Social media isn’t inexpensive, it’s just different expensive.
To do it well requires a tremendous time commitment, and regardless of
what your life and lifestyle entails, the time you spend on social comes
with an opportunity cost price tag. Thus, one of the characteristics
that sets adept practitioners of social media apart from less successful
adherents is wise use of time.
Using your limited social media time wisely is all about going beyond the obvious activities. If you’re doing the exact same things everyone else is doing in social, I can guarantee you will not have an advantage.
But, if you do some things differently, you may find activities where
the reward is disproportionate to the effort. These nine efficiencies —
hacks — are what you need to embrace right now.
1. Listen to Podcasts
Sure, they’ve been overcome by newer and sexier social flavors du jour but podcasts are still the best way to spend time when you’re not in front of a screen. Driving to work? Listen to Mitch Joel’s Six Pixels of Separation or MarketingProfs’ Marketing Smarts with Matthew Grant . Working out? Put on the earbuds and embrace John Jantsch’s Duct Tape Marketing , or Chris Penn’s Marketing Over Coffee . I’d love to have your ears on my weekly Social Pros Podcast, where we focus on real people doing real work in social media. (you can put your eyes on it too, because we run full text transcripts here).
2. Take and Curate Photographs
I’m not certain if a picture is worth a thousand words, but it’s definitely worth 140 characters. This is the year that photos challenge writing as the lingua franca of the social web: Instagram; Pinterest; Path; Google + using large thumbnails in the news feed; face recognition technology. All trend lines point toward photography.
If you’re not taking and posting pictures to dedicated photo networks
and cross-posting (when appropriate) to Twitter and Facebook, you’re
missing out on a huge opportunity to grow your network and see the world
through the eyes (or cell phone cameras) of thousands of new friends.
3. Read LinkedIn Today
It’s
pretty safe to say that most people keep their LinkedIn shrubbery more
closely pruned than their Facebook or Twitter trees. Thus, when content
is shared in LinkedIn, it often has a better chance to have been shared
by people you trust, or at least people with a modicum of business
sense. That’s why when I’m looking for a summarized source of what’s
happening in the categories I care about, I turn to Linkedin Today.
4. Buffer Your Links
One
of the most insidious time sucks in all of social media — especially
for content curators — is the “Oh, I found something cool. I should
share this on a social network or four!” keyboard fire that
spontaneously erupts a few times a day. This kills your focus and
productivity. The better approach is to set aside a chunk of time first thing each morning to find the handful of truly interesting content bon mots that are worthy, and use Buffer to automatically share them across your chosen social networks at pre-determined, optimized times. While you’re at it, add the Buffer button to your blog too. (disclosure: I’m an investor in Buffer)
5. Use “if this, then that” Recipes
If This, Then That (IFTTT) is the best social tool nobody ever mentions. It’s like a virtual assistant social media robot,
where you can create an almost infinite array of conditionally-defined,
time-saving tasks. Create an account and hook up all of your social
profiles, blogs, cell phone numbers, etc. Then sift through the mountain
of existing recipes to find processes that will save you effort.
For
example, want your Twitter profile photo to change automatically when
you update your Facebook profile photo? Done. Want to have your
favorited tweets automatically emailed to you? Done.Want to
automatically store your Instagram photos in a Dropbox account?
Done.Want to automatically post to your Pinterest board any link you add to Facebook? Done.
The opportunities are nearly endless at IFTTT.com.
6. Create a Stalker List
Grab a piece of paper, or open a new document and write down a list of the 20 people you most want to interact with in social media
— people you don’t know, but want to know. Then, create a list for
these people on Twitter and Facebook, and a circle for them on Google +.
Where applicable, visit their blogs and bookmark them. Also subscribe
to their feeds (via email, not RSS because you’ll check your email every
day, but not your RSS.) Find them on Instagram, Pinterest, and LInkedin
and connect in those places, too.
Done? Starting tomorrow, spend 15 minutes total per day interacting with some of these 20 people.
Not in a yucky way, and not in a pandering way. If you have something
interesting and relevant to add via Twitter, blog comment, or elsewhere,
do it. If you don’t, keep your hands to your sides. But pay attention
to your list of 20, and find ways to interact with and help them. In
short order, they will recognize you and you’ll have grown and leveled
up your network of social contacts. Make a new list every three to six
months.
7. Interact on Google +
Let me make this clear:
If you’re reading this, you should be on Google +. Not for the SEO
benefit — although that’s not insignificant. Not for the entertainment
value — although the large number of videos and GIFs there can be a
hoot. Do it for the opportunity to interact and engage with industry professionals in a comparatively quiet and efficient location. You want to get on Chris Brogan’sMari Smith’s? Or Brian Solis’s?
Google + is the place to do it. It’s Twitter before Oprah; Quora for
the masses; blog comments but easier to use. It may not last, but for
now Google + is the place to interact with people that no longer answer
every tweet. radar? Or
8. Blend Personal and Professional
Quit worrying about showing your real self in social media. If your social media bios talk only about who you are at work, you’re leaving attention on the table.
The reality is that unless you’re a sword swallower or an astronaut,
your personal life is more interesting than your professional life.
You’re a marketing director for a B2B software company? Yawn. You’re a
marketing director for a B2B software company, and you happen to grow
prize-winning roses? That, I’ll remember. What you love makes you
memorable in ways that what you do cannot. There’s a reason most of my
bios say I’m a tequila lover.
9. Quit Obsessing Over Case Studies
How much time do you spend reading case studies, trying to find evidence that social media will work for your company? Case studies should be used for ideation, not ratification.
Beyond the fact that case studies are often strategically irrelevant
because the company profiled is in a different industry, with different
goals, competitors, and customer expectations (among other variances),
perhaps the biggest problem with most social media success stories is
that the measures of that success are largely without real merit.
Even
in the best possible scenario, where the case study in question is
extraordinarily applicable to your business goals, social media
situation, KPIs, budget, timeline, customer personas, and more (which is
a rare alignment indeed), you are placing significant influential value
on one outcome. Worry less about what some other company is doing, and worry more about doing your own work.
Social
media is too complicated for you to be wasting your time, spinning your
wheels on activities and behaviors that won’t make much difference. I
know these nine hacks will save you time and propel you forward,
because I use them all consistently. But I’m sure I’ve missed many
terrific ideas. What are you doing to save time and boost your social
media efficiency.Source: SocialMediaToday.com
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