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Social Media Management - Setting Your Sights on the Right Sites
by Enzo F. Cesario
More Social Networking Articles

Published on this site: February 4th, 2010 - See
more articles from this month

One of the most amazing features about the Web is that it allows
many people to take advantage of features they did not originate.
Livejournal, Twitter, Digg, Reddit and each of the many other
Social Media sites were proposed and implemented with a
relatively small cadre of people, yet thousands of businesses are
finding ways to use these sites for promotion and improvement
every day. These sites allow for communication with the nearly
captive audience that is any business' dream.
Of course as is the case with any innovative process many
businesses jump in to Social Media Marketing without
understanding the problems at hand, and find themselves ignored
or scorned for seeming to be incompetent. In some cases this is a
failure of research, while in others it is a case of forgetting
that these audiences are indeed people with complex opinions and
attitudes. Combine these traits with the mass communication
capability of the Internet, and you have equal potential for word
of mouth fame or disaster.
Before jumping into SMM, every business needs to consider the
core options available to them and see just which ones truly suit
the organization and its needs. The leadership must consider the
objective of their business and the audience that will facilitate
this objective. Then they should consider not just which Social
Media sites this audience frequents, but how to reach them in a
way that makes them care. To that end, what follows is a short
review of some Social Media sites and a comparison of their roles
to highlight these issues.
Twitter
Twitter is Social Media at its barest; short messages are sent
out to anyone following the account, usually consisting of no
more than a brief comment or a short URL. US President Barack
Obama relied heavily on Twitter during his successful White House
bid, using it to promote rallies and campaign meetings. The very
brevity of Twitter gives it some of its most unexpected strength.
After all, what could be more mysterious than a message reading
'Tyler Park, 9:30 pm, bring chips and sunglasses'? Sunglasses
at night? Chips? It immediately gets the mind racing with
questions and interest.
Yet in a classic example illustrating that audiences are not
simply feedback devices, but actual people, consider the
gone-wrong story of the Republican Party in Connecticut. In an
effort to satire some of their opponents, the party set up 33
fake Twitter accounts impersonating state Democrats! Twitter shut
down the accounts citing terms of service clauses against
impersonating other individuals. The move raised a number of
ethical questions and is a classic example that users should
always ask if 'can' necessarily means 'should.'
Facebook and Myspace
The title of this section indicates a common perception in the
media that these competing services are offering essentially the
same product. In a sense this is true, as both offer users a
chance to join groups, manage and customize a profile, and use a
variety of applications for entertainment or business. They
represent the more involved tier of Social Media, combining
aspects of blogging and websites for easy access.
However the facts show that perceptions can be misleading.
Facebook only allows for plain text customization, whereas
Myspace allows users to customize with HTML and CSS. While this
may not sound like the greatest of distinctions it does make
Facebook more accessible to the 'casual' user of Social media,
while Myspace by default becomes the realm of those more
interested in website design. If your business' aim is to
recruit potential designers, this distinction alone tells you
where to focus your efforts.
Digg and Reddit
These sites and others like them are in essence an Internet
popularity contest. Users submit content, and other users vote on
whether they find it interesting. The theory of use here is that
these sites can be used as a benchmark for public opinion, based
on a reading of what is popular at any given time. Except it
isn't always that simple. Digg has faced criticism that the
site's owners have a great deal of direct influence on which
stories make it to the front page, which does call into question
whether it actually represents public opinion.
Not the Final Word, Just a Thought
Above we mentioned the curious case of Republicans attempting a
bit of satire and finding themselves called on ethical questions.
Another fact to consider is the irony vote. It is not unknown or
even uncommon for Internet hobbyists to vote en masse for an
irrelevant news story just to see if they can make it popular as
a jest. For example, the infamous and popular social site 4chan
seemingly organized massive, worldwide boycotts of the Church of
Scientology because it could.
Working with a professional social media marketing agency can
help ensure that your online efforts are focused on the right
sites, with the right message, to the right audience for maximum
ROI.
Above all, the lesson that must be learned is that the Internet
is not a static collection of people waiting to obey the input of
various broadcasters. Each audience is composed of many distinct
and individual users, many of whom are intelligent, critical
thinkers with opinions and ideas of their own. If your campaign
treats them as a switch to be thrown, it will fail, period. If
you want your campaign to succeed, treat these audiences with
respect and develop a campaign that communicates with rather than
at them.

Enzo F. Cesario is an online brand management specialist
and co-founder of Brandsplat, a social media company that
uses blogs, articles, videos and social media to drive
traffic to your site. For the free Brandcasting Report
go to http://www.BrandSplat.com/ or visit our blog at http://www.iBrandCasting.com/.


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