Social Media and Sales – a Perfect Match

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At this point in time, nobody questions the value that social media has brought to our professional and personal lives. The next question is always how can the value of social media translate into increasing revenue. There are many ways.

The answer is yes; however, the way that you go about achieving greater financial success through  your social media efforts needs to be well thought out and strategically planned. Social media and sales can work together to locate new prospective clients for your business, speak with those prospective clients, and furnish useful information. The big challenge in this case lies in the idea that the success of social media is based on building, strengthening and maintaining relationships. It does not have the hard sell as its foundation.

With that said, it is also important to be aware that there are many different types of selling, some of which don’t mention dollars and cents in any way. Every effort that we make is selling in one form or another.

Social media strengthens your opportunities to increase business by focusing more accurately on your target audience, communicating most effectively on what is important to your target audience, offering large amounts of information that will solve the problems of your audience, and building meaningful relationships that will eventually lead to other people trusting you so much that they will want to buy what you are selling. The concept of building credibility and trust through relationships is the same online and in person. They must always serve as the basis of all meaningful relationships.

It is with great trepidation that you should proceed when it comes to going from establishing relationships that end up with a sale. It is a relationship that must be nurtured and cultivated. It is good to consider the coupling of social media and sales as a partnership that grows steadily and positively only because the two exist side by side. You need both to succeed. As always, when you think from the perspective of the client (WIIFM [What’s In It For Me?]), you can understand that you are giving a great deal to them by enriching the relationship with social media and all of the benefits that come from it. There are many ways to successfully combine social media and sales so that you achieve an end that makes everyone happy.

Respond quickly: Let’s face it, nobody likes to be ignored. This is definitely true when it comes to your prospective clients. When a person reaches out to you (with a question or comment, etc), make sure that you reach out to them in return right away. Most comments and questions are time sensitive. You want to make sure that you respond to them before someone else beats you to the punch.

Make sure that your focus is on your clients: Your web presence should always be user friendly for those people who want to connect with you. If you make it difficult, the prospective clients won’t have to patience to keep trying to connect with you. They will leave quickly. You should make sure that you have a lot of valuable information just waiting for them to click on. The information should be easy to download and to share with others. Your file formats should be the ones that are used by most people and your content should be clear, concise and straightforward. It is very important to listen to what your prospective and existing clients want and to make sure that you give it to them. Another important aspect of relationship building is sharing. You should share as much valuable content as possible with your connections, even if the content was not written by you.

Be pleasant: The expression “You catch more flies with honey than vinegar” is so true. You and your business must always appear helpful and friendly. You should consistently give your clients that feeling that you are there to serve them in some capacity. It is critical that you teach everyone with whom you work to have the same approach. When people think about your business, you want them to immediately connect it to a feeling that they can always come to you to solve their problems in a pleasant and helpful way. This will drive them to return to you over and over again.

Keep the process in mind: As important as the end result is (in other words, making sales), having an effective and strong process is critical to the success of your business. Always keep in mind that the journey is just as important as the end result. If you accomplish one sale but if your approach to getting that sale was not strong and didn’t touch your client in some way (on a human level), you may never make another sale with that person. The process has be a real success for your business to ultimately be a success.

Conclusion

Social media and sales are a wonderful and natural match. Make sure that you are well versed at using it to its fullest potential. Of course, that doesn’t imply that there is no work to be done along the way, however. You need to work on the social media aspect first (the aspect that involves relationships) before you can get to the crowning jewel, which is the actual sale of your products and/or services. So, go out there and start building those relationships.

We are pleased to provide you with the insightful comments contained herein. Please contact us at CompuKol Communications for further discussion on how we might be able to assist you and your team and don’t forget to “like” our Facebook page for additional, valuable content.

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Author

  • Carolyn Cohn

    Carolyn Cohn is the Co-Founder & Chief Creative Services of CompuKol Communications. Carolyn manages CompuKol’s creative and editorial department, which consists of writers and editors. Her weekly blogs are syndicated globally. She has decades of editorial experience in online editing, and editing books, journal articles, abstracts, and promotional and educational materials. Carolyn earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in English from the State University of New York (SUNY) at Buffalo.

9 Responses

  1. Robert Eastman says:

     

    Via LinkedIn Groups

    Group: Small Business Online Community
    Discussion: Social Media and Sales – a Perfect Match

    Michael,

    Thanks for sharing this very insightful and well-written article by Carolyn Cohn.

    The points that really stood out for me were:

    – There is a place for "selling" in social media, and it is "building, strengthening and maintaining relationships. It does not have the hard sell as its foundation."

    – Social media is an opportunity to communicate with your target audience, to provide them information and insight that is useful – and useable – by them, and that will help them (want to) establish a relationship with you.

    – Social media can also help you to establish and build trust and credibility, which is as important as it has ever been.

    – Respond to people promptly. (A challenge for all of us at one time or another.)

    – Be user-friendly – it is not all about "you".

    – The process – how you get there – is as important as the end result; ignore the process, and your relationships will suffer.

    I continue to be surprised by the stumbles people make in using social media. I have seen more than my share of examples here in LinkedIn of people trying to share insights about articles newsletters and email newsletters – that are themselves riddled with misspellings; other instances of people shamelessly putting promotions of their services or webinars under "discussions" here in LinkedIn; still other instances of people carpet-bombing the media with unelightened links, where they could have provided even more value by providing, as you have, a useful synopsis or summary – or explanation – of the content.

