Make it personal - why sharing is caring

Make it personal

To make a difference, make it personal…

If you want people to engage with what you’re sharing, build a connection to it.

If you’re sharing it, you are the connection.

So, if you’re connecting others to something (a story, a page, a cause, a fundraiser, a blog or a friend) tell them why you care enough to share.

If you don’t want to share your connection perhaps that’s an opportunity for reflection … why ARE you sharing it?  Are you sharing out of obligation?  Has sharing just become habitual?  If you don’t want to be personally associated with it, why not?  Why don’t you want to be connected to it?  What has you feeling that you SHOULD share but you don’t want to commit your own words to it?  Does it put you ‘on the hook’ for something, making you accountable?  Perhaps it’s that you don’t really believe in it…  The reasons are likely to be as unique as you are.

“Without strategy the content is just stuff, and the world has enough stuff.” *

Our strategy is our reason why…  If we don’t have a reason for sharing something, should we?  Isn’t the world already full of “stuff” …  aren’t our news feeds and our emails already overfull with things we may not actually care about?

So, you’re saying Don’t Share?

Don’t get me wrong – I’m not writing this to discourage you from sharing, I’m writing it to admonish you to make what you share meaningful in a trifecta of ways – to you, to the person you’re sharing for and to the rest of the world.  Your personal connection may just be the difference between people scrolling on by or stopping to check it out.

If you’re not sure what to write when you’re sharing ask yourself: Why am I supporting this cause/friend/whatever?  What is important to me about this?  What is it about this thing I’m sharing that means something to me?

Chances are if it means something for you, it might also mean something significant for those who you are sharing with.  Chances are people will care BECAUSE you care, and even if they don’t, that’s OK.  It’s not for everyone.

Be generous.  Make it personal.

I, for one, am always keen to know what’s important to you and why.

Heather x

 

PS.  To clarify, I’m talking here about sharing other people’s posts, pages, causes etc, because I see so many of these pass me by without a note of explanation as to why people are sharing them.  That said, it applies to whatever you write/post/share really…  🙂

*I’ve seen this quote attributed to many different people, and I don’t like using quotes without crediting the author, however I’ve not been able to pin down the true author.  I’ve seen it credited to Arjun Basu, Seth Godin and others.  I’ll thank each of them here. 

Putting the Social into Social Media Marketing

Is your Social media really social?

My husband hates social media.

Thinks it is turning the world ‘anti-social’.

He’s right.  To a point.  (I couldn’t let him be fully right, that wouldn’t seem… right… 😉 )

If our only interactions with people become a ‘like’ and the obligatory birthday message, it’s hardly what I’d call social.  If we spend all our time staring at our screens (yes, I can be guilty of this sometimes) then it could be perceived as anti-social.  Six forty-something ladies sitting at a restaurant I was at the other night were all staring at their phones, taking selfies and posting updates.  It was a strange thing to watch, and certainly seemed a bit anti-social.

Likewise, when we’re using Facebook pages for business, if all we’re doing is promoting ourselves, and not truly communicating with our ‘network’ then that may not come across as very social either.

So, when it comes to social media marketing for small business, we come up against this hurdle.

How do we make sure our social media isn’t anti-social?

Firstly, I think one of the keys is going back to what social media used to be called.  Social networks.  Whether it is a personal ‘social network’ or a business ‘social network’ we all have them.  The  benefit comes in how we use them.

My hubby, being one of these non-social media types, rings up his mates when he wants to know where they bought something, or who they contacted for help about something.  Social media allows us to do this same kind of thing in one post to many people, rather than several phone calls.

As businesses,  we’re on the other side of this – hoping that when that ‘call for recommendation’ goes out, that we are the ones mentioned (in a good way) for who to contact.  Which means amongst other things, that:

  • We need to do good work
  • We need to be human, and show that we care
  • We need ways to let people know that we do good work and that we care

Social media (or social networks) allow us to do this.  Notice that nowhere on that list does it say “Sell your stuff”. It doesn’t mean you can’t use social media for that, you certainly can, if you do it right.  Do  too much of it, though, and you become like that friend who decides to sell Amway**, who people just slowly step away from and try not to make eye contact with for fear of getting the “I’ve got a business opportunity I want to talk to you about” speech.

Let’s step through it then..

Do good work

I reckon I pretty much need to leave this one to you, after all it’s your business. As a result, I’m sure you care enough to give it your best, but I’ll give you an example anyway.

