Social Marketing
Social Marketing
Social Marketing
• Whether it’s related to the environment, public health, safety, or community development,
marketing for good is a methodology for creating change
To make sure your campaign is as successful as possible, you need to plan and strategize the
campaign in advance.
• If you have a new feature coming out, a holiday that you want to capitalize on, or maybe you’re
releasing a brand new product, there are always plenty of reasons to start a new social media
marketing campaign.
• But in order to make sure your campaign is as successful as possible, you need to plan and
strategize the campaign in advance.
• In this blog post, I'll share seven steps you need to go through to help plan a social media
campaign to improve your chances of achieving your goals.
Ms. Amira Zainab Khanum M, Faculty,
DOS&R in Business Administration,
Tumkur University, Tumkur
1. Set campaign Goals
The first question you need to ask before a campaign is: why am I running this campaign? Answering
this question will determine other steps you take during your campaign
Generally, common goals for running social media campaigns include:
➢ Increasing brand awareness, Acquiring leads, Increasing sales, Acquiring customers, Increasing
engagement
• However, after setting these goals, you need to be specific. What level of brand awareness do
you want to achieve with your campaigns? More website traffic? 2,000 new social media
followers?
• To set effective goals, they need to be specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and time-bound
(SMART).
• Then, after setting your goals, it's vital to state the metrics you'll use to measure the achievement
of your goals.
Ms. Amira Zainab Khanum M, Faculty,
DOS&R in Business Administration,
Tumkur University, Tumkur
2. Create Buyer Personas
• Even if you create the best campaign content ever, if you're not targeting the right audience with
your content, the campaign will likely fail. That's why you need to understand your ideal target
before a social media campaign.
• A buyer persona is a document that contains extensive details of your ideal customers. This helps
you to create messages in your campaigns that can resonate with your target audience.
• When running a social media campaign, you're likely to get better results when you focus on a
few social media channels
• From your buyer persona, you have an idea of your ideal audience's favourite social media
channels. Most times, it also depends on the type of product or service you're offering. For instance,
LinkedIn is a popular social media network for B2B companies because many decision-makers are
present on the platform.
• Another way to select social media channels for your campaign is to look at past results on your
website analytics. Which channels have referred more visitors to your website in the past? Which
channels have brought in more leads?
• Stating these channels will affect your campaign as each channel has its best practices. Furthermore,
each channel has its best content type and posting frequency. For example, what works on Twitter
won’t necessarily work on Instagram and there’s a huge difference between LinkedIn and most other
major social networks.
Ms. Amira Zainab Khanum M , Faculty,
DOS&R in Business Administration,
Tumkur University, Tumkur
4. Have a Social Media Calendar
Your social media calendar will help ensure that you don’t miss any important steps in your strategy, while also
helping you be more productive with your time
• If you're running a social media campaign, you'll inevitably need tools at various stages of your
campaign. You can increase your chances of success if you have a list of the tools you want to
use at each stage of your social media campaign
• Content creation
• Content curation
• Social media management
• Social media analytics
• Performing competitive analysis can help you understand what your competitors’ strategy is like
as well as see what tactics and channels work for them and which don’t. This can then inform
your own social media campaign strategy
• Apart from watching your competitors for their great practices, you also need to watch out for
their mistakes Thereby, you can exploit them to gain an edge on your competitors.
• Tracking performance for your campaign helps to determine the success or failure of your
campaigns. More so, it can provide insights to help adjust your social media strategy even while
a campaign is still running.
• Another benefit you get from tracking your metrics is that it can necessitate changes for your
future campaigns. It's vital to note though, that the metrics you track for your campaigns will
depend on your goals.
• For instance, you can use UTM parameters to track traffic from your campaign to your website.
A tool such as Google Analytics will provide details about traffic from a source and its behaviour
on your website
• To increase the chances of success for your social media marketing campaign, you need a robust
plan in place before you start.
• This starts with setting your goals. Then, you need to understand your audience, use a social
content calendar to plan the actual content, use the right tools to run your campaign, and track your
campaign performance throughout.
• By following these steps, you’re well on your way to developing a successful social media
campaign.
• Over time, as social channels have become paramount to every marketer’s toolkit, the term social
marketing has taken on a new meaning that has been widely adopted and accepted within the
modern marketing world. At Marketo, we define social marketing as the strategy of including social
channels in every aspect of your marketing. In our guide we state “social is more than just a
channel or a tactic, it is a strategy that has to be present in every aspect of your marketing”. In this
case, social marketing refers to the the practice of infusing your entire marketing strategy with
social elements. We believe that the term social media marketing just isn’t accurate to how
marketers should be using social channels in their marketing. To define what a social strategy
strictly in the terms of social media is quite limiting.
