Showing posts with label marketers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marketers. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 July 2015

How to Create The Perfect Social Media Post

As a marketer, you may find yourself struggling when it comes to formulating the perfect social media post.
To make things easier for you, I’ve decided to create a cheat sheet you can use when trying to create the perfect social media post. Just follow the advice in the infographic below.
Click on the image below to see a larger view:
How to Create The Perfect Social Post

Conclusion

A lot of the information within the infographic may seem basic, but chances are you aren’t following all the rules.
From using hashtags to keeping your posts under a certain length, it’s the little things that can make a big difference.
So, in what other ways can you create the perfect social media post?

Thursday, 9 April 2015

33 Social Media Facts and Statistics You Should Know in 2015


33 Social Media Facts and Statistics You Should Know in 2015


Social media is starting to take off its short pants.

It’s becoming all grown up. In fact, Facebook is now over 11 years old and heading towards platform puberty and is still the standout leader of the pack.

Google with its Google+ platform (with a development cost of over half a billion dollars) tried to take Mark Zuckerberg on, but it has become an incidental social network that isn’t taken seriously by many marketers.

They play there but don’t want to work there.

There are even rumours that Google is going to break it up into separate digital products by segmenting the components that got traction… like Google hangouts and photos.

The emerging trends

The biggest trend over the last 12 months has been the move from earned marketing attention (sometimes called free) to “pay to play”. Another is the impact of social messaging platforms such as Snapchat and Whatsapp that have become “quasi social networks” in their own right.

It’s a social web shift that is driven by a connected generation. If your Mom joins Facebook, then maybe it’s time to play somewhere else. Teenagers don’t want to be dancing with their parents. Right!

In fact the the instant services and chat apps now account for 3 of the top 5 global social platforms.

Facebook tried to buy Snapchat for $3 billion and was snubbed. But then they pulled out $20 billion out of the back pocket and bought WhatsApp. You just have to love deep pockets and a vision of what the future looks like. Mobile,social and alternative messaging.

How does the social web look like in 2015?

The quick truth is that it can be summed up in one word, “mobile”. Smartphone penetration has soared as it the devices have become more affordable and the wireless networks more ubiquitous and faster.

There are now 7.2 billion people on the planet and of those the following numbers make interesting reading.

  • There are just over 3 billion active Internet users (45% of the world’s internet users)
  • Nearly 2.1 billion people have social media accounts
  • 3.65 billion mobile users have access to the internet via smartphones and tablets
  • Close to 1.7 billion people have active social media accounts

social web overview in 2015

Source: Wearesocial.net

The rise of non English speaking social networks in China and Russia, such as Qzone, are producing large social networks that exceed Twitter, Instagram and Google+. The traditional social networks as we know them are not the only games in world wide social web town!

So what are the social media facts and statistics in 2015 that are worth checking out?

Mobile social media facts

The developing world has not had the luxury of fixed wire internet from poles and wires. To provide access for the aspirational masses the mobile wireless networks are a fast track to a global world. Put up a tower rather than build an expensive fixed infrastructure.

So the mobile phone has made the web accessible for almost everyone.

  • In India mobile devices account for 72% of all web site traffic
  • There are 1.65 billion active mobile social accounts globally
  • 561 million active mobile social accounts are located in East Asia

Facebook facts

You may scream at Facebook for its dominance and arrogance. But it can’t be ignored.
Tall poppies are easy targets but the reality is that Facebook has cracked the social network code. It’s the ultimate beta business. Testing features in real time and snapping up online apps that push the boundaries of  use experience in a world that is about digital disruption.

  • There are nearly 1.4 billion Facebook users
  • 71% of all Internet users are on Facebook
  • 4.5 billion likes are generated daily
  • Nearly 75% of Facebook’s revenue comes from mobile advertising
  • Direct uploads of user videos to Facebook now exceed YouTube 

Twitter facts

Twitter is an accidental social network but don’t be fooled. It’s a great brand awareness facilitator.

  • Twitter has 284 million active users at last count
  • 88% of Twitter users are on mobile
  • 500 million tweets per day

Google+ facts

Google saw the writing on the wall but turned up to the party a little too late.

  • Google+ cost over half a billion to design and develop
  • 363 million users
  • The +1 button is hit 5 billion times per day

Instagram facts

This network is owned by Facebook. They saw that social and mobile was a powerful intersection of synergies. They were right!