If you’re a tradie, turn up when you say you’re going to, and if for some reason you can’t, call your customer out of courtesy and let them know when you will.  When you do the job, do it properly the first time.  Communicate with your customer and keep them updated.  Clean up after yourself and leave your customer’s location looking better than when you turned up.  In other words, treat people how you would expect to be treated.

It  shouldn’t be that hard.

So – on to bullet point 2 –

Be human, show that you care

If we want to be part of a social network, it pays to contribute to that network.  It doesn’t always mean money.  Donate your time to a charity, be supportive of local events, share other people’s posts, encourage others, sponsor something – if you have the money, encourage your staff, share their fundraising efforts and help them reach their goals.  Do something for others, this is your opportunity to invest in social karma.

And so then…

Let people know that you’re human and you care

There’s pretty much an untested*** rule which says your Facebook posts should be 80/20 as a ratio of “other stuff” to “sales generating”..  Subsequently, many struggle with how to come up with the 80%.  If you treat social networks as ‘human networks’ that you care about, the result is a fair bit easier.  If you’re posting something three times a week, finding three things that are about your staff, your community, your ideas, your ideals etc shouldn’t be so hard.  Write them down.  Schedule them.  Make a calendar…

Talk to your audience on social media as you might talk to them if you were at a party, introducing them to other people, finding out about them, learning what drives them, what they love, who they love and what they’re involved with.  Become interested and pass that interest on.  Subsequently, you’ll find that your audience is also more interested in you.

Putting the social back into social media marketing

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If you don’t want to seem anti-social on social media, BE social.

Social media – whichever flavour you like of it – really works best when we remember it’s origins.

Social networks.

See you later, my friends.

Heather x

 

* * Not that there’s anything wrong with that, yada, yada and apologies to Seinfeld writers for paraphrasing and in advance to all MLM devotees!

*** Could be tested, probably has been, but finding a source for it specifically is tricky.

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The right approach to LinkedIn

There is a lot to be said for making the right approach

Overnight, I’ve accumulated 10 (count them) LinkedIn requests.

right approach to LinkedIN requests

 

 

Clearly, I’m very desirable.  😉

But let’s get serious.  Out of the ten people requesting to be linked, I have never met and don’t know 8 of them, I know OF one of them through sport (only by name, never met him) and one was a real estate agent who didn’t get the job of selling our house in Sydney nearly three years ago.

And, out of those ten people I don’t know, I got this message from 9 of them.

right approach to LinkedIN request message

Now, I don’t know about you, but my personal view on people I don’t know on LinkedIn is that if you can’t take the time to introduce yourself a little more than the cursory LinkedIN provided message, then I’m going to assume you’re trying to sell me something.

And I’m just not keen on that.

If LinkedIN is the “World’s largest professional network” it seems such a shame that the most professional approach a person might make towards a new contact is a form letter that is only one sentence long.

Now, I’m not against “linking up” with people I don’t know yet.  What’s that old saying “strangers are only friends we haven’t met yet” (don’t totally agree, but that’s another topic altogether) but the gist is OK.  There may well be people who are interesting enough and have some mutually beneficial reason to be “linked” – and in fact, may even be a sales person for a product or service I don’t know I need yet – but there’s a pretty good chance if that is going to happen, I’m going to want a little more of an introduction than “I’d like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn”.

Imagine being in a business networking meeting and you get to the part where you have tea or coffee at the end and do the “networking” part. Now imagine walking up to someone and saying “I’d like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn” … and the response is???

My response would be to stare and wonder whether I’d missed something.  You know – the niceties, the courtesies, the introduction .  Who are you? (Really.) What do you represent?  Are you interested in me, or just in what you can sell me?

Meeting in an online ‘networking’ environment shouldn’t really be any different.  If you’re linking up with someone you’ve met before, remind them of where you’ve met and exchange some pleasantries.  If you’re linking up with someone you haven’t met, let them know something about yourself and show that you are interested in them as well (though not in a creepy stalker like way, that probably won’t go over too well either).

If you want to be part of my “most professional network” this is pretty important, but I also think that regardless of who you want to “friend” and on what network, a personal approach will go a long way.  Although we are in a world of online networks which may seem disconnected, more and more it seems that in work and business who we want to work with is based on having a strong connection to people.  It’s important to start out on the right foot.

And now I’m off to reply to the ONE person who took the right approach and wrote a personal introduction.  My apologies to you David, for taking so long to get around to it.  Busy, busy…

Onwards and upwards,

Heather x