50 Steps to Establishing a Consistent Social Media Practice

50You’ve told the boss that you’re going to implement social media stuff for your organization, and in your mind, you’ve decided that means an account on Twitter and a blog. Maybe there’s a bit more to it than that. For instance, what are your goals? Are you there to show customers and prospective new customers that you care? Are you there to solve customer issues? Are you building awareness and attempting new forms of digital marketing? Knowing this up front makes a world of difference.


In the mean time, here are some things you might consider for when it comes time to implement. They range from ideas for starting out, things to augment your efforts with, writing ideas, next steps, and metrics. You’re welcome to share this with others. Please link back to [chrisbrogan.com] and especially this post if you use it.

50 Steps to Establishing a Consistent Social Media Practice

  1. If you’re blogging, make that a home base for all your other efforts.
  2. Re-read the “passports” section of this post and use it to think about your blog promotion efforts.
  3. Pick 3 social networks to join based on where your customers might be. 3 might sound like too few, but it probably will be too many.
  4. On those networks and on your “passport” accounts, make sure you link everything back to the blog.
  5. Get a second (maybe even a 3rd) person in the company to build accounts on these places. Nice to have backups, in case you get busy.
  6. Build an editorial calendar to think about your posting schedule and subject matter.
  7. Subscribe to 50 or more blogs in a similar space as yours, including competitors, and any industry blogs.
  8. On all your presence points, be human, and write a human-sounding profile. Use a human-seeming profile picture. (Did I mention “human?”)
  9. After you’ve written your first blog post, take some time to comment on some of those 50 blogs, but NOT about your first post.
  10. Set up a few searches as explained in this post.

    grocery store

  11. Make sure it’s easy for people to subscribe to your blog, via a reader and also via email. (Nearly 50% of my blog subscribers are receiving [chrisbrogan.com] in email).
  12. Run periodic checks of your blog/site using Website Grader to see if you’re technically sound and findable.
  13. Use tagging and other metadata to improve your blog’s search features. Most newer blog software has this built in. If not, look for plugins.
  14. For whatever reason, graphics in posts improve audience. Check out Flickr’s Creative Commons pool for how to use which kinds of graphics appropriately.
  15. Consider a nice clean theme for your blog’s design. There are many free themes for different blogs, and some inexpensive ones like Thesis that are worth every penny.
  16. Outside of your blog, be sure to update/refresh the information on your social networks every two or three weeks. USE the networks more often, but refresh your profiles and other info.
  17. Seek out opportunities to guest post on more popular blogs in your space. Don’t be spammy and over-link to your own site/posts. Add value.
  18. On social networks, look for ways to contribute, even when it’s not directly related to your company/product.
  19. Continue building relationships outside of having a specific need. Don’t ONLY try to build relationships with customers, for example.
  20. Remember that social networks are a great place to look for hiring prospects, competitors, etc.

    Gears

  21. To create consistent content, read daily, and not just for your industry. Skim, synthesize, and post.
  22. Use notepad files to jot post ideas down when you don’t have a moment to write. Return frequently.
  23. Riff off other blog posts you like, and add some value beyond linking back to those original posts (and always link back to those posts).
  24. Go to the grocery store news stand and find popular magazines. Convert their story titles to blog post titles for your field. (Hat tip Brian Clark, who taught me this).
  25. Skim news aggregator sites like Reddit or Digg (or what’s appropriate to your industry), and create posts from there.
  26. Ask your audience what they need, what they’re struggling with.
  27. Revisit a month of posts and see what you’ve covered the least.
  28. Think about things your customers/stakeholders/prospects might need and write about that, even if it’s a bit off-topic.
  29. Check your stats to see what people are searching for, and address it.
  30. Use these blog topics posts for inspiration. (Wow, I write on that a lot).

    Brains

  31. Look into creating additional materials like an ebook or online course from your best materials.
  32. Branch out your blogging into video and audio where appropriate.
  33. Look into building a community platform around your content platform.
  34. Invite your audience in to guest post where appropriate.
  35. Add social bookmarking plugins like Add This to your blog to improve distribution.
  36. Look for cross-promotional opportunities for like-minded blogs in your space.
  37. Consider starting groups on your social networks (such as a Facebook group) to further discuss the space you’re covering.
  38. Remember to comment on other people’s blogs frequently, and show your participation in the communities where you have presence.
  39. Occasionally produce PDF versions of your better posts and email them to customers and prospects to encourage growing your audience.
  40. Consider a conversion engine like a free offer to help sort prospects from fans and audience.

