I bring up this lengthy example (see the episode here if you haven't already) because the timing of the episode was pretty spot-on. Last week I spoke at the eCommerce Summit in New Orleans (I'll be sure to post about that later this week), and Brian Smith from ComparisonEngines.com was on the New Media Panel with me. After I gave an overview of social media and its benefits, he came to the podium and asked the single most important question every business should ask themselves before diving into the sordid world of upvotes, stumbles, tweets, pownces, and photo streams: "Do you need to do this right now?"
Brian went on to say that too often, businesses dive into the new web big buzz thing because they feel that they need to keep up with the latest trends on the web. However, is social media truly your top priority now? I met a lot of eBay sellers and small business owners at the eCommerce Summit, and they often either worked for themselves or were part of an extremely small team. These people barely have time to SEO their site, and yet they're asking about which social media sites they should join and if they can create the same profile for each site.
Going back to The Office and last week's episode, if you watch the show or are remotely familiar with it, you'd clearly know that making a fancy website and offering a super cool social networking feature shouldn't be Dunder Mifflin's top priority. More specifically, what will a social networking section accomplish for them? Do teenagers and young hipsters order bulk reams of paper? Too often people think "I need to do that!" without first asking themselves whether they need it at all.
Both Brian and The Office taught me (in both a pointed and comical way) that before diving into something as time-consuming as social media, you need to ask yourself the following questions:
- Is this a top priority, or are there other, more important things I need to take care of first? (There's no point in having 30 social media profiles if they point to an ugly, poorly SEO'd, horribly converting website.)
- Is social media appropriate for your business?
- What goals are you trying to accomplish by engaging in social media marketing?
I *love* The Office. When my favorite shows and SEOmoz collide, I'm a really happy girl :)
Let me speak from the perspective of a small business owner who does all her own SEO. Social media is tricky. It's not so much all-or-nothing as, "What parts of social media can really work for me?"
I'm not going to get a lot of value from trying to land on Digg's homepage, but I've put a lot of time into my blog, and when I (and my readers) submit my blog posts to StumbleUpon and Delicious, I get a ton of traffic, links, buzz, etc. from that.
I've learned how to use my own expertise and writing skills for the benefit of my business, and I'll put that on par with having great customer service, fantastic items to sell, a usable website, and all the other things that go into a successful online business.
Even eBay sellers create Squidoo lenses, and use social media to build links to their eBay stores, etc. I personally don't think that you can have a successful online business without engaging in some sort of SEO, and social media almost has to be a subset of that.
That was an awesome episode! I wrote a bit about it here https://www.jordankasteler.com/utah-seo-pro-blog/social-media-education/ stating how social media is going mainstream on TV and in schools.
Nice one! Clearly great minds think alike. :P
You make good points. Sure, it seems as if social marketing can be beneficial for a company, but not necessarily your company.
In addition, if you are going to engage, you should take the time to learn the lay of the land, continue to educate yourself and your team, and be consistent.
Many times, our company does not follow through on what we start and we leave marketing 'floaters.' If you are going to tip the glass, then see it through to the bottom. Cheers.
Fantastic analogy. I couldn't agree more.
(nice avatar, by the way! It's biz-nez, it's biz-nez time!)
Great analysis here Rebecca! There are many young companies who are mistakingly spending too much time on social network sites. I myself made that mistake to see very little results. When looking at the grand scheme of things I should have been spending more of my time performing on-site SEO and building links. I've learned my lesson, that's for sure!
Top notch, Rebecca. The "must have it now" syndrome is common, especially among small to mid-sized companies.
The same point could be made for many of the latest buzz trends in web technology. Do you really need RSS feeds if your site markets knitting supplies? (How hot could knitting news be, anyway?)
Do you need a blog if you can't write a lick? And don't have time to be blogmaster?
If you and your business don't have the resources to do it right, wait and focus on lesser-priced priorities.
