Monday, May 21, 2012

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Main Principles of Social Marketing

social-media

Marketing in the age of social media can be a challenge to many business people, who grew up in an age dominated by giant corporations. These social media make it easier for small businesses to take advantage of their flexibility, local connections, and nimble nature.

The Harvard Business Review blog had an interesting post recently by Nilofer Merchant, an expert on corporate culture and innovation. Titled “Rules For the Social Era,” the post outlined some of what she sees as the major shifts in how businesses need to market to customers in the current environment.

She focused on three shifts in particular, with some lessons you can apply for your own business. Here are some of the highlights from her article:

  • Be Lean, Not Big. Today, being effective and efficient is more important than just being “big.” She believes that companies in the past tried to grow so big that it was a natural barrier to entry for competitors, but those companies today are facing problems with their rising expenses. Doing things more efficiently, instead of focusing on size, can help you reinvent your business.
  • Start Conversations, Not Chains. Instead of seeing your business as a sequential train, from logistics to operations to marketing to customer service, see it all as one big, interlocked conversation. Taking customer feedback and working from that directly into all other elements of your business can lead to rapid, big changes, instead of isolating each aspect to contain and control change.
  • Share, Don’t Tell. Social media is all about engaging with customers. You can’t just talk at people; you have to talk with them. When customers follow your business on Facebook, Twitter, or any other medium, it’s because they are connecting with what your business stands for. Ms. Merchant writes, “The social object that unites people isn’t a company or a product; the social object that most unites people is a shared value or purpose.” Figure out what your business means to your customers, and engage with them at that level. Moreover, reach out to influencers in your industry who can share what your business is doing to consumers, as well as share what consumers are looking for from your business.

This is an article to refer back to again, too, because Ms. Merchant plans to follow up with sequels focused on “being fast, fluid, and flexible in the social era.” We’re looking forward to it, and I hope you are, too.

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