As a consultant working with
many brands on social media strategy and efforts, I hear a lot of
perceptions about social media. Extended out to the conferences that I
attend and sometimes speak at, it is surprising how often I hear the
same myths about social media. These are not things that brands are
just using as reasons to not engage ... they often come from brands and
marketing teams that are actively using social media as well. The
following is a selection of some of the myths that I hear most often,
as well as some thoughts on why they are simply myths and what your
brand can do to get past them:
- You need to give up control.
By far the most common myth, giving up control is a defeatist way of
looking at social media. It means that anyone can say anything about
your brand and there is nothing you can do and no input you can have.
The truth is actually that control in the best of cases is shared. You
have a point of view and your customers do as well. To effectively
create a dialogue, you need to be willing to share some of the control
with those people conversing online ... but keep some for yourself as
well.
- It is all about going viral.
Starting out with social media with the intention of creating a viral
success or getting "X" number of subscribers, followers, friends or
fans is a sure recipe to focus on the wrong things. The point of most
social media programs is not that they may reach millions of people
blindly, but a smaller subset strategically. To that end, focusing on
creating something engaging is far more important that just trying to
get volume or go viral for its own sake.
- Someone needs to be managing it full time. Resourcing
can often be a huge roadblock - in part because of the perception that
if you don't have someone ready to make social media their full time
job, then you are not prepared. The truth is that you can manage social
media effectively by making it a core part of someone's job. You do
need to identify someone who will take the lead, but this doesn't have
to be a 24/7 job.
- Everything has to be open, transparent and public. There
is a lot of talk about openness and transparency, which often forgets
one of the most powerful things about social media: that it has huge
potential to foster internal dialogue, enable better collaboration and
allow more efficiency. In these cases, you might want to use social
media more for something that doesn't (and shouldn't) belong in the
public. This is not about hiding information (and you do still need to
assume that some or all of it could end up online) - but sometimes the
easiest place to start using social media is internally ... and in
private.
- Measurement just involves "soft" metrics.
Every day marketers are learning that social media doesn't just have to
be about awareness or influencing perception. Depending on the
strategy, you can use social media for everything from direct sales to
generating real relationships online which lead to revenue generation.
Our own team at Ogilvy has created a metric model called Conversation Impact that goes far beyond the soft metrics to prove the real value of social media to the brands we work with.
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