Seven Easy Way to Work on Your Social Media Strategy

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The founder of Likeable, Dave Kerpen, responds to thousands of Tweets, emails, and messages every day by himself.

A social media genius? Or just a crazy guy?

Mr. Kerpen always stated that social media are not freebies. They will not bring you immediate results,  cannot make up for a bad product or service.

If you are OK with all of these conditions, you’re ready to learn how Mr. Kerpen get his social media strategy right:

1. Listen Before Talk

A couple of years ago, when Kerpen went to Vegas, the check-in line at the Aria hotel where he was staying “took forever,” he said.

So Kerpen did what he does best–took to Twitter, and quickly posted: Waiting on line for 45 minutes at the Aria. Not worth it.

Did he hear anything from the Aria? No. But he did hear from the Rio, a hotel down the street. Within two minutes, the Rio Tweeted back to Kerpen: Sorry you’re having a bad experience, Dave. Hope the rest of your time in Vegas goes well.

Kerpen didn’t switch hotels on that trip, but where do you think he stayed the next time he went to Vegas? The Rio. And he “liked” the Rio on Facebook. And sometime later, a friend going to Vegas saw that Kerpen had “liked” the Rio, so asked if Kerpen would recommend the hotel. His response? “I don’t think it’s the fanciest, but I know that they listen,” Kerpen recalls telling that Facebook friend.

Kerpen pointed out that all the Rio did was pay attention to Twitter, and respond with empathy.

Kerpen recommends you do the same thing, regardless of the business you’re in. “If you’re an accountant, go to Twitter and search ‘need an accountant’,” he said. “Your customers are asking for you.”

 

2. Respond

Kerpen said most of the big brands do not answer customers or prospects on Twitter, Facebook, or other social media. As a result, “you have a huge competitive advantage if you respond to your customers, and theirs as well,” he said, in this case, the Rio hotel in Vegas.

If a customer complains, don’t delete. Instead, you have an opportunity to respond publicly that you’re working to solve the problem, and will send a private message to the individual so it can be fixed.

“We all know that companies are going to make mistakes,” said Kerpen. “The problem isn’t when companies make mistakes, it’s when companies don’t say, ‘I’m sorry.'”

Instead, if you delete a complaint, you’re sending a message that the person who wrote it doesn’t matter, and you’re, in essence, “inviting him to go tell someone else, to start a petition,” warned Kerpen. “Only delete obscene or bigoted posts,” he added.

 

3. Tell, Don’t Sell

Social media is most powerful when you use it to tell personal stories, not to sell your products, Kerpen said.

Kerpen likes to tell the story of how, when he and his then fiancé couldn’t afford a lavish wedding, they raised $100,000 from sponsors and got married at Brooklyn Cyclones park. That personal story, he says, helped propel Likeable into a $7 million business.

If yours is a business-to-business company, tell a story on social media using webinars, e-books, and white papers.

“The only thing better than telling your story on social media is to inspire your customers to tell your story,” said Kerpen.

 

4. Just Be You

Oprah Winfrey once said: “I had no idea that being your authentic self could make me as rich as I’ve become. If I had I’d have done it a lot earlier.”

As Kerpen puts it: “When I am authentic, when I am vulnerable, when I am me, customers want to do business with me.”

 

5. Better Advertising Strategy

Social media is not just touchy-feely, said Kerpen. It can drive leads, and sales.

On Facebook, rather than just get your ad in front of huge a swath of people, you can target the right people–based on job title, interest, age, location. “Every single piece of data that Facebook’s got on people you can target based on that,” Kerpen said. “What’s cooler than reaching a billion people on Facebook? Reaching the right 1,000, the right 100, the right 10, or the right one.”

Another perk of advertising on Facebook? Word-of-mouth endorsements. You can target ads against just the friends of people who have “liked” your brand on Facebook, and when those people see your ad, they will see listed the names of their friends who like your brand, too.

 

6. Give Freebies Away

If you take 10 percent off, you’re marketing, 50 percent off, you’re giving away value, 100 percent off, you have loyal customers for life, Kerpen quipped.

Give away good content, webinars, articles, and white papers. “I’ve had two people come up to me and say, ‘Thank you for all that valuable information you gave away, I’m starting my own social media agency,’ but I also got dozens and dozens of inbound leads because of all the value we put out there,” said Kerpen.

Recently, a new client told Kerpen she had $250,000 to spend on social media marketing she’d move to Likeable because of all the free, yet useful information the company has made available.

 

7. Be Grateful

In your social media posts, regularly thank your customers, and partners.

According to the non-profit organization DonorsChoose.org, 38 percent of people who received a thank you note were more likely to donate again.

Kerpen writes three thank you notes every day.

“It puts me in a great mood every single time,” he said.