  • Instagram has 300 million users
  • 70 million photos and videos are sent daily
  • 53% of internet users aged 18-29 use Instagram

Pinterest facts

Pinterest has made the pinboard a virtual activity. It’s female centric and very visual.

  • 80% of Internet users on Pinterest are female
  • 70 million users are on Pinterest
  • 88% purchase a product they pinned

LinkedIn facts

LinkedIn dominates the professional social network segment. It is one of the oldest having started in 2002. Almost the grandfather of social networks.

  • LinkedIn has 347 million registered members
  • Total revenue at the end of 2014 was $643 million (a growth rate of 44% over the previous period)
  • There are over 39 million students and recent college graduates on LinkedIn

Other social media facts

Facebook maybe the biggest and baddest but there are many other social media facts and networks that shouldn’t be forgotten. Both niche and non-English speaking.

  • Viber has over 200 million users
  • There are 639 million users on Qzone (China)
  • 600 million users on Whatsapp
  • Facebook messenger has 500 million users
  • Wechat is close behind with 468 million users (China)
  • Snapchat has been valued at close to $20 billion at the last valuation
  • Snapchat has 100 million monthly users
  • Russia’s “VKontake” has 100 million users
  • Social networks will earn $8.3 billion from advertising in 2015

What are you going to do?

Social media started with a few players that have now  been empowered by another obsessive technology. Mobile.

The game is changing.

How can you use visual, mobile and messaging in your marketing? Instagram, Snapchat and Whatsapp are disrupting the game.

Looking forward to your comments..


Podcasting provided by Odovox.com

Source

Tuesday, 3 March 2015

Social Media Or SEO? 20 Top Marketers Share Their Opinion!

Social media OR SEO – it’s a balancing act to decide which is best to use and to decide which is more important.
So, even though I’ve my own opinions, I decided to ask 20 different renowned marketers what their opinion on the was on whether one takes precedence over the other.

Q. Social Media or SEO? – Which is more Important and why

A. Roxanasoi (The Brain at SERPlified)


I believe we live in an age in which you cannot have one without the other. In my experience, I’ve had clients who wanted SEO only without any Social Media, and in the long run, we experienced a big handicap: there was no community around the brand. The brand was vulnerable and lacked stability.
I also had clients who wanted Social Media only, and while that enabled us to build a community, it cost us a lot in another “department”: the Organic one. Don’t get me wrong, it’s great to have a community and a constant buzz about your brand. But what happens when you don’t get any surprises? SEO is the one that feeds nice surprises to the brand: you get a new hit on your website, a visitor converts into a buyer and even subscribes to your newsletter.
I think you need both SEO and Social Media to generate what I like to call Social SEO: the result of brands reaching their ideal followers and unexpected visitors converting themselves into ideal followers for your brand. It’s never one-sided and you can never grow as a brand if only one party does the outreach, it has to be mutual.
Imagine back in the early days, a brand would be translated into a cult. So let’s say every brand is the modern version of a cult. Every cult had to start somewhere, with a foundation, a mission and vision that people would embrace. At first, it had to stay hidden because other cults were a majority (talking about tough competition). It had to build trust, by imagining the general, lost user who happens to stumble upon something that resonates with their beliefs. That would be SEO in our days: general, untargetted outreach; the general user just types a search query related to his beliefs (and needs), and lands on you website. Now going back to the cult story, the cult wouldn’t grow that much if it didn’t rely on people recommending it. So the cult attracted specific people, with power of speech, with the power to spread the word. You could translate that into Social Media today. In time, the cult became strong and had enough followers to be officially recognized.
If you just take this simple medieval example into account, the answer has always been there: you need both, they are complementary, you can’t have one without the other. If you want your brand (your cult) to be officially recognized, that is.
A. airdragon
It is kind of the chicken or the egg. But I always figured the chicken came first so I have to go with SEO first. If you get your site optimized to get traffic going to your site than you stand a better chance to get your Social Media out there were it can be seen. Of course, once you get traffic and get an audience then Social Media will add to it. Neither is easy although we all know the basics of both aspects they both take a lot of work to pull off right. Especially the Social Media part as you have to constantly feed the beast or it dies!
A. Mimuba (Mi Muba says SEO and social media are different tools of blog promotion)