The government has cottoned on to the advantages of social marketing to create camapign
engagement and deliver a message without preaching to the audience. But it's still easy to get it
wrong. The CIM's Mark Stuart looks at what commercial marketers can learn from their social
counterparts and how to foster better dialogues with consumers.
• Social marketing, broadly speaking, is the application of techniques from commercial marketing
and, to an extent social sciences, for social good. Currently, the UK government is recognising
its importance and much investment is being allocated to social marketing, particularly in the
NHS. Witness the number of campaigns recently for responsible drinking, smoking cessation,
and diet and exercise (such as the Change 4 Life programme)
For example, in smoking cessation campaigns, social marketing approaches can identify why
smokers act the way they do, what the barriers to them changing their behaviours are and offer
solutions that will achieve ‘buy-in’ from the patient. This is like the way commercial marketing offers
a process of exchange that shows people it’s to their advantage to make certain choices, rather
than others.
• The smoke alarm ‘pull your finger out’ campaign, for example, is a textbook piece of social
marketing – especially the reminder that comes at the end of the ad break. We don’t just want to
give you a message, we want to say something that you will buy into, agree with and identify with,
and be able to change behaviour with a minimum of inconvenience.
• A significant amount of social marketing is carried out in health areas, but it has other applications
too. Social marketing can be used for environmental schemes, for example to influence public
transport initiatives, because it can show why people don’t use public transport, what they would
like to see instead and show how to improve the plan.
1. Irregular Posting
• One of the biggest mistakes companies make is not integrating social media into their
daily business tasks. Do you post once every week when you find the time? Or randomly
when you come across an interesting article?
• This won’t work. Brands like State Bicycle Company have attributed their social media
success to frequent and regular posting on a schedule
• When you’re fighting with large numbers for space on social media, there’s a limited probability of
your content even making it into the intended social media feeds. Of that limited reach, even
fewer people pay attention to your posts and follow through on your Call To Actions.
• This means you have a small window to introduce your message and have it heard. To make the
best of that window your brand has to have a strong identity, a personality. Something consistent
for your audience to recognize and connect with
• When your social media marketing isn’t focused on your niche and buyer personas, you’re very
likely to attract the wrong followers, people who may never buy or engage with your brand.
• More often than not, your posts aren’t geared towards your target audience. This is mostly
because you aren’t aware of exactly who your target audience is, and more importantly what
their behavioral patterns are. Unless you have those details down and documented, they won’t
reflect in the content you create and will affect the impact of your content.
5. Unplanned Content
• Several companies outsource their writing and have multiple authors involved in the process.
When doing that, it is very hard to maintain an overview of the content strategy to ensure that
it is well in place and fits your plan.
• The consequence is disorganized content without intention and direction. Unplanned content
leaves you little control over the overall effect that it may have on your social media audience.
• Enough with the text. It has been ages since many institutes proved that visual content not
only attracts more attention, but prompts more shares and engagement in general. Even if
you’re design–challenged, there are tools that can help you succeed with visual content.
➢ Ethics
• Ethics is the art and science of determining good and bad or right and wrong moral behaviour of a
single or group of people.
➢ Marketing
• Marketing is the science and art of exploring, creating and delivering value to satisfy the needs of a
target market at a profit
- Philip Kotler
➢ Marketing Ethics
• Marketing ethics is an area that deals with the moral principle behind marketing. Ethics in marketing
applies to different spheres such as in product, pricing, placing(Distribution), promotion and
advertising etc..
Ms. Amira Zainab Khanum M , Faculty,
DOS&R in Business Administration,
Tumkur University, Tumkur
➢ Why We Need Ethics in Marketing
• When an organisation behave ethically, customers develop more positive attitudes about the firm,
its products, and its services,
• To create values or trust with key stakeholders
• To build good image about the organization in the minds of customer, employees, shareholders
and society.
➢ PACKAGING
• Label information
• Packaging graphics
• Packaging safety
• Environmental implication of packaging
➢ PLACING ( DISTRUBUTION )
• Product distribution ( or place ) is one of the four elements
of the marketing mix
• Distribution of product or services is transporting them from
manufacture to stockiest, wholesalers, retailer and then to
consumers
• Influencer Marketing
• Chatbots and Al
• Employee Advocacy
• Driving Sales Through Social Media
• The Importance of Engagement
• The Rise of Groups
• Transparency
• Stories
• Live Videos
• Importance of Messaging
• Augmented Reality
Ms. Amira Zainab Khanum M, Faculty,
DOS&R in Business Administration,
Tumkur University, Tumkur
Ms. Amira Zainab Khanum M , Faculty,
DOS&R in Business Administration,
Tumkur University, Tumkur