    cash register

  41. Move towards measurements quickly, as these are often where companies decide their vote.
  42. Create a simple report on how you will report what you’re doing for upper management.
  43. Work out which numbers might matter. Comments received. Links in. Times bookmarked?
  44. Rank each blog post on effectiveness based on your own criteria. Review weekly and monthly.
  45. Figure out a “downstream” metric that drives real business value. Reduce costs to call center? Sales leads?
  46. Never count # of friends or # of followers as a valuable metric. It’s quality in that case.
  47. As soon as you can, find ways to tie your numbers to marketing and sales numbers where appropriate.
  48. Move to automate the numbers collection parts early. Keep the sentiment reporting parts human.
  49. Set 3 month goals to review progress with upper management. Determine if this is having any impact.
  50. Though these last 10 tips are about numbers, NEVER treat people like numbers in social media.

Your mileage may vary, and some of this advice ranges from dead simple to over-simplified. It will also require some customization, depending on your industry, goals, and interests. But consider it a starting point.

What else would you add?



The Social Media 100 is a project by Chris Brogan dedicated to writing 100 useful blog posts in a row about the tools, techniques, and strategies behind using social media for your business, your organization, or your own personal interests. Swing by [chrisbrogan.com] for more posts in the series, and if you have topic ideas, feel free to share them, as this is a group project, and your opinion matters.

Get the entire series by subscribing to this blog, and subscribe to my free newsletter here.

Photo credits:
50
Grocery Store
Gears
Brains
Cash Register

Related posts:

  1. Starting a Social Media Strategy
  2. Making Business Sense of Social Media
  3. Best Social Media Advice From This Site
  4. Social Media Strategy- The Planning Stage
  5. Social Media Strategy – Aligning Goals and Measurements

ChrisBrogan.com runs on the Genesis Framework

Genesis Theme Framework

The Genesis Framework empowers you to quickly and easily build incredible websites with WordPress. Whether you're a novice or advanced developer, Genesis provides you with the secure and search-engine-optimized foundation that takes WordPress to places you never thought it could go.

With automatic theme updates and world-class support included, Genesis is the smart choice for your WordPress website or blog.

Become a StudioPress Affiliate

  • http://www.wrightplacetv.com Dr Wright

    Excellent article, I will refer my readers to this.
    Thanks again Chris!

    Dr. Wright
    Wright Place TV Show
    http://www.wrightplacetv.com
    http://www.twitter.com/drwright1

  • http://www.wrightplacetv.com Dr Wright

    Excellent article, I will refer my readers to this.
    Thanks again Chris!

    Dr. Wright
    Wright Place TV Show
    http://www.wrightplacetv.com
    http://www.twitter.com/drwright1

  • http://www.wrightplacetv.com Dr Wright

    Excellent article, I will refer my readers to this.
    Thanks again Chris!

    Dr. Wright
    Wright Place TV Show
    http://www.wrightplacetv.com
    http://www.twitter.com/drwright1

  • http://twitter.com/aaronmeister aaronmeister

    Great post, very informative, easy to read.

  • http://twitter.com/aaronmeister aaronmeister

    Great post, very informative, easy to read.

  • http://twitter.com/aaronmeister aaronmeister

    Great post, very informative, easy to read.

  • http://www.visionaryblogging.com Easton Ellsworth

    Chris, stop it. RIGHT NOW. You’re going too fast. Putting out too much good stuff. I can’t process it all. I have too many things of yours bookmarked.

    Just kidding, man. Drinking from your fire hose is a blast, pun intended. Keep it up.

  • http://www.visionaryblogging.com Easton Ellsworth

    Chris, stop it. RIGHT NOW. You’re going too fast. Putting out too much good stuff. I can’t process it all. I have too many things of yours bookmarked.

    Just kidding, man. Drinking from your fire hose is a blast, pun intended. Keep it up.

  • http://www.visionaryblogging.com Easton Ellsworth

    Chris, stop it. RIGHT NOW. You’re going too fast. Putting out too much good stuff. I can’t process it all. I have too many things of yours bookmarked.

    Just kidding, man. Drinking from your fire hose is a blast, pun intended. Keep it up.

  • http://www.diligentdesign.net/2008/07/28/click-comment-ii-7-day-challenge/ Corey Freeman

    Wow that’s a long list, but very detailed, and extremely helpful. I also send out emails to some bloggers I think are doing an awesome job. When commenting, I would suggest using a popular post as your URL, and not the actual index.

    I’ll definitely be featuring you in social media week over at DD, so check it out.

  • http://www.diligentdesign.net/2008/07/28/click-comment-ii-7-day-challenge/ Corey Freeman

    Wow that’s a long list, but very detailed, and extremely helpful. I also send out emails to some bloggers I think are doing an awesome job. When commenting, I would suggest using a popular post as your URL, and not the actual index.