It is quite difficult to outright say what is more important SEO or social media. Both have their own significance for blog promotion.
Basically there are two objectives of blog promotion. One is short term promotion and other one is long term promotion. With social media we promote our blog posts on short term basis. We share the URL at social media and people notice it and visit our blog if headlines impress them. After awhile our each sharing at social media goes into deep bottom of archives at our timeline.
For long term promotion we do both on-page and off-page SEO. It get our posts ranking higher and we keep getting traffic at our blog from searches at Google and other search engines.
So both SEO and social media help us bring traffic at our blog and the difference is one brings on short term basis and other one on long term basis. So difference is there but importance wise both are equally important.
A. Konstantinos (co-founder of Beakon)


As Google became a giant and changed the SEO landscape, more and more business are turning to social media.
Actually, search engines themselves are turning to social media. With Google loving Google+, tying up the knot with Twitter and propably using social signals as ranking factors, the future of marketing is social.
While on-page and local SEO remain business’s top marketing focus, social media marketing should be the runner-up.
Indeed, social pr and social shares can increase engagement and bring quality traffic to your website, which is a key factor in search engine ranking. More quality traffic equals more UX – user/customer experience and eventually less bounce rate. Thus, social media will be the “easy” SEO of the future!
A. LRJordan (Founder of Intergeek)


As much as I want to say that SEO is more important, it’s simply not the case. I really don’t want to stand on the fence on this one but they’re both as equally as important as each other in my opinion.
Without social media, SEO just isn’t anywhere near as effective. Not only does the likes of Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Pinterest and more bring in extra sources of traffic but they also offer amplification opportunities; you can naturally catch the eye of influencers who can link back to and share your content without you needing to outreach to them.
However, social traffic often peaks highly and falls dramatically within short timeframes, whereas organic search traffic will tend to stay steady and provide much more traffic in the long-term. I guess it’s kinda like the old tale of the tortoise and the hare.
A. David Leonhardt (President, The Happy Guy Marketing)


This is a huge loaded question, because not everybody can dominate SEO (only one top result for each search phrase, only ten results in the top ten for each search phrase, etc.), and not everybody can engage on social media because people will burn out.  Ditto for billboards, flyers, TV ads, etc.  If every company excelled at every marketing channel, people would just tune out and business would explode with costs.
With that preamble, I will say that social media is more important than SEO.  The reason is twofold: first, you can engage  your target market through social media, and the more active you are in social media, the more likely the market is to relate to you and eventually buy.  Second, the more active you are on social media (especially if you direct people to various pages of your website), the more people will share your pages and link to them, which helps SEO.  So with straight social media, you can also get significant SEO benefits; with straight SEO, nothing you do will reverberate in social media.
A. sef.caa.diz (BV Digital Marketing Director. H.I.M Founder. )


This is a great question, it’s like asking me which eye ball I like most. Let’s start off by asking the right questions before diving head first into this topic: what is your main objective?; does this decision impact a long-term or short-term marketing campaign?; what are your main key performance indicators?; what are your strengths? Weaknesses? Opportunities? Threats?; how much does your client have in their marketing budget?.
These are the types of questions one has to consider. Now after going through the discovery process only then data-driven marketers such as myself can answer and set this in stone.
But from the arm chair it appears you have put me in two situations:
1) a situation that begs for immediate results; hitting high-volume prospects at low-to-high cost = social.
2) a campaign for long-term investment with a potential to hit high volume eye balls at medium-to-high cost = organic SEO.
Conclusion: when brands conquer SEO; they conquer social with little effort.
The reality is that SEO and social media are morphing into one. Google doesn’t claim social signals impact on SEO but the reality is they most likely do. Conversely, for a good SEO campaign to work social media is needed. Nowadays both are intertwinned and neither is more important than the other.
A. Liudas – Easy M6.com
Search engines are the top traffic source for blogs so, I go with SEO. The biggest benefit of search engine traffic is that it accumulates. The more content you create, you start ranking for more keywords and getting more traffic and on social media the traffic comes in spikes when you promote something new.
Still, if you want to succeed with content marketing you can’t ignore social media because it’s starting to merge with SEO. Social signals are becoming more and more powerful ranking factors so you can’t just choose either or, you need to do both if you want to get the best results.
A. Erik Emanuelli (No Passive Income)


