How to use social media to unlock true fan marketing

(Editor’s note: Serial entrepreneur Scott Olson is president of MindLink Marketing. He contributed this column to VentureBeat.)

Quick marketing poll: Who has bought an industry contact list and used that to send out direct mail, email or some other marketing promotion?

Guiltily holding your hand up? You’re not alone, but it’s pretty well established that this approach no longer works. Playing the numbers game of a less than 1 percent response on marketing outreach to unknown contacts doesn’t have a future.

Social media and the decline of traditional media have changed the marketing discipline forever. Broadcasting marketing messages to a vast population who may or may not care is a formula for failure – so it’s more important than ever to tailor your outreach and messages to connect to people who do care.

Tailoring your marketing to be interesting and relevant to the people who receive it both increases its effectiveness and builds relationships with customers, prospects and contacts. It’s not an easy task, but it can be made easier by utilizing social media to identify, listen to and connect with the true fans of your company, your peers or competitors – and even your industry as a whole.

Seth Godin, one of today’s most recognizable marketing visionaries, wrote about this on his blog, saying “one true fan is worth perhaps 10,000 times as much as a stranger.”

If this is true, how do you know who your true fans are? How do you effectively market to them? What do they care about? Here are some suggestions on how to use social media to guide a true fan marketing strategy.

Identify the right fans – The first step is simply understanding and knowing who your true fans are. True fans aren’t necessarily people who are evangelists of your company. They could be proponents of the broader category of technology that you sell or could even be fans of your competitors.

Use social media to identify people online who have something to say about you, your competitors or your industry and follow them. Twitter is an ideal medium for identifying fans, but you can also identify relevant blogs, Facebook fans and LinkedIn group participants who will add to your list. If you could create a list of the 1,000 people who cared most about your industry and who influenced others, what would it be worth to you?

Listen to your fans – Once you have identified and followed the fans of your company and your industry, listen to them. Establish a process for regularly watching the trending topics of the people who care about your space.

Fish your pond, not the ocean – If all you are fishing for is fresh water trout, why look for them in the ocean? Search is an extremely important component of your marketing strategy, but it isn’t precise. Google and other search engines require you to be highly specific in your search terms. Otherwise you are flooded with irrelevant data. Similarly, wouldn’t it be nice to refine search to the output from your true fans?

Create a data feed from your fans outputs and then use search more effectively on broader terms. An example: I’ve worked in the security industry, but looking at a Twitter feed of anyone who mentions “security” isn’t that useful. There is simply too much data. By searching on that same term from the 1,000 people who care about my space, everything changes.

Engage with your fans – Once you know who your fans are and what they’re talking about, you can more effectively interact with them. Reply to their tweets, comment on their blogs, or generate original content that addresses an emerging topic your fan base is talking about. All of this will strengthen the connections to your closer community.

Market to your fans – Your true fan list should be one of your most valuable marketing assets. As you establish these contacts, your marketing promotions can become that much more effective and viral. Keep your fans top of mind when you do any of the following things:

  • Solicit product feedback
  • Launch a product
  • Promote an event
  • Publish a whitepaper
  • Host a webinar or online forum

Give your fans the tools to market for you – The whole point of marketing to your fans is that they have reach and influence that you simply won’t be able to achieve. Generate promotional items and marketing content that your fan list can get behind, promote to their own network and evangelize on your behalf.

Your pipeline growth from these efforts will be of a much higher quality and allow your sales team to be much more productive with their interactions.

Many companies spend an enormous amount of time and energy focusing on how to grow their contact database and marketing to that list. That time can be better spent, though, by understanding who your fans are and using them to increase the quality of that list and the effective use of your limited resources.

Next Story:
Previous Story:

Tags: ,




Photo of Scott Olson

About the Author, Scott Olson

Scott Olson is a serial entrepreneur and is currently the president of MindLink Marketing providing strategic marketing services to startups. He has founded two companies, one of which was sold to Cisco Systems, and served as the VP of Marketing at three others, one of which was sold to Symantec. He has guest lectured at the University of Texas at Austin on Entrepreneurship. In 2007, Duke University Engineering Department honored Scott with the Distinguished Young Alumni award. He can be found on twitter at @scottdolson1.

  • Thanks for all the great comments. I've gotten a ton of great feedback on this article. One thing I didn't mention is how useful Twitter lists are for organizing sub-groups of your fans to listen to and engage with. Glad you enjoyed the article.
  • I think you nailed this on the head. Especially the last note of giving your fans the tools to market for you. We know it’s about sales, but it’s also creating those brand ambassadors to help create sales for you. Nice post.
  • Great article! I also believe in targeting your message to a specific audience. I think the listeners and followers (fans) of your message are highly attracted to something that would interst them vs. a general message to a global audience via mass email. And as we are more innundated with mass email, my experience has been to delete the email before it even reaches my inbox. Careful positioning of your message is key to being heard, followed by careful listening!
  • Great article Scott! I agree that it's become useless to send out a mass e-mail to everyone in your industry and that it's more valuable to have one true fan than a ton of strangers. Luckily all the new social media tools make it easier to connect with your fans in a less time consuming manner. The most important thing to remember is responding to your fans though- there's no point in having social media if you're not even listening to your customers!
  • I agree completely with what you said about being "highly specific in your search terms. Otherwise you are flooded with irrelevant data."

    When using tools like Plotonic or HubSpot, I found that I got more accurate results by being more specific and leaving out terms that were generic. For instance, if your brand is "Target," you should look for phrases like "at Target" and "in Target" instead of just "Target," which will yield you mostly noise.

    Thanks for the article!
  • Great article, but your opening comments on purchased lists really hit home for me. My former Marketing VP manager was a big fan of purchasing lists to "fill up our lead database." He could never figure out that it was just turning us into a spammer and wasting thousands of dollars of our marketing budget.

    But, as a good quantitative marketer, I had to do some analytics to see if he was actually on to something. Looking at the data, contacts from purchased lists who were marketed to over the past 18 months had an open rate of 0.7% overall, and that's probably high. In fact, some of the individual lists, with 4,000+ contacts, returned absolutely ZERO opens across multiple email campaigns.

    Sigh - these times they are a changin', and marketers need to change with them...
  • Great article Scott. I think the most important suggestions were to identify and listen. Doing that solely through participation keeps you close to where the action is but it's a long road. Social media monitoring software which ranges from free to very expensive, can shorten the time it takes to identify true fans and can make listing a lot more efficient. The ironic thing is, that social participation can be a great source for the lists used in email marketing.
  • I like the "Engage with your Fans". I think some people should be told that this doesn't mean - "harass". Consumers have developed little tolerance for spam or harassment now, so I think it's important to have a plan or strategy on how to engage with your fans or potential clients. Carefully handled and managed over a long-term basis, this could generate some amazing results.
  • Greate comment Fiona. Harassment is definitely not engagement. If you are actually listening to your true fans you will find that more often than not they will start a conversation you can participate in. Thanks for your thoughts.
  • Glad you liked it Virginie! I think there is a lot of room for improvement in engagement tactics in social media and people are still figuring out a lot of it.
  • This is one good post!
    After several years of social media monitoring which ultimately creates noise, laser targeted and community focus is becoming the new approach, where tools like eCairn Conversation brings tremedous value. Thanks for this article!
blog comments powered by Disqus