Social Media Confuses Businesses

November 3, 2009 on 1:10 pm | In FaceBook, LinkedIn, Marketing, Twitter | 3 Comments

It seems businesses of all sizes are conflicted about how to use social media effectively. In a recent CitiBank/GfK Roper study, about 75 percent of small businesses said that social networks are not working for them.  On the other side of the equation, Gartner says that most Fortune 1000 companies will delve into social media by 2010 but more than half of them will fail.

First of all, small businesses may not clearly understand how social media can help them. Nor, do they know how to measure the impact of social networks.  For instance, friending a brand may not always result in immediate sales. So, the small business reporting that social media doesn’t work is probably not giving the program sufficient time to develop.

Additionally, like businesses of all sizes, small businesses have trouble focusing their efforts. They want to jump into Linkedin, Facebook, and Twitter all at once. Now, I believe in utilizing all three of these networks, as does Paul Chaney. However, small businesses should pick one platform that makes the most sense for their customers and master that one before adding another one.

And most of them don’t have the necessary resources to make the most of social media.

We’ve written about this often: strategy should drive tactics, no matter what type of business you run or what type of program you are planning to implement.

Duck Tape Marketing’s John Jantsch agrees that the most successful organizations approach social media with a strategic bent. According to Jantsch,

It’s about connecting, not automation. The best companies are using the latest communication tools not for automation or as “just another tactic,” but to truly connect and create relationships with customers.

Are you having any luck with your social media forays? Wade into the discussion and let us know.

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  • http://www.PublicityHound.com Joan Stewart, The Publicity Hound

    I wonder how many small businesses would actually take the time to master a platform like Facebook or Twitter before trying to learn the next one.

    Facebook, in particular, is incredibly difficult for beginners to comprehend. I can remember struggling to figure out the basics. Compounding the problem is that Faceboook periodically changes the site. Just when you think you’ve nailed it, they introduce the “live feed vs. news feed” concept.

    I also think it may take a fair amount of time for businesses to determine which of these sites works best for them. Again, that involves testing, which takes time.

  • http://www.my-creativeteam.com Harry Hoover

    Just for that reason that it takes time, Joan, is why I suggest a company master one platform before moving on to another. But if you do the thinking upfront and figure out which platform makes the most sense to start with, it pays off.

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