    Perhaps I am expecting too much. But when "experts" in online publishing and email marketing do not know the difference between "principal" and "principle", or "your" and "you're" (each of which I have seen on LinkedIn in the past week), I must admit to getting a bit discouraged about the care and thought people are putting in to using social media.

    This reminds me of the Seth Godin piece, "Do you have the right to be heard?" http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2010/06/do-you-have-the-right-to-be-heard.html

    The only thing(s) he was missing from his list, and I would add to yours, is: Are you sure you know how to spell and to write? Have you done a re-read and a spell-check?
    Posted by Robert Eastman

  2. Marilyn Lockwood says:

     

    Via LinkedIn Groups

    Group: NJ Association of Women Business Owners (NJAWBO)
    Discussion: Social Media and Sales – a Perfect Match

    How long does it take to see evidence of its value? I've never gotten any clients from any of my social network connections.
    Posted by Marilyn Lockwood

  3. Rhoberta Shaler says:

     

    Via LinkedIn Groups

    Group: For Women Entrepreneurs
    Discussion: Social Media and Sales – a Perfect Match

    Very important points in the social media world, and in the everyday offline world of doing business. Thanks for the contribution, Carolyn. My favorite social media outlet is LinkedIn and I invite all FWE members to join me there.
    Posted by Rhoberta Shaler, PhD

  4. Karen says:

    This article is a good foundation piece, however there are some subtle distinctions in social media that often get ignored. For example, my network contains a lot of people who consider themselves my peers and not potential clients. I see this a lot. So they are not ever going to be "sold" on anything I offer as they believe they can do the same. It's not always about selling — I love interacting with thought leaders and thoughtful people. In addition to the writing issues mentioned above in the comments (especially on LinkedIn) I find many discussions spiral down into nasty conversations people would be ashamed to have face-to-face OR threads are filled with open pleas for employment. (And who can blame people in this economy?)

  5. Cristina Rodriguez says:

    Carolyn:
    Those tips you just gave are ussually take it for granted,a and keeping your mind in customer needs is everything. You are so right when said  that the process is of  the same importance that the end.

  6. Neil Licht says:

     

    Via LinkedIn Groups

    Group: A Solo Business – Solopreneurs And Business Owners
    Discussion: Social Media and Sales – a Perfect Match

    Here's how we in sales can use social media to increase revenue. BTW, it takes patience and tenacity but it works:

    The web and the fact that folks automatically source on line at precisely the time they need something presents a different challenge – How to Re Tool messaging and sales approaches to Capture Business in our "everything's a commodity" mentality Market Place

    Given that, Before you begin your journey to gain a "go to" position and prospects via social media ( thats isn't relying on facebook or twitter or even your web page as the magic path), you need to do some homework first:

    Quick starting solid business growth

    While we all want to grow our businesses as painlessly as possible, there is some important homework to be done first in order to see the paths and avenues to take when trying to gain traction for a product or service so sales can happen.

    Look at these key issues in strategic positioning, messaging, understanding your target audiences and actual selling approaches that need to be addressed to get YOU sales:

    • Where is my target audience Who are they
    • What do they care about
    • How do they source
    • Where do they go for industry updates and information and how do you get featured "there"
    • How do I think from the point of view of my target audiences so I can relate and connect
    • What do I specifically "say" that can instantly capture the targeted audiences, prospects so they want to talk
    • How do I differentiate myself from the pack so i get called
    • How does my target audience evaluate issues and solutions
    • How can I define my key audiences and position to be of service to each audience so they want what I offer
    • How do I become a featured speaker at events and establish my position as a go to expert

    That reveals where target audiences are, where their "influencers" are and where you should be active via articles, social media, blogs, email, newsletters to create a "go to" national presence and reputation.

    Next, using what you found, apply 2 key sales axioms as the road map for tapping into what you learned, using/leveraging each identified path and for messaging accordingly in each avenue you found that can create calls, buyers, get attention and position you as the go to source:

    * Axiom #1: People do things for their reasons, not yours.

    * Axiom #2: Imagine the prospect has a sign on his forehead that says “so what”

    These two principles guide the selling process, whether in letters, emails, your web page, blog or in person. If you remember these two axioms, your sales reach outs and what you say in them will come out as grabbers and connectors with issues and concerns that prospects interested buyers have, not as product pitches and then link/position what you "offer" as a way to solve those issues.

    Understanding this thinking in target markets and constructing your reach outs based on the 2 sales axioms can get you the desired national presence and reach that you want plus the all important interested "real" prospect that you want.

    Regards, Neil Licht, Posted by Neil Licht

  7. Leanne Hoagland-Smith says:

     

    Via LinkedIn Groups

    Group: Need A Speaker / Be A Speaker
    Discussion: Social Media and Sales – a Perfect Match

    Zig Ziglar defined sales as the transference of feelings. Social Media when executed correctly enhances that transference.
    Posted by Leanne Hoagland-Smith

  8. Venus Davenport says:

     

    Via LinkedIn Groups

    Group: Sticky Branding
    Discussion: Social Media and Sales – a Perfect Match

    Just compare 5 Billion Mobile users against 1.8 billion internet
    users, where would you get good business from?

    Go Mobile And Be Mobile

    "Local Mobile Monopoly allowed us to do in
    4 minutes what it took us 4 months to put
    together." – And generated more than $30,000 in
    one good month

    Posted by Venus Davenport