π± Setting Up B2B Social Media Marketers for Success
Give them room. Give them budget. Give them trust.
Hi! π
InΒ The B2B Bite, I break down the most effective strategies and tactics to help B2B companies do better marketing.
Sent every Monday AM. Best enjoyed with coffee.
Sign up below for free.
Social
π± Setting Up B2B Social Media Marketers for Success
B2B buyers are getting younger. And younger folk like to spend time on social media. So it would stand to reason that hiring a full-time professional social media marketer (SMM) should be pretty high on the priority list for B2B brands.
Yet... many companies simply hand over the responsibility of social media to an intern or - gasp - don't leverage the channel at all.
AND if brands do have a professional marketer on board, managing content creation, distribution and analytics is usually just one task on a very long laundry list of tasks that has to be dealt with on top of:
Unrealistic expectations from leadership
Too much red tape and layers of approval
Limited budgets and/or resources
Unclear objectives or an understanding of 'the why'
In this article, I've shared some of my thoughts on how to set up SMMs for success.
Have a read and tell me what you think!
#1. Give Them Room
When you see a social post that reads something like...
"Introducing our market-leading enterprise solution for leading industry professionals across the enterprise sector"
...you can almost guarantee it's had one too many pairs of non-marketing hands on it.
I'm a firm believer that the reason there's so much drivel out there in the B2B ether is an unwillingness from organisations to give their content creators some room to be... well, creative.
Perhaps this comes from a fear of handing over control of what is one of the most customer-facing channels there is for a business? Or perhaps it's an unwillingness to take risk and move away from the crowd?
Whatever the reason, non-marketing executives demanding 'final approval' of any and all content before it's published stifles what can be incredibly effective and resonant content.
If you're going to hire an SMM, give them the framework and freedom to make decisions in real-time and - most importantly - trust in their reasoning.
#2. Give Them Budget
If you go out for a walk and see some ducklings in a pond, you'd be forgiven if the photo you post to Instagram has your thumb peeking in from the bottom right corner and the caption reads "cant get enogh of these cuties!"
Not so much if you're professional B2B brand.
High-quality copy and visuals are the lifeblood of social media. SMMs must have access to the tools, resources and people they need to pull it together - and this means budget.
I'd argue that in B2B, there's actually a competitive advantage to investing in high-quality creative. Why?
Because the bar is usually very low. Often competitors in a sector use the same stock imagery and tired one-liners as each other, preventing any single message from standing out.
Empowering a B2B content creator to go out and capture original photos and produce copy with a unique tone of voice can put you above 95% of the competition.
Generalist or specialist? Junior hire or an industry veteran? Someone in-house or an agency?
Picking the right people when building a marketing department from the ground up is the single most difficult challenge for a small business or startup. But Bethan Vincent and I are here to help.
In this highly focussed half hour masterclass on Twitter Spaces, we will walk through some of the most common challenges faced by B2B Founders embarking on their journey to pull together a killer marketing team.
Really looking forward to this one. Just hit the button below if you fancy joining us on Tuesday 27th July at 6:00pm GMT / 1:00pm EST / 10:00am PST.
#3. Give Them Direction
When I was a kid, I had an after school job that required me to go post leaflets of a local business through all the doors in my village.
One day, I asked my boss how many clients we got as a result of the leaflets in the last year. His response?
"Zero."
Translation β what I was doing with the leaflets was effectively meaningless. A box-checking exercise for a brand unwilling to stop beating the dead horse.
If success in social media for your brand is simply 'posting three times a week' it can at best limit creativity, at worst kill any enthusiasm the person once held for the role.
Avoid this by clearly defining and communicating how social media is tied to the success of the business.
This usually comes down to clearly defined, revenue-influenced goals - e.g. social sourced registrations to a company webinar or traffic driven to a high-intent landing page on your website via social.
Importantly, invest in the attribution platforms that allow you to track this effectively. These can be your bread-and-butter tools - from Google Analytics to Oktopost - but also qualitative mechanisms that can help you understand the effectiveness of channels not picked up otherwise, like adding a 'Where Did You Hear About Us?' question to all your forms.
#4. Give Them Time
There's a quote from legendary basketball coach, John Wooden. It goes:
"Good things take time. We shouldn't expect good things to happen overnight. Actually, getting something too easily or too soon can cheapen the outcome."
Mr. Wooden would have been an excellent leader of SMMs as he would have understood that expecting instant results from a social media strategy is as foolish as letting a fox guard the henhouse.
At it's heart, social media is about building trust with your customers that in exchange for their attention, you will provide them value.
And just like how it takes time to build trust in our everyday relationships, so too does it take time to build trust with an online audience. So give your SMMs the time to see through their strategy.
This isn't to say you shouldn't set milestones - you absolutely should - but work with your colleague to understand what's a) realistic to expect in terms of timeframes and b) that they have the support and resources they think they need to hit these targets.
ALSO consider that is social has become an added responsibility on top of an existing workload that this will impact their other responsibilities.
Good rule of thumb is to expect social media management to take 3x as long as you think it will.
Focusing on Gen Z: How B2B Brands Can Hook This New Generation of Customers & Candidates | Penry Price (Link)
IBM CMO is Taking βa Completely New Approachβ to B2B Marketing | Alison Weissbrot (Link)
The Growing Trend of B2B Influencer Marketing: 10 Brands Doing it Right | Digital Marketing Institute (Link)
How Gusto Uses Content To Take On Existing SaaS Giants | Foundation Inc (Link)
11 Ways Top B2B Marketers Are Breaking Free of Boring B2B | Top Rank Blog (Link)
ποΈ It's Time to Ban Sales from Your B2B Community w/ Tom Bangay
In this episode, I sit down Tom Bangay, Director of Content at Juro, the contract automation platform.Β
We talk about:
His step-by-step strategy in building a niche B2B community for legal teamsΒ
How he convinced the first members to join - and persuaded them to stay
Why banning his sales team from the community was a great decision
This episode is a must-listen for any marketers looking for an actionable strategy to get a niche B2B community started (and showing results) quickly.
Listen to it here:
This is real advice for the everyday B2B marketer who wants to be better.
β¦visit Juroβs website here...
And here's the article Tom wrote that inspired this episode.
Previous episodes:
Building a Marketing Strategy When Budget is Tight w/ Bethan Vincent
The Founder's Guide to B2B Content Marketing w/ Melanie Deziel
You can also find the B2B Better onΒ Apple PodcastsΒ and almost all other podcast directories.
And that's it! See you next week.