The explosive growth and acceptance of social media has entrepreneurs working hard to get their message into news feeds everywhere. We all want you to “Like us on Facebook” or “Follow us on Twitter,” but it’s what happens after we receive this marketing permission that determines our social selling success.
Social networks like Facebook, Twitter, and Google+ are popular places for small business marketers to acquire new customers and keep current customers informed, but these platforms should not be used for pushing your offerings repeatedly onto your audience. You didn’t wake up this morning and say, “I can’t wait to log into Facebook and check out all the new advertisements!” Guess what? Your audience didn’t either.
Social selling isn’t about pumping out tweet after tweet promoting your wares, or flooding your G+ stream with product plugging posts. In my opinion, social selling isn’t really about selling at all. It’s about helping your audience discover the right reasons to buy. Effective social selling begins with identifying your customer’s problem, and using your content to help them understand how your company can help them solve that problem. If you would like to see an actionable example, click the image below to check out the article Jenn Herman shared with her Google+ audience. That’s social selling done right!
Know Who You Are Creating Content For
Before you can begin creating compelling social content, you need to have a solid understanding of what your audience wants. You won’t be able to deliver relevant information if you don’t have a clue what topics get your audience passionate!
Knowing your audience goes beyond basic demographic information like age, gender, and income. To really know your customers, you must know what drives them:
- What are their goals?
- What challenges do they face?
- What excites them?
- What do they worry about?
- What do they want?
- What are their needs?
Executing a content strategy with these things in mind will allow you to focus your message on subjects that potential customers can relate to.
Creating Content That Gets Results
Now that you have a better idea of what inspires your audience, you can begin to create content that truly resonates with them. Instead of trying to force upon your readers what you want them to hear, concentrate on their challenges, fears, or desires and present your message that way. Let’s take a closer look at a Facebook post from B Squared Media to illustrate this technique.
The post image speaks directly to concerns that many entrepreneurs have when considering outsourcing their social media. Should they pony up the dough for a pro? What could happen if they cheap out on their social media marketing? Naturally, you want to create content that addresses these fears.
Once you click through to the article, Ballard paints a vivid picture of the various obstacles entrepreneurs face when managing their own social media. Presenting a daunting list of challenges to your audience’s goals will get them interested in finding a better way.
She then presents a comprehensive list of benefits and advantages in favor of outsourcing your social media marketing. The end goal of your social selling content should be introducing your solution as the happy ending your customer was looking for.
The article concludes with a non-intrusive call-to-action prompting the reader to take the next step in the sales process. The reader’s buying motivation is at the peak, so this is the ideal time to convince them to take action!
You’ll be hard-pressed to find a better social selling blueprint than this.
The Takeaway
The key to great social selling is producing content that attracts customers to your products and services without sounding overly promotional. You don’t want your content to read like a sales page. Today’s customers are overloaded with marketing messages. They are tired of being “sold.” Social media marketers who are savvy enough to recognize this and adapt their message will have a huge advantage over those who continue to peddle their products traditionally.