    I’ll definitely be featuring you in social media week over at DD, so check it out.

  • http://www.diligentdesign.net/2008/07/28/click-comment-ii-7-day-challenge/ Corey Freeman

    Wow that’s a long list, but very detailed, and extremely helpful. I also send out emails to some bloggers I think are doing an awesome job. When commenting, I would suggest using a popular post as your URL, and not the actual index.

    I’ll definitely be featuring you in social media week over at DD, so check it out.

  • http://tiffanymonhollon.com/blog Tiffany Monhollon

    Love tip 3. The shotgun approach so many people use with social networking sites is for one too difficult to manage in reality. Any suggestions of one place where you might be able to research different types of audiences on different types of SM sites? Or is it best to go with your gut/personal experience?

  • http://tiffanymonhollon.com/blog Tiffany Monhollon

    Love tip 3. The shotgun approach so many people use with social networking sites is for one too difficult to manage in reality. Any suggestions of one place where you might be able to research different types of audiences on different types of SM sites? Or is it best to go with your gut/personal experience?

  • http://tiffanymonhollon.com/blog Tiffany Monhollon

    Love tip 3. The shotgun approach so many people use with social networking sites is for one too difficult to manage in reality. Any suggestions of one place where you might be able to research different types of audiences on different types of SM sites? Or is it best to go with your gut/personal experience?

  • http://pages.teamintraining.org/sj/honoride08/rksar Randy Ksar

    Great list and I especially like the blog comment about keeping it visual whether with a photo of your own or a CC photo via Flickr.

  • http://pages.teamintraining.org/sj/honoride08/rksar Randy Ksar

    Great list and I especially like the blog comment about keeping it visual whether with a photo of your own or a CC photo via Flickr.

  • Pingback: Learn to Adapt Links for July 26th through July 28th | Learn to Adapt

  • http://www.personalitydevelopmentblog.com/ VENKATAKRISHNA NALAMOTHU

    Extensive useful list for every blogger. Some ideas like profile updating helps enormously. Link building should be a continous process. Web 2.0 helps in this regard.

  • http://www.personalitydevelopmentblog.com/ VENKATAKRISHNA NALAMOTHU

    Extensive useful list for every blogger. Some ideas like profile updating helps enormously. Link building should be a continous process. Web 2.0 helps in this regard.

  • http://www.personalitydevelopmentblog.com/ VENKATAKRISHNA NALAMOTHU

    Extensive useful list for every blogger. Some ideas like profile updating helps enormously. Link building should be a continous process. Web 2.0 helps in this regard.

  • Pingback: Social Media: Paso a paso | Codigo Geek

  • Caryn

    Good tips. Thanks.

  • Caryn

    Good tips. Thanks.

  • Caryn

    Good tips. Thanks.

  • http://thewahmmagazine.net/blog Erika

    Excellent post. Great tips…I especially love #5, because in the day-to-day operations, it’s easy to get bogged down. Two (or three) heads are better than one.

  • http://thewahmmagazine.net/blog Erika

    Excellent post. Great tips…I especially love #5, because in the day-to-day operations, it’s easy to get bogged down. Two (or three) heads are better than one.

  • Pingback: 50 Steps for using Social Media | Net-Biz101

  • http://100bucksaday.com fatbastard

    Nice list. I am bookmarking to spend a little time making sure I understood it all.

  • http://100bucksaday.com fatbastard

    Nice list. I am bookmarking to spend a little time making sure I understood it all.

  • http://100bucksaday.com fatbastard

    Nice list. I am bookmarking to spend a little time making sure I understood it all.

  • Pingback: Networking Prosperity » Blog Archive » 50 Steps for using Social Media

  • http://www.sparkminute.com/ David Spark

    Chris, this is some awesome stuff, and I want to add my two cents with an article I wrote for PC World about how to get up and running with business social networking. It’s really a beginners’ guide for people who haven’t event started.
    http://www.sparkminute.com/?p=305

    Plus, a presentation I just posted up on Slideshare is featured on its front page. It’s entitled “The Social Media Fallacy” and it debunks the traditional way social media is being sold and offer a more sane and logical approach to developing industry voice to grow your business.
    http://www.sparkminute.com/?p=391

  • http://www.sparkminute.com/ David Spark

    Chris, this is some awesome stuff, and I want to add my two cents with an article I wrote for PC World about how to get up and running with business social networking. It’s really a beginners’ guide for people who haven’t event started.
    http://www.sparkminute.com/?p=305

