Whether you want to
sell products, gain subscribers, persuade followers to a point or sway the
hearts and minds of readers to your cause, they’ve got to know who you are in
the first place.
Your
ability to encourage any of these actions comes from your brand’s authority
-- and one of the best ways to build that is through the savvy use of
social media. In fact, recent research from Econsultancy shows that 71
percent of brands plan to invest more heavily in social
media in the coming year to reach new followers and build brand
reputation.
Want
to join their ranks and become known in your industry? Here’s everything you
need to know about using social media to build your brand:
1. Choose networks that support your brand image.
According
to Convince and Convert, 22 percent of Americans use social media multiple
times a day, making it one of the best mediums on which to build
your brand. There are literally hundreds of social networks out there, but
most of them aren’t worth investing your time and energy.
Instead,
find the platforms that support your brand image, taking the following factors
into consideration:
- Facebook is by the far the best platform for promoting
brand awareness, as nearly three quarters of Americans
adults use the site. Facebook is a great platform for promoting virtually any brand,
due to its very heterogeneous user base.
- Instagram is a great option for brands that rely heavily
on images, such as clothing companies and retailers. It’s also particularly
effective for reaching young adults, Hispanics and African Americans.
- While Google+ hasn’t
taken off as well as many people predicted, it can be a great platform to reach
men in the technology industry, as two-thirds of the network’s users are men,
most of whom work in engineering or other technical professions.
- Pinterest is an excellent social network to reach women,
especially for brands selling jewelry or clothing.
- Finally,
if you operate a business-to-business company, LinkedIn is
a stronger choice for promoting business-related content and connecting with
other corporate influencers.
2. Provide valuable and shareable content.
It
should go without saying, but you’ll create a much stronger brand reputation if
you focus on creating useful content that viewers will want to
share, rather than cranking out content to meet arbitrary publishing
calendars or that covers subjects only you’d want to read.
- Keep
the following principles in mind as you craft content for social sharing:
- Every
single piece of content you share should support your brand image. Remember,
humor can be difficult to pull off. If you can use memes effectively, they can
be powerful brand-building tools. But if you aren’t 100 percent sure how your
audience will respond to your image, resist the temptation to create memes or
engage in clickbait strategies that have the potential to reflect poorly on
your company.
- Figure
out which content is most likely to gain visibility on your social networks.
Images may resonate better with your audience than blog posts, but you won’t
know that if you don’t look at your data.
- Don’t
be afraid to use visual content. Articles with images receive 94 percent more
views. Twitter content with images receives nearly twice as many
views as text posts, even though there are seven times more text
posts on Twitter.
One
of the easiest ways to create content for deployment on social media profiles
that’ll support your brand building efforts is to see what types of posts
others have been successful with and put together your own, better versions.
Say,
for example, that one of your competitors has received good social traction
with a blog post titled “12 Strategies for Increasing Website Traffic.”
Instead
of wasting your time building content around unproven topics, you could release
a stronger content piece on this same subject. For instance, you could put
together a post titled “102 Strategies for Increasing Website Traffic,” or you
could go through your competitor’s list of techniques and put together your own
guide that goes into more depth on how to put these principles into action.
To
find the content pieces that are performing well in your industry, use tools
such as BuzzSumo and sort based on past social
engagement. To learn more about implementing this technique, check out the Backlinko blog’s guide on the subject.
3. Leverage influencers.
Publishing
killer content to your social profiles is important, but it’s only one part of
the equation. If you have a relatively unknown brand, your voice is likely
getting lost in the noise. While you can eventually build your own audience through
the creation of great content, this strategy is going to take time.
A
much faster approach is to leverage the audiences existing influencers in your
industry have already built. There are a few different ways you can do
this:
- Mention
their names or cite their websites in your content pieces. Influencers with
Google Alerts or other notifications set up on their names will see your content
after it’s published.
- Tag
any influencers you’ve referenced when sharing content to your social media
profiles.
- Email
influencers after you’ve published your content to let them know they’ve been
referenced in your work.
The
goal of all these different actions is to get them to share your content piece
with their followers via social networking. It can take time to build up
the kinds of relationships that lead to influencer sharing, but if you’re
consistent about producing quality content, your efforts will get noticed.
4. Use social campaigns to promote content.
A
growing number of brands use strategies such as contests and other social media
campaigns to successfully gain visibility and generate leads.
To
take advantage of this effect, provide your audience with valuable incentives
that encourage user participation and make sure that your campaigns offers
value to all participants.
While
social media is one of the most powerful ways to reach new leads, it’s easy to
waste time or alienate people if you don’t use it appropriately. That’s what
makes having a sound social media strategy in place so important.
If
you make it a priority to consistently share great content and leverage the
power of existing social media influencers, your brand building efforts are
bound to pay off in the long-run.
- Aaron Agius
Comments
Post a Comment