Showing posts tagged brand

5 Ways Brands Influence Social Media Strategy

Amplify’d from gigaom.com

5 Ways Brands Influence Social Media Strategy

There’s a lot of talk of personal branding in social media, but when it comes to commercial brands, many of the questions that you or I might take for granted when setting up a social media presence become dilemmas.

It’s not just the way organizations engage through social media that matters: the portrayal of a business brand in this space is affected by a range of factors.

1. Networks and Tools

Many businesses feel a competitive obligation to set up Facebook pages, but it’s true that your brand’s presence — or absence — from a given social network reflects on your brand as far competitors, clients, and industry watchers are concerned.

If your brand is the first from its category to develop a presence on Facebook, that says something. What it says, and how well that fits with your branding and communications strategies, will likely determine whether you’re the organization that breaks that new ground.

The tools you use to manage your social media accounts may also, perhaps inadvertently, affect your brand. Do your brand values include approachability, friendliness and responsiveness? Then it would be better to manage your account through a tool that alerts you immediately when you receive a direct contact from your network, and allows you to closely monitor what users are saying about your brand.

2. Types of Engagement

Brand personality and positioning will also influence the types of engagement you champion, seek, and try to avoid.

Is your brand the type to initiate engagements with others? What sorts of engagements? And what sorts of contacts? Is it the type to provide resources to followers and fans, or to give advice and help?

Branding can influence the types of campaigns and involvements your organization runs through social media, the frequency of updates and engagements, the methods of brand, product, or service promotion you use, and the degree to which you engage with contacts around issues of corporate and social citizenship, among others.

Finally, these decisions may, of course, influence the choices you make around networks and tools.

3. Who’s Making the Updates?

Whether your organization chooses to centralize or decentralize — or outsource — its social media management may be affected by brand, since brand can imply certain priorities for various social media factors, and those priorities might necessitate a certain type of management.

One consumer-focused technology consultancy I worked with would never dream of outsourcing its social media. This decision was simple: if the company was to position its brand as an experienced social media innovator, it’d have to prove it could walk the talk. Social media expertise was a core value for this brand.

However, the decision to decentralize its social media management was impacted by another aspect of the brand, which championed the employment of skilled, experienced, mature, knowledgeable experts who clients could get to know and rely on, no matter where they fitted in the consultancy process. As a result, every member of this consultancy had access to the organization’s social media accounts, and was expected to engage through them regularly.

4. Degree of Integration With Other Offerings

How, and how seamlessly, your business integrates social media activity with other means of audience communication, research, and engagement can be impacted by brand values, and, in turn, impact your brand.

One of my clients timed tertiary student-focused social media advertising with on-campus orientation week presentations as an experiment with social media. A more experienced, social media-savvy organization might tie those on-campus presentations to, for example, a Facebook competition, the winner of which might have been announced at an industry event the following month.

It’s clear that these two approaches would have achieved different response rates, results and brand resonance within the student segment.

5. People Your Brand Follows, Friends and Fans

On entering the social media space, most organizations are focused wholly and solely on attracting followers, friends and fans: a solid contact base. Yet the amount of attention you pay to customers, competitors, pundits and peers within the social media sphere, and who your organization follows and friends, will reflect strongly on your brand.

Again, the organization can use its brand to direct an approach to these different types of engagement. A conservative organization, or one whose brand is tied to quality, best-practice performance, is unlikely to form social media alliances of any sort with brands that are known or found not to adhere to industry standards, for example.

An Evolving Approach

Whether the branding choices you make for your organization’s social media presence are made by internal brand custodians, your marketing team, advertising creatives, an external social media consultancy, or senior management, be warned: some of those decisions will likely be altered as the organization’s experience with social media, and its online audience relationships, deepen.

Each time the organization faces a new challenge within the realm of social media, an opportunity likely exists for the brand to help influence the response. Ignoring your commercial brand in making decisions for social media is as potentially harmful as an individual ignoring their personal brand in this space. The difference is that the social media audience may be more willing to forgive mistakes made by personal brands, given the innately human, personal nature of the medium. Commercial brands may have more to lose, and may lose it more swiftly, if their activities and interactions jar with the audience’s evolving perceptions of the brand.

Read more at gigaom.com
 

Bringing a Brand to Life in Social Media: Video by Brian Solis

Great discussion on Branding and Social Media. The “Brand Reflection Cycle” is an interesting concept also.