I often get asked how to rank well on search engines (and believe me, I’m not an SEO expert at all).
My answer is always the same : “Be sure to write first for your readers, and then optimize the content for search engines. With time, you will learn how to produce great content for your audience, while writing and doing SEO at the same time.”
So I put social media at first place, because if you are able to build a solid base of fans, they will follow you and read your content, no matter how many times search engines will update or change their algorithms (with the risk of losing the organic traffic you worked so hard for).
After all, it’s all about enhancing the user experience. In other words, satisfying your audience needs or problems.
A. seoprofessor
Both are important and and I don’t think you can realistically separate the two these days. If I’m working on a client’s SEO I like to control the social media output as well. Social media is the engine for business growth because it is the most effective way to build an engaged audience for content marketing activity.  I see SEO as the fine tuning you need to do to make sure people can find your website when they type in keywords. It is more likely that SEO will be successful if a brand is consistently associated with particular keywords in sociaql media and those signals will help contribute to all the other elements required to raise your Google ranking.
A. Ashley Faulkes (Online Marketer)


SEO has changed so much in the last few years that I no longer believe you can separate it from the likes of content and social media.
Content marketing is now an integral part of SEO because you need to have awesome content to share, get noticed, earn links, create relationships and much more. And a huge part of doing all of that is using social media to get your content noticed, find a new audience and ultimately customers for your website.
To even get a piece of content ranking highly requires quite a lot of promotion, and for most people using social media is one of the key parts of that. Of course, you also need to do email outreach and networking, and there is also a little bit of luck. However without any social media whatsoever, SEO will be a lot tougher for most people.
It is also often the case that the categories you choose become the main SEO keywords for your website and the hashtags you use for social media sharing. Which is to say, that SEO and social media very much go hand in hand.
A. kristawiltbank (Owner, Krista Wiltbank Digital Marketing)


As a social media person, I hate to say this, but I believe that SEO is more important than social media. Why? Good SEO puts your website in front of the people who are looking for your product/service. If you’re offering good enough content to be indexed on the first page of Google (or other search engine), then you’ve got a much better chance of having your customers find you. Plus, because SEO is done one your website, it’s something you can, to some degree, control.
Social, while powerful in its own right, is better for building brand awareness than it is for generating leads. It’s dependent on getting your message in front of the right audience, instead of the right audience actively searching for you. If you’re going to look at it in the framework of the marketing funnel, it’s towards the top. The other downside is that the social media platform, since it’s owned by someone else, can make changes at any time that can negatively impact YOUR business, but benefit its business. To take a very recent example, Pinterest just made an announcement that it would discontinue the practice of allowing affliate links as pins – which really upset the applecart for many businesses.
A. sbizideasblog (Small Business Ideas Blog)


I asked that question once on social media and people either said SEO or both SEO & social media. If I absolutely had to focus on just one, I would pick SEO because search engine traffic is ongoing while social media traffic is temporary. Even some social media experts, like Jon Loomer (Facebook expert), have admitted that they get more traffic from SEO.
However, it would be foolish to ignore social media completely, especially if you blog often. Blogs that are posting content daily or even weekly get a good boost in traffic from ongoing social media traffic. Social Media Examiner, for example, gets thousands of shares each day for their blog posts and they put out a new post each day.
It’s hard to separate the two entirely because you can promote content through social media and some of those people will link to your site. So I’d say figure out a way to integrate social media into your SEO to get the best results.
A. Gary Dek (Founder of StartABlog123.com)
I think the answer really depends on your skill set because each strategy presents its own benefits, challenges, and risks since both are controlled by larger entities that can change algorithms and disrupt your traffic flow. If an internet marketer can effectively drive great results (traffic, conversions, revenue) with social media, then more power to him/her to continue growing their accounts and influence. Personally, I’m not a social media person and my strengths are in SEO. I prefer it because I understand it and have the skills to deliver. Plus, I see solid search engine rankings as a form of recurring revenue when marketers produce evergreen content to target search terms with decent monthly volumes.
A. Lukasz Zelezny (Head of Organic Acquisition)


I am often asked this question but it is really hard to give a definitive answer. Both are important elements in any marketing campaign and both serve a purpose. When employed properly, they work hand in hand to get people to your website and keep them there. That’s what it’s all about – traffic.
I look at it like this. Great search engine optimised content brings in the traffic by ranking highly with the search engines. However, social media helps you establish a relationship with potential clients/customers. So, once you get them to your site, invite them to follow you on social media sites like Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Which do you need more, traffic or followers? You wouldn’t get either without the other.
A. Dev (WPKube)


