Who or What is Your Social Persona?

February 28th, 2012 Nick Stamoulis Posted in Social & Viral Marketing, social media marketing, social persona, social profiles No Comments »

When implementing your social media marketing campaigns, one of the first things you have to do (before you even think about building your profiles) is decide who or what is going to be your social persona. Are you going to build your social brand around an actual person (say the VP of Marketing) or stick with the company’s name (@CompanyX)? There is no “right” way to build your social personality, but there are pros and cons to each option that you should consider before you jump blindly into social media. The ever increasing reach of social networks means that companies can’t afford to make any big mistakes or try to change direction mid-campaign.

Creating a social persona around your brand:
The beauty of building your social persona around your brand is that is cuts down on brand confusion. Someone searches for your company in Google and your Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and (now) Google+ profiles fill in behind your company website, increasing your online presence and helping your dominate the SERP with your own websites. Since it is so easy to brand your social profiles with photos, logos, links, company biographies and so forth, consumers can trust that the company they follow on Twitter or Like on Facebook is the one they meant to connect with.

The downside of creating a social persona around your brand is that you might lack some of the “personal” elements that consumers have come to expect from social networking. You have to be careful that your brand’s social profiles don’t become another soapbox for you to advertise your company and products. Your brands unique personality needs to shine through; otherwise you aren’t giving anyone a reason to connect with your company.

Creating a social persona around a person:

The best part about building a social persona for your brand around a member of your staff is that it lends more accountability to your social profiles. Consumers and other industry professionals know exactly who they are talking to on social networking sites, not just nameless employee X who is monitoring the Facebook page. People want to do business with other people, so having an employee act as the voice of the company goes a long way is building consumer trust.

One of the cons of relying on a real person to be the face of your brand’s social media marketing is that if that employee were to ever leave your company, they could completely hijack all your social media success. Let’s say your VP of Marketing (@theirname) has over 1,500 Twitter followers, most of which the acquired during their seven years with your company. If they quit/are fired/find a new job/retire and take their Twitter handle with them, there goes your Twitter presence and you are back at square one. There was actually a lawsuit in 2011 over the very situation.

In order to maximize the pros and minimize the cons, I’ve actually taken the time to create both branded and personal social networking profiles. It gives me a few more touch points I can use to connect with my target audience, helps me grow Brick Marketing’s overall online presence and lets my social connections pick how they would prefer to interact with me and my company.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Website Marketing Should Focus On Your Website!

August 15th, 2011 Nick Stamoulis Posted in inbound marketing, Internet Marketing, social media marketing, social profiles No Comments »

On more than one occasion I have come across a marketing blog post claiming that businesses should just do away with their company sites and turn their social networking profiles into final destination of all their website marketing efforts. For the record, I 100% disagree with this (and it’s not just because I am an SEO professional). While social media may be at the core of how we connect, communicate and grow online, a social profile cannot replace the value of a well optimized website. Your website has to remain the central hub of your website marketing.

Social media marketing is a powerful and useful tool when handled appropriately. It allows you to connect with your customers on a personal level and stay connected with them throughout their day. Thanks to the increase in smartphone usage, your target audience is almost always online, no matter where they are or what they are doing. However, social media marketing is not the magic bullet to your online marketing needs. It is only one more piece of the puzzle.

Think of your Internet marketing like a bicycle wheel. Each of the spokes represents a different online marketing tactic: off-site link building, content marketing, on-site optimization, local SEO, social media and so forth. All of those things connect back to your main website, the hub of your wheel. You can’t afford to be missing any of the spokes, because it weakens the effectiveness of your wheel. But you can’t even build the wheel without a strong and constant center to hold everything together.

The Internet is constantly evolving. This means that the spokes of your wheel can be replaced at anytime. Social media isn’t going anywhere anytime soon, but there are also no guarantees that it will stick around forever or remain as powerful as it is today. That’s why you have to diversify your website marketing efforts so as to not rely on one source of traffic. If Facebook where to disappear tomorrow for some reason, what would you be left with? Would you still have a strong online presence or would you fall of the face of the Internet?

Note: The same argument could be made for your website if Google were to shut down, hence the need for diversity.

Businesses should never favor one website marketing tactic (social media, SEO and content marketing) over another. The most successful websites are the ones that develop and integrated approach. But your website has to be the thing that pulls all your website marketing together.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Creating Company Descriptions and Profiles – Video Tip

May 24th, 2011 Nick Stamoulis Posted in Branding, Marketing Videos, social media, social networking, social profiles No Comments »

There are many places online where you’ll have the opportunity to publish a company description (directory listing) or create a company profile (social networking site). Each of these descriptions/profiles needs to relate to one another, keeping the branding and messaging the same. By having a synergy across all platforms, your present a much stronger online brand personality and avoid confusing your audience with different messages.

Watch the SEO video tip here:

AddThis Social Bookmark Button





OK!