What makes media a social media?
There’s a long-standing answer to this question. For some, it seems both obvious and clear as day. If you ask someone what social media is, they will inevitably say that it’s all about the conversation. I’m no longer bullish on this notion of conversation within social media. At its core, what actually makes any piece of content (whether it’s generated from an individual or a company) have any semblance of social-ness to it, is the ability for it to be as shareable and as findable as possible (if you do that and people like it, they will naturally talk about it). Look no further than the meteoric rise of The Huffington Post as a prime example of this. The Huffington Post generated conversation (comments, engagement, links and the like) because, unlike traditional newspapers and magazines that were making time online, The Huffington Post "opened up the window" and let their content be cross-posted, it linked out (not to be confused with LinkedIn) and did everything in its power to garner attention by leveraging the power of a sharing economy over one that was looking for a return on investment (or advertising).
Can you make money sharing?
On March 30th, 2012, Marketing Charts published a news item titled, Social Shares Drive 1 in 4 Online Shoppers to Purchase. This is the kind of data that more businesses need to think about: "62% of survey respondents said they had ever read a comment on their Facebook page from a friend talking about a product they purchased, while of those, three-quarters clicked on the product link in their friend’s comment. Once at the retailer’s site, 53% purchased the product they learned about through their friend’s comment. Additionally, these eventual customers are happy to pass along the favor, as 81% identify as sharers themselves." The social web turns out to be an engine of word of mouth marketing unlike one we have ever seen before (no big surprise there).
Scaling your social media efforts back is the best way to scale them for true growth.
When reading through the Marketing Charts news item, something become abundantly clear and amazingly simple: the best brands do two things extremely well:
A social business is a sharing business.
The bigger consulting firms are getting all hot and bothered by the notion of social business. We’ve gone from social media to social CRM and then straight to social business. Those working on the inside of an organization have a baseline expectation that everything that happens within the organization can be shared easily (through the magic of intranets, wikis and internal social media platforms), and consumers expect a more social experience from the brands that they do business with (seriously, no Facebook page?). What’s actually happening is that businesses are running their social activities like advertising campaigns, so they’re struggling to see their initiatives take hold.
Move from social media tactics to a philosophy of sharing.
When a corporate blogs lack attention or a corporate Twitter feed is not engaging for its followers, more often than not, it’s because the corporation is not approaching these media with a sharing attitude. They’re looking to shill, sell or convince others of something. Part of the challenge is that sharing takes time to validate. That being said, this form of social proofing is critical in the long term. The Marketing Chart news item is quick to remind us that social proofing makes people more engaged with our brands: "Significant opportunities exist for retailers to drive higher engagement through social proofing, suggests the report. In fact, more than 3 in 5 respondents said that they are likely to stay and shop on a website if they are shown their friends’ activities on the site. Additionally, 57% are more likely to make a purchase there if they see a list showing their friends who have made a purchase on the website."
It may not seem that obvious, but the more you share… the more you sell.
The above posting is my twice-monthly column for The Huffington Post called, Media Hacker. I cross-post it here with all the links and tags for your reading pleasure, but you can check out the original version online here:
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