Finally, I can't help but wonder how many site owners launch, clueless as to what this adventure will ultimately cost. We've all run into the undercapitalized web site. What do you say when you know the site is circling the drain?
Thanks for the thought-provoking post,
Paul Lalley
[email protected]
I think this is a good point rebecca, and something brands and clients have to consider (agencies simply do what they're asked to do - but maybe should point this out more) in that you need to have objectives and a plan just as anywhere else...
not just "lets do social" "wow cool - how much $$ do you want" "dunno lets just do it".....
"huh why didnt that work?" "ah well"
as that approach seems to common...
Man, have I caught myself doing that a bit too much.
I'm now under wife-review, where I'm not allowed to jump on the latest thing until she tells me it's okay to. I think she only knows from some stupid forum, but at least I'm getting more work done. Heh.
When I'm not twittering...
Unfortunately, too many people get caught up in the buzzword of the day when they really need to be focusing on getting the foundation in order. I see a lot of people that want to "do social media" when they need to be doing some content writing or rethinking their hideous navigation structure. Social Media should be step 10 of the 10 step SEO strategy, but like many books, people skip chapters 1-9 to get to the cool stuff. But if your site sucks, work on that first. Besides, traffic that doesn't convert is just wasted bandwidth anyway. ;)
Hi I think Social Media Marketing is very important for branding. Day by da people are more net savvy. So it is the high time of concentrate in social media marketing. One thing need to remember SMM not an one day cricket match..
Thanks for the article Rebeca. Sorry for my ingnorance, but isn't Social Media a great way of branding? Link building? You may not accomplish other goals as to filling out forms or selling stuff, but you are branding your Company. Isn't that a good strategy for branding?
Social media marketing is great for a lot of things--link building, branding, reputation management, networking--but it can be time consuming, and it's something you should be prepared to take on after you've got other priorities straightened out.
It is not time consuming to do SMM. You just have to "submit" stuff. It's is not a rocket science.
regards,
Zafar Ahmed
I do recall that Creed has a blog - or the Word program that Ryan told him was a blog. That's social networking, right? :)
You can read his Creed Thoughts, and they are as oddball as you'd expect.
For some reason, I'm late to this post but since we're talking about Creed.
My favorite Creed line thus far had to be from last week's episode (Career Day) when everyone left back at the office is talking about why they have to hang out when no one in charge is in the office.
Creed's argument to others as they are debating the issue:
"Yeah, and I got all of my work done months ago."
Classic Creed.
Last week's episode of The Office taught me something also... not to get on the dance floor when I am too coked-up ;)
This idea really goes for any marketing vehicle. Learn what it takes to use the technique to its fullest and all that it entails. If anyone has a solid model for a good cost-beni analysis for social media, I'd love to see it....coughRANDcough...
Excellent Post, I believe that this is totally true. Before developing the SMM there are a lot of other area's that small businesses could work on. By optimizing and developing your websites content it could attract far more traffic to your website than any form of SMM can. This blog offers both a funny, but informative reason why company's should research before investing to much time into SMM strategies.
Rebecca,
Excellent post. As part of a team for a small business, we often get overwhelmed with all the possible options to pursue and have to sit back and evaluate which ones to give priority to. We had to drop social media for the immediate future and I can certainly relate to the post.
New Orleans is only a two hour drive for me - but I still couldn't make it and to think I missed meeting people from two of my favorite companies ....SEOmoz and Comparison Engines/Singlefeed :(
Oh well. Maybe next time!
Looking forward to your post about the eCommerce summit at New Orleans.
Manjula
I find that my clients love to hear about social media, the way they used to love to hear about SEO. I think it has to do with the word "Digg". It makes it sound cool, like something the kids are saying and they want to be in on it. Even "Stumble Upon" almost sounds cool. Ya digg?
Hi Rebecca. I just watched the episode you linked to and I didn't see anything about websites. Maybe it's my error though. Anyway, I like your article.
It was a brief conversation early on in the episode. Maybe you missed it?