    Plus, a presentation I just posted up on Slideshare is featured on its front page. It’s entitled “The Social Media Fallacy” and it debunks the traditional way social media is being sold and offer a more sane and logical approach to developing industry voice to grow your business.
    http://www.sparkminute.com/?p=391

  • http://www.sparkminute.com/ David Spark

    Chris, this is some awesome stuff, and I want to add my two cents with an article I wrote for PC World about how to get up and running with business social networking. It’s really a beginners’ guide for people who haven’t event started.
    http://www.sparkminute.com/?p=305

    Plus, a presentation I just posted up on Slideshare is featured on its front page. It’s entitled “The Social Media Fallacy” and it debunks the traditional way social media is being sold and offer a more sane and logical approach to developing industry voice to grow your business.
    http://www.sparkminute.com/?p=391

  • http://www.DrinksAreOnMe.net Dale Cruse

    Great list, Chris. I plan to print it and utilize the ideas on my personal blog.

    One small thing, however: Instead of using Notepad “to jot post ideas down when you don’t have a moment to write,” I recommend a free online tool like Google Docs or Google Notebook. That way you have access to those ideas whether you’re at home or work, on your own computer or not.

  • http://www.DrinksAreOnMe.net Dale Cruse

    Great list, Chris. I plan to print it and utilize the ideas on my personal blog.

    One small thing, however: Instead of using Notepad “to jot post ideas down when you don’t have a moment to write,” I recommend a free online tool like Google Docs or Google Notebook. That way you have access to those ideas whether you’re at home or work, on your own computer or not.

  • http://www.drinksareonme.net Dale Cruse

    Great list, Chris. I plan to print it and utilize the ideas on my personal blog.

    One small thing, however: Instead of using Notepad “to jot post ideas down when you don’t have a moment to write,” I recommend a free online tool like Google Docs or Google Notebook. That way you have access to those ideas whether you’re at home or work, on your own computer or not.

  • Pingback: links for 2008-07-28 | The Zone Read

  • Pingback: iLibrarian » 50 Steps to Developing a Consistent Social Media Practice

  • Pingback: links for 2008-07-28 | andydickinson.net

  • Pingback: Saren Sakurai » links for 2008-07-29

  • Pingback: New & Noteworthy in Internet Marketing : Southern Content

  • Pingback: Forum Posting - Day Two | Diligent Design

  • http://www.itsopen.co.uk justin hunt

    Interesting list Chris but in my experience so many companies here in the UK are so behind when it comes to social media. Many cannot even see social networks or blogs at work because of really restrictive firewalls. And a key concern for them is the time it will take to staff up all these new ventures. Not all companies are dragging their feet though and I think it will take an online crisis or two to jump start a lot of organisations.

  • http://www.itsopen.co.uk justin hunt

    Interesting list Chris but in my experience so many companies here in the UK are so behind when it comes to social media. Many cannot even see social networks or blogs at work because of really restrictive firewalls. And a key concern for them is the time it will take to staff up all these new ventures. Not all companies are dragging their feet though and I think it will take an online crisis or two to jump start a lot of organisations.

  • http://www.itsopen.co.uk justin hunt

    Interesting list Chris but in my experience so many companies here in the UK are so behind when it comes to social media. Many cannot even see social networks or blogs at work because of really restrictive firewalls. And a key concern for them is the time it will take to staff up all these new ventures. Not all companies are dragging their feet though and I think it will take an online crisis or two to jump start a lot of organisations.

  • http://www.gijptech.blogspot.com Kevin

    Great list!

    I especially like tip 3. In fact, I work with small nonprofit camps that can really benefit from social media. But they are so understaffed I recommend focusing on just 1 platform at first (not even 3). They can choose based on where their alumni and other constituents are already active. If successful, they can add other social media sites to add a presence, if it makes sense.

    Keep up the great work,
    Kevin

  • http://www.gijptech.blogspot.com Kevin

    Great list!

    I especially like tip 3. In fact, I work with small nonprofit camps that can really benefit from social media. But they are so understaffed I recommend focusing on just 1 platform at first (not even 3). They can choose based on where their alumni and other constituents are already active. If successful, they can add other social media sites to add a presence, if it makes sense.

    Keep up the great work,
    Kevin

  • http://www.gijptech.blogspot.com Kevin

    Great list!

    I especially like tip 3. In fact, I work with small nonprofit camps that can really benefit from social media. But they are so understaffed I recommend focusing on just 1 platform at first (not even 3). They can choose based on where their alumni and other constituents are already active. If successful, they can add other social media sites to add a presence, if it makes sense.

    Keep up the great work,
    Kevin