Social Media Not Converting? Put Down The Shotgun & Use A Rifle!
One of the most frequently asked question I get about social media marketing is “Should we try and market to all social media sites or just focus on certain ones?” There are a couple ways to answer that question, and it really depends on a lot of factors. In my opinion, it makes more sense […]
of the most frequently asked question I get about
social media marketing is “Should we try and market to all
social media sites or just focus on certain ones?”
There are a couple ways to answer that question, and it really depends on a
lot of factors. In my opinion, it makes more sense to focus your efforts in a
few places for a couple of different reasons. At the same time, if you have a
super broad topic, it can make sense to try and cover them all.
So there isn’t exactly a cookie cutter answer to the question, but there are
a few reasons why I like to focus on certain sites.
If you run a site about cats and dogs, it doesn’t makes much sense to try and
get content on Digg, where the audience is
largely tech related. Instead, try and focus on sites where people interested in
what you’re doing actually hang out. Sites that have groups for many topics work
well, such as MySpace and
YouTube. You can also focus on niche social
media sites like Dogster, a social site
for dog lovers.
Another reason I recommend focusing your efforts is what I call the trickle
down effect. This means if you have a campaign that is successful on Digg,
Delicious and
Netscape, then that effect will most
likely trickle down to the smaller social media sites as well.
The other thing that is important to remember is that different social media
sites should be used for different things based on the goals of your campaign.
For example, a successful MySpace campaign will hardly produce any backlinks to
your site, if any at all. But MySpace is great for creating mindshare and
gaining new customers. On the other hand, a successful
linkbait
article that makes the Digg homepage can result in hundreds or even thousands of
links, though it’s much harder to convert those users into customers unless what
you are doing is highly relevant to their interests.
More focus equals more success. The reason I say this is because if you put
more focus or effort into less of these sites, your chances of success will be
much higher. I’d rather work hard at getting my campaigns successful on just a
few sites instead of spreading myself too thin and possibly ending up with them
all being flops.
Conversions are one of the hardest things to master with SMM. Campaigns are
notorious for sending loads of traffic, but only the highly targeted campaigns
will actually convert. The main reason I think people are having a hard time
with conversions is they are not properly targeting the social media sites. Make
sure you target the most relevant sites, and you will convert at a much higher
rate.
Think of it as taking a shotgun approach to hit a moving target rather than
careful aim with a rifle. The shotgun will hit a lot of things, but maybe not
what you’re after. The rifle is more precise — less effort, but more likely to
hit, if you’re aiming right.
For search marketers, there’s a similar comparison. You can get a lot of
traffic by targeting broadly popular terms, such as “shoes” or “movies.” But if
you only sell hiking books or documentaries, then targeting those broad terms is
a lot of effort to gain lots of people who probably won’t convert, since you
won’t have products for most of them. As you get focused with a search term
list, so you want to often focus when considering social media sites.
It is important to take all these things into consideration when launching
your SMM campaign. It takes a lot of research to figure exactly who your target
audience is, where they’re hiding, and how you’re going to capture their
attention. But if you do your homework and have good execution, your campaign is
sure to be a success.