When I ask companies or clients what their content strategy is for their social media engagement, I usually hear one of three responses …
Each of these answers is perfectly reasonable …
Social media content is its own unique beast for one key reason: when you talk in social media, people talk back … and you can never predict what exactly it is that they’ll say.
I think this is fundamentally a “game changer,” that makes social media content worthy of a new set of rules.
From content to analytics to optimization, as social media matures and grows, we’re learning that it often requires its own unique approaches and processes.
In the case of content, social media is comprised heavily of words, but also just as heavily of communications … the ways in which we exchange that content with other humans in real time.
The intersection of the two is uncharted terrain that is both an art to navigate as well as a science to strategize for.
In this new area, traditional Web rules don’t necessarily apply.
If you take your existing content strategy and apply it to the social web, it may be successful (particularly if you are using social media as a broadcast platform), but it won’t create the kind of rabid brand evangelists that are the holy grail of most marketing plans.
Broadcasting a schedule of brand messages in an engaging or entertaining way can convince someone to “fan” or “follow” your brand, but …
… you need to establish a connection or build a relationship.
And that means using social media SOCIALLY.
Do you have a content strategy for that?
Much of what we could call “social media content strategy” is just revisiting the basics of human psychology and communications that are the seeds of most of the marketing and PR practices we employ today.
What makes us successful in our virtual engagements is the same thing that makes us successful in our face-to-face ones – having the ability to explore and improvise within the gray area that occurs between creating words and exchanging them.
Social media has just made that space a little more gray and a lot more lively.
In social media, your “content” won’t always take the shape of a collection of “on brand” phrases, but rather, will consist of the words you develop and use to:
As a society, we were once great at this navigating this gray area. But after decades of building layers of communication bureaucracy between marketer and consumer, we’ve become pretty rusty at just plain ole talking to each other.
It's as if we've all been using the "communicating with people" script so long that all of our inherent improvisation skills have atrophied.
I invite you to come explore this topic with me at our Kane Camp event on Thursday, April 15. We’re going to break it down and talk about how to develop a strategy for choosing the words and communication style to use for your social media engagement.
While this is still an evolving concept (I've never seen it covered at a conference, webinar, etc.), even if I can’t provide all the answers, I can promise that you’ll leave asking the right questions.
Hope to see you there.
I’m a consultant, strategist, author, educator, and speaker with more than 30 years of professional experience. I’m passionately curious, fairly sassy, kinda dorky and seriously good at what I do.
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