Thursday, August 4, 2011

Developing a B2B Social Media Strategy

Social media marketing is different for B2C (business to consumer) companies like residential roofing contractors than it is for B2B (business to business) companies like commercial roofing contractors and roofing material manufacturers, suppliers and distributors.

Here are five basic steps for B2B companies to develop a winning social media strategy:
1. Stop Calling it a Social Media Strategy
2. Know What Stage You Are In
3. Focus on Your Customer’s Issues
4. Develop a Keyword Strategy
5. Content, Engagement, Call-To-Action


Stop Calling it a Social Media Strategy
Think bigger picture. This isn't just social media, this is a marketing strategy. It is 2011, so obviously social media will play a role in how you reach and engage your customer, but don’t tunnel-vision your strategy by thinking it’s solely a social media strategy. Do you have a “tradeshow strategy,” a “direct mail strategy,” and an “email strategy?” Of course not - these are merely elements in your overall marketing plan that help you reach customers, engage them, differentiate your company, create new job leads, and ultimately move qualified prospects into to your sales process.

Know What Stage You Are In
A recent article on Mashable estimated that about half of all companies currently using social media are in the initial Launch stage of their plan. This involves things like creating branded accounts for Twitter, Facebook, LinkedInYouTube, and now Google+ as well. The focus in this stage is just establishing a social media presence usually with little or no strategy.


Another 40% of companies are in the Management stage - seeking to drive traffic, followers, fans, subscribers and to begin engaging with their community. There is typically very little strategy involved in this stage as well.

The remaining 10% are in the Optimization stage. This is where a strategic marketing plan is in place with executive-level support (including budget for people and technology resources). The purpose is to drive revenue with ROI metrics defined to measure successes.

Focus on Your Customer’s Issues
What business issues do your customers care about? In a typical B2B sale, multiple people are involved in the research and selection process for the products or services your company offers. Often tose decision makers span different areas of a business, and therefore they have different needs. Map out the issues for each role and develop your content to address each of them. Don't just assume a “one size fits all” mindset with the content you create and share.


Keep in mind that each of their issues can change according to the stage of the buying process. Meet your potential customers where they are through your social media engagement and address them accordingly. Blog and video content is a good way to deal with this by using titles and tags that allow your content to be easily found according to the relevant issues for each role.

Develop a Keyword Strategy
This is very closely tied to developing a role strategy. Once you have identified your cusotmer roles and their issues, create a list of keyword phrases that very closely address each role's issues. The same product or service must be communicated slightly differently according to keywords that are meaningful to each role that must approve the ultimate purchase.


Content, Engagement, Calls-to-Action
In B2B marketing, slick campaigns have limited effect. B2B buyers are not influenced by sizzle - they are influenced by the steak! The steak in B2B marketing is relevant content. Blogs, white papers, ebooks, videos, case studies, and webinars all represent methods to deliver relevant content. But, the content alone is worthless without a high level of engagement. When people respond to your content, don’t be invisible, be engaging. It sounds simple and intuitive, but it takes time, effort and authenticity.


Add relevant calls-to-action in your content. It can be as simple as an invitation to contact you with your name and email address, an invitation to request budgetary pricing about your offering, a link to more information/content, etc. Calls-to-action should always be designed according to the strategic goals that can be measured as tangible contributors to the revenue goals of a B2B company.

Let me know what stage you are in by emailing Chris@RoofPal.com. If you have any questions about successfully moving to the next stage of your strategy, I'd be happy to chat with you. Best of luck!

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