Combining social-media marketing with traditional marketing efforts can create more brand awareness. However, knowing the pitfalls to avoid can lead to a bigger return on a company's marketing investment.

July 26, 2009

7 Min Read
Avoid the Top Five Mistakes of Social-Media Marketing

As a self-storage owner, you already know the importance of using traditional advertising outlets—print, radio, Yellow Pages and TV exposure—to keep your name circulating in the market. Now, however, there's a new avenue in which to become familiar. It's called social-media marketing (SMM), and when combined with your traditional PR efforts, it can help you penetrate the marketplace with your message quicker and easier than ever before.

With this type of marketing, you use various social-networking sites to enforce your brand and market your business. A social-networking site is simply an online meeting place. Think of it like an eHarmony or Match.com for business people. On such sites, people can post a profile with the hopes of meeting other like-minded professionals for business reasons.

According to the Nielsen Research Group, social networks and blogs have moved ahead of personal e-mail among the most popular online activities in which people engage. Additionally, USA Today reports the time spent on these sites is growing three times faster than the overall Internet rate. More than two-thirds of the world's online population now visits social-networking and blogging sites.

Knowing this, it's clear that if you haven't yet engaged in social-media marketing, the time to start is now. But before you do, you need to be aware of the top mistakes businesses make with this PR outlet so you can avoid them and get the biggest return for your marketing investment.
 
Mistake No. 1:Having More Than One Face on the Internet

When you're engaging in social-media marketing, you're really building your image from the ground up. The goal is to virally spread parts of your image across the Internet. The word “parts” is important.

Basically, you're starting with a holographic image of yourself in the virtual world. You then need to break that hologram apart and find the appropriate places on the Internet where you can frame certain pieces of that hologram.

When someone looks at all the pieces on the various sites, they should be able to put them together to see a cohesive whole. They should not see multiple images of who you are, as that would ruin your credibility. Therefore, if you have multiple Facebook accounts, for example, your personal one has to be hidden and by invitation only. You don't want that other image out there confusing people and possibly diminishing your reputation.
 
Mistake No. 2: Collecting Friends

Social-media marketing is how you create instant buzz on the Internet by getting the same message out over and over. It's spreading your message and getting your company branded so you can get more business. Social networking, on the other hand, is about making friends.

For example, you've likely seen someone on LinkedIn who has 25,000-plus contacts. That's great, but what do you do with all those associates? Remember, just because you have a phone book in your office doesn't mean you can open the book at random, pick a name and call it for business.

When you collect a contact, you're supposed to be opening the door to exchange information and build a relationship. Think of it as relationship marketing in the 21st century, and the same rules apply. The only difference is you're building the relationship online rather than over coffee.
 
Mistake No. 3: Putting Out the Wrong Messages

You've likely seen people on Twitter or Facebook post, “John Smith is watching a great movie and eating popcorn.” Such messages may be fine for personal networks, but for business ones, you need to put out messages that are useful to your readers. In other words, don't talk about yourself. You want to give valuable tips and advice so the people who read your posts want to repost them to their own sites. That's how your message spreads virally.

The key is to keep your messages consistent. Remember, people are subscribing to various feeds to get your information. They’re essentially saying your message has value. That's why you can't do a series of sales tips and then post a couple of your favorite omelet recipes. You have to stay on message, and your message has to be for your readers.

With that said, it’s OK to occasionally have a press release-type message that says, “John Smith is speaking at ABC Convention on employee productivity today.” This kind of message does two things: It tells people they might not get a tip today or tomorrow because you're busy, and it shows that other big-wigs out there think your message is important. It's a positive reinforcement that boosts your credibility, so long as you don't do it too frequently.
 
Mistake No. 4: Posting Inappropriate Information

Don't allow yourself or anyone on your site to post anything online that you don't want your most conservative client to see. You never know where something will end up, especially since the nature of the Internet is for things to spread virally.

For example, a CEO of a corporation had a picture of himself and his girlfriend on a topless beach in Mexico. For some reason, he decided to post the photo on his personal, invitation-only Facebook site. The man was married and his wife saw the photo. How? Someone on his invitation-only Facebook account thought it was a great picture and decided to repost it on the public Internet.

To top it off, his board of directors got wind of the photo and fired him. Now he's no longer employable in that field or position again. The moral of this story: Never post anything on any site you wouldn't personally show your own grandmother.
 
Mistake No. 5: Using Only One Internet Site

In the “old days” of the Internet, people believed they had to keep all their content on their own website. The theory was that spreading it out ruined your credibility and diminished your reputation as being a unique speaker. Not so today. In fact, with social-media marketing, the opposite is true. The more places you can get your message to appear simultaneously, the more effective it will be.

Think of it as constructing a funnel. You want to lay several trails of information, all of which lead to your main site. Therefore, no matter how someone stumbles upon you, as long as they “follow the trail,” they'll eventually find you. That's essentially what you're doing with social-media marketing messages: putting out kernels of information. If someone wants the next kernel, they have to follow the trail. Eventually it funnels them to one website, which is where you wanted them to be anyway.

You're creating an environment where people see your message everywhere. As a result, you now have their attention and have the opportunity to sell your product, services, or whatever you're selling at that point of distribution.

Here's an example of the power of funneling: Recently Aaron Chronister posted a message on Twitter. Someone saw his post and reposted it on a blog. CNN and The New York Times found the post interesting and reported on it. Because of that exposure, Chronister got a book deal from Simon and Schuster. So, what was his post about? Current events? Global warming? A tell-all celebrity biography? Nope. It was a Twitter post with a unique bacon recipe, as Chronister was trying to get publicity for a barbeque club he belonged to. That's how powerful funneling your message can be.
 
Get Noticed

The marketplace is changing, and you have to change with it. Your name has to be everywhere—in print, on radio and TV, and on social-networking sites. The more you get your name and message circulating in the various mediums, the higher the chance your clients will see your information. Thanks to social-media marketing you can get your message out to thousands of people in an instant. And the results are greater credibility, more exposure, and higher sales—all of which positively impact your bottom line.
 
Pam Lontos is president of PR/PR Public Relations and author of I See Your Name Everywhere. Maurice Ramirez is the chief strategist for social media for PR/PR, and speaker on the importance of social-media marketing. For more information, call 407.299.6128; e-mail [email protected].

Related Articles:

Six Must-Haves for Successful Social-Media Marketing

Using Social Media in Self-Storage: Does it Measure Up to the Hype?

ISS E-Book: Best Practices for Self-Storage Marketing

Self-Storage Talk: Social Marketing: Friend or Foe

 

 

Subscribe to Our Weekly Newsletter
ISS is the most comprehensive source for self-storage news, feature stories, videos and more.

You May Also Like