Amplify’d from www.briansolis.com

Video: Bringing a Brand to Life in Social Media

  • September 1, 2010

We’re approaching the last bits of this enlivening conversations where Chris Beck, founder of 26dottwo (@26dottwo) and I examined the state and future of social media.

In this installment we review the various aspects and formalities of bringing a brand alive, truly alive in social media. Everything begins with establishing the rules of engagement in order to define the boundaries, context, and objectives for conversations. Guidelines such as “don’t be stupid,” “use common sense,” “stay positive,” is not the most useful approach to steering representatives or consumer experiences.

While many brands possess a brand style guide, many have yet to adapt it to the social Web. In chapter 12 of Engage, I introduce “The Brand Reflection Cycle,”an exercise inspired by personality cycles used in psychology. This is intended to help brand managers design the persona, voice, characteristics, and “soul” of the brand within these very human networks. These attributes are then embodied by those on the front lines of social networks to personify the brand and reinforce intended qualities.

See more at www.briansolis.com
 

6 Ways To Build Your Personal Brand With Social Media

Amplify’d from mindsproutmarketing.com

6 Ways To Build Your Personal Brand With Social Media

your personal brand 6 Ways To Build Your Personal Brand With Social MediaWhatever industry your personal brand is based in knowing how to use social media to increase awareness is important. Social media is an amazing tool that can be used to gain exposure and a loyal following in a few simple steps. Consider these steps below as you use social media to build your brand.

1. Be Friendly & Approachable

Far too often people share overly candid remarks and opinions on the web. Perhaps it’s the anonymity of cyberspace that feeds their bullying tendencies, or maybe they feel untouchable behind their laptops. Whatever the reason – don’t let yourself become one of those people. Building your personal brand means that you’ll need to show off your amiable side. You’ll attract more flies with honey than vinegar and the great thing about flies is they generate quite a buzz when they’ve found something they like. Put a smile on and get to know the people on the social media platforms that want to support your brand.

2. Remember to Share

Here’s a prime opportunity for you to shine. Share what you know or what you do best with others. If you’re an expert in your field, or if you want to become one, using social media to communicate credible and helpful information is one of the best ways to boost your personal brand. Social media is exactly what its name implies – social. People are connecting with others to learn, exchange and network. Reach out to your Twitter followers, Facebook fans and blog readers and supply them with honest to goodness valuable content and information. The more relevant your shared material is the greater the chances are of it being shared with others and the more likely your supporters will stick around for the long haul.

3. Promote Authenticity

Politicians call it ‘shaking hands and kissing babies‘ but in social media transparency is everything. Be authentic in your conduct and approach. If you’re using social media to rope 10,000 groupies in a single swoop versus the slow build of meaningful interactions with people, chances are you’ll be left high and dry in the end. Social media takes time and requires patience, but the end result is well worth the wait. Just remember that people are not sheep. They will not follow for the sake of following. Take a genuine approach to your personal brand and position it as such among your audience. Say what you mean and mean what you say and don’t forget to do it with originality.

4. Don’t Be Everything to Everyone

If only it were so simple to win the hearts and minds of everyone with your personal brand. Sadly, this will never happen. Find your niche and stick with it. Once you’ve figured out who you are and what you stand for you can find your social media audience. For instance, if your personal brand appeals solely to women with a finger on the pulse of technology, you might want connect and network with members of Kirtsy, a social media site for women. Your personal brand should connect with the right people through the right social media channels and not to the world. Streamline your branding efforts to yield better results.

5. Grab Endorsements

Use social media to collect feedback about your personal brand from clients, customers and colleagues. Being able to share reviews and praise demonstrates the integrity and capability of your personal brand. Gathering recommendations and posting them on social media sites like Yelp, Merchant Circle and YellowPages.com will work to build credibility and respect for your personal brand much more quickly than a brand without any.

6. Associate Yourself

Use what you’ve got. If you’ve guest blogged for a well-known blog or if you’re connected to industry experts then leverage those relationships with your personal brand. You’re not bragging, you’re showing networking achievements and accomplishments that can enhance what personal brand is about. People like to see who you know and what your credentials are. Mentioning some of the more well-known ones can give your personal brand a leg up.

Read more at mindsproutmarketing.com