Definitely Social Media!
In the last two years or so, Google has become a lot more smarter, and doesn’t rely just on backlinks to rank a website. Of course, links do play a significant part. But it also takes a number of other factors into account such as social shares and user engagement.
So it makes sense to focus more on social media, rather then spending all your time building links. Plus on social media sites like Twitter & Linkedin, you get the chance to build a strong personal relationship with your fans and followers.
Here are some tips to become active on social media sites —
  • Signup for sites like JustRetweet, ViralContentBuzz, and Triberr, which can help you generate more tweets / shares.
  • Use custom images with the help of third party tools like Canva or Pablo (by Buffer).
  • Thank users who have already shared your posts.
A. AdWordsGirl (Search Engine Strategist)


I have always views Social Media to be something that happens in the SEO (Search Engine Optimization) process. You can do these amazing things to your website to make Google read it better like schema markup or writing better title tags, h1’s, URL, content etc but what’s the point if you’re not sharing all of that. Much like many other SEO’s, I believe Social Media to be an offline SEO task. The higher quality the content, the more traffic you will get which will result in more shares (aka links) which will result in a better page rank. So, to answer your question – neither are more important that the other; Social Media is SEO.
A. SoBold (SoBold)


This is a very good question. Search Engine Optimisation makes you more visibile on the web to those who may be searching for expertise in your particular field, however social media gives you the chance to sell yourself to your audience.
Through my experience I have found that both are extremely important however I would say that Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) is more important as it means your consumer can find you through their own accord. Social Media has an element of selling and you are pushing your brand out to certain audiences and communities.. When you are selling there is always a drop off rate.
In Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) you have been found by your audience and so long as your website is optimised in the certain way for consumers to make a purchase or find out more information then you have more chance of making more profit.
A. Tim Fehraydinov (Online marketer at Texterra web agency)


Well, I guess you can’t identify what’s more important. As for my blog, social networks give nice results, but they are not enough. This way you can say that SEO is more important, but I have a different opinion. It’s better to regard Social Media as a part of SEO, instead of as some separate tool. Even if there are no evidences that social signals may influence ranking, I have assured in my own experience that they do.
On another hand, let’s imagine you’re promoting a new blog. In this case SEO can exist without Social Media, while Social Media can’t exist alone.
It’s wrong to focus on one thing – include Social Media in your SEO, if you want to get a higher impact.
A. SEO Doctor (Gareth James)


The most important thing for any commercial website is making money.  How traffic is driven to these sites is totally dependent on the niche, though I would say overall search drives the most traffic to the vast majority of sites. I do admire sites that ‘don’t need Google’.  Sites like Buzzfeed and Viral Nova drive huge traffic from social, but can still be susceptible to changes such as with Facebook’s news feed algorithm.   The key is to build up all your channels and not rely on any particular one, search, social and referral  traffic.
It’s also important to note that Social Media is now part of SEO. If you build an amazing resource, it will not attract links without it doing well in social.  The content must have amplification to reach the linkerati.
Source

Friday, 9 January 2015

What Will Replace Facebook? Six Considerations

A question I often receive in my classes and talks is “What will replace Facebook?”
It’s a natural question. We look to history to see the progression of upstarts replacing established companies — didn’t Facebook replace MySpace? — and of course assume there is a new idea out there somewhere waiting to unseat Facebook as the leading social network.
But that is not necessarily the case. What will replace Facebook? Here are six factors that will determine the answer to that question … and the company’s future.

1. The cool factor

Facebook’s biggest vulnerability is that it would fall out of favor with its core audience. If it ever becomes “uncool,” its marketshare will slip away quickly. This is one reason why Google+ struggled to be mainstream. It was Tom Hanks when it needs to be JayZ.
So what is hot today? Instagram. WhatsApp. Guess who owns these? Facebook. To remain relevant, Facebook will certainly build a war chest to continue to buy platforms that are siphoning off customers and ad dollars. A smart strategy.
I think it is possible to remain relevant generation to generation. Look at Coca-Cola. Without changing the product, it has remained vital across the generations for 120 years! Can Facebook stay cool? That needs to be their number one priority.

2. The switching costs

It is far easier to change houses than to change social networks. Facebook has become a convenient hub for photos, videos, games, family, and friends. It is literally a timeline of our lives. It would be hard to give that up.
To move to another network, you would have to move all of that or start over. Not easy.
Research shows that even Millennials are diversifying their social media use but not leaving Facebook entirely. The switching cost is a huge advantage for Facebook.

