Seven
years ago, I remember someone could create a Facebook page without using
Facebook’s in-house programming language. This would be a huge time saver
for agencies and advertisers.
Eventually
the company added tools for publishing messages to the Facebook stream, as well
as analytics and media buying. Then they tacked on Twitter, LinkedIn, and
YouTube. To this day these are the core components of every social media
management system.
As
much as this sector has been a success, there are still two unanswered
questions in my mind about social media marketing:
1.)
Do people actually follow brands on Twitter?
2.)
Who visits brand pages on Facebook?
I
ask because I don’t.
If
you do, can you please write in the comments below what corporate account you
follow so I can check them out? Just curious.
In
general, branded content gets low engagement within social media. I know
this because a picture of a celebrity’s bowel movement just got more likes in
my stream than a great brand campaign.
It
is easy to point fingers and say the problem is bad content. With few
exceptions (notably Samsung, LG, Safaricom) most brands are not good at social.
Unfortunately the two areas that work in social – controversy and humor – are
“off brand” for most advertisers.
But
the real problem is that brands approach social with a broadcast mentality.
Social media was never constructed to be a passive, one-to-many medium
like TV. It is inherently an active, many-to-many medium.
Many-to-many
communications are hard to engineer. Some companies pay people to share
content into the stream. Other companies buy distribution from Facebook
or Twitter via “sponsored posts”. In the long run neither approach is
great. Humans have a pretty good bullshit meter, and if it isn’t
authentic it won’t work in social.
For
an advertiser, the arithmetic of many-to-many marketing is simple. The
average person has 200 first-degree connections across social media. That
means a large company, with 10,000 employees, is less than three degrees
removed from everyone on the planet. This is the power you can unlock by
engaging employee networks on your behalf.
Every
brand has content that employees should want to share – whether it is
recognition and awards, new product releases, or a specific program that an
employee worked on. This is the highest quality approach to social media
marketing: an authentic message delivered among friends.
It
is important to remember that companies are just a collection of people, who
collectively possess a vastly broader reach than a marketing department.
This idea has the potential to change marketing, and maybe in the process
it can humanize companies too.
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