This summer has been a busy one for the staff at LinkedIn, the business-focused social network. There has been a complete site redesign, lots of new features rolled out, and the whole thing now has a more modern feel. But how will these changes - and others on the horizon - affect how you promote your company on LinkedIn?
Social networks, especially ones like Twitter where update lengths are limited, have frequently been blamed for a decrease in the quality of our communication. Often when chatting with friends online, we tend to abbreviate words and take a looser approach to things like grammar and punctuation. While this may not make much of a difference when using social media on a personal level, when you are using social networks for the purpose of business marketing you may want to keep a few things in mind.
It's already abundantly clear that social media marketing is a huge factor in how businesses develop their online presence and connect with their audience. It can be frustrating, then, when despite your best efforts, your social network clout seems to go nowhere and you don't see the growth you were hoping for. If this is the situation you find yourself in, here are a few things you can do to help get things back on the right track.
Now that all Facebook Pages for brands have been moved over to the Timeline format, if you haven't optimized your Timeline you're missing out. Some business owners have stubbornly avoided making changes on the basis that they never wanted to be moved over to Timeline, but now that it's a done deal, you may as well make the most of all the features that are now available.
In many ways, when you first have a look at Twitter it seems like a free-for all. Millions of users, everyone talking at the same time... it can be both exciting and frightening. Although it may look like there's no rhyme or reason to it and that you can say anything you want, how you present yourself does matter, especially if you're representing your business. Here are four things you want to avoid when you're trying to build a good social media reputation.
When you're focusing on social media marketing, you might think that the broadcasting is the whole point - after all, you want to get your message out to the greatest number of people, right?
We've all been there: you're building up your company's social media accounts, and it just seems to be going so slowly. You get a trickle here, a trickle there, but in the end the growth is not nearly what you'd hoped it would be. You look at the social media accounts of your competitors, of celebrities, even of your personal friends, and wonder why your numbers aren't up where theirs are.
Thanks to the internet and especially social media, the way business owners communicate with customers is changing rapidly.
If your company deals mostly in business-to-business (b2b) transactions, you may not think that there's anything a site like Pinterest can offer you. After all, on the surface it can appear that Pinterest is more like a turbo site for the Etsy crowd - perfect for artistic types who are selling handbags or home decor items. But if you're looking to up your b2b marketing game, Pinterest has a lot to offer you, too.
As with most success stories, tales of a meteoric social media campaign gone viral can make you believe that the same kind of success is right around the corner for you, too. You might imagine sitting back while the visitors roll in on your Twitter and Facebook pages, and while you wonder why you didn't get into social media marketing earlier.
The labyrinth of ever-evolving Facebook changes can be difficult to keep up with, but there are always a few tips and tricks out there to help make your life easier on the world's largest social network. Here are a few recent tips that can help you navigate the site more efficiently, and get more out of your efforts.
Most businesses and individuals are on all the major social networks. This means that marketing for Facebook, Twitter, and the like becomes somewhat easier over time, as there is a lot of group knowledge about the best ways to reach out to an audience via these regularly-used channels. But what if there's a social network out there that is a little more tailored to the focus of your business?