3. The investment

Facebook has spent billions of dollars on software development and the extraordinarily complex processes that make it work. It has billions invested in mega-datacenters.
Facebook works really well on a massive scale. Even if you don’t like HOW it is designed, you have to admit it functionally works. Duplicating that technology and infrastructure would be an immense challenge. They have such a head start … and the gap widens day by day, patent by patent.

4. The psychology of choice

In most other places in our life we enjoy having a choice. We like lots of brands in the grocery store or may shop around town to choose between different car companies.
But when it comes to social networks, we seem to only have the bandwidth for one.  We don’t need another Twitter. The one we have works fine.
We don’t need another LinkedIn. That niche has been filled.
And we don’t need another massive social network.

5. The leadership

Here are characteristics of Mark Zuckerberg that will solidify Facebook’s long-term success:
  1. He knows what he doesn’t know. He is an urgent learner and can see his own weaknesses and vulnerabilities as a leader.
  2. Zuckerberg has surrounded himself with outstanding business leaders, not just friends and sycophants
  3. He has committed to long-term strategies and investments, even when the decisions are not popular with Wall Street
  4. He is obsessed with a vision and has a unique financial arrangement to assure he will be the leader of his company long enough to see it through.
Facebook is a well-run company and it is being built to last.

6. The future

Facebook made an investment in 2014 which I predict will prove to be one of the most impactful technology alliances in history. It bought the immersive augmented reality company Oculus (not Oculus Rift which is the company’s headset).
This is a topic for an entirely different post, but let’s just say that Oculus has patents that can potentially transform the way we connect, become informed, and entertain ourselves … just as Facebook did in the last five years.
Facebook is preparing to re-invent itself in amazing new ways.
Perhaps “what will replace Facebook” is the wrong question. A more interesting question is “How is Facebook replacing itself?”  Perhaps the Era of Facebook just beginning?
What do you think?

Wednesday, 31 December 2014

A 3-Step Beginner's Guide to Social-Media Marketing

A 3-Step Beginner's Guide to Social-Media Marketing

Social media has become as much a daily part of our personal lives as it has our business lives. What once was cutting edge just a few short years ago is now just the norm. So how do you know which aspect of social-media marketing you need to have and which aspects are simply passing fads?
For entrepreneurs who are just starting their businesses, wrapping your arms around your social-media marketing plan can feel like a stretch. Do you need to be on all outlets? Which are best? How will you manage all those conversations? There’s a lot to think about when you’re getting started and some important questions you need to ask yourself.
Before you get your business up and running, here is your three-step definitive guide to social-media marketing.

1. Determine your MVPs.

When you first begin to formulate your social-media plan, you may be thinking about what outlets to get started on. However, sometimes a more important conversation to have when you’re starting out is which outlets to avoid.
There can be a general feeling that you should get your business on any and every outlet available to you. However, that can be a mistake. Not all outlets are relevant for every business and trying to force your business onto a platform that isn’t right can feel awkward and inauthentic.
Start with your social-media marketing MVP plan. The MVPs of social-media marketing means two things: your most valuable platforms and your minimum viable platforms. When it comes to social media, less can be a lot more. Why?
You are going to need to be active across every platform you're on for the duration of your business. This means not just great conversations but valuable content and hawkeyed monitoring. Would you rather have sparse contact with tons of people across lots of platforms, or would you rather have valuable, intensely personal and relevant conversations with the right handful of people? Which do you think has the most value to your business in the long run?

2. Consistency isn’t key, it’s critical.

Once you determine your MVPs you need to come up with a reliable posting schedule that can’t be broken. If you aren’t going to be able or willing to post on a specific social-media outlet religiously, you shouldn’t be playing on that platform at all. It’s that important.
Who are you going to assign the challenging and time-consuming task of vigilantly attending to your social-media outlets? Get clear about who will take ownership of this space and come up with a plan for how and what will be said to stay consistent not just with posting but with your brand voice.
Understanding this step can put into perspective the importance once again of your MVP outlets because if you can’t post to an outlet, you shouldn’t be on it.

3. Take risks.

The risks you take will be commensurate with the type of industry your startup is in -- but don’t be afraid to mix up the conversation and start taking risks in your social-media postings. These can be anything as simple as showing some of the behind-the-scenes aspects of your day-to-day business or sharing your personal struggles as an entrepreneur.
Make sure it’s honest and relevant, but sometimes taking risk and exposing more of yourself and your business can really help with making a splash. People like authenticity and transparency so let your audiences see what’s behind the curtain.