Visit the CMA Website

Canadian Marketing Blog

Welcome to the CMA - Canadian Marketing Association - Blog. This Blog is an initiative of the CMA Digital Marketing Council. All marketing-related topics are fair game: branding, strategy, online, offline, marketing trends, technology, direct marketing, market research...and more.


Social Marketing Etiquette

A lot of clients want to get involved in Social Marketing but are overwhelmed with the landscape and simply don’t know where to go or what to do. Some of them fear opening up dialogue because they won’t have enough control over their image.

Welcome to marketing in 2008.

As with any type of community, there are rules and etiquette that must be followed in order to be successful. Generally people on the internet don’t like to feel like they are being advertised to in a traditional way. But if people can provide their feedback, creativity, opinion, or gain some value by interacting with a brand or company, they will be far more receptive to interacting with a campaign.

Here are 3 simple rules for Social Marketing that should always be considered when launching a campaign:

1. Foster Conversation
Whether it’s a company blog, a branded social networking site, a microsite with comments enabled or a video posting site, LET PEOPLE TALK. Even if it means that they might say something negative.

Of course there needs to be some moderation to disallow inappropriate content, but let people voice their opinions and talk openly and freely. This is the only way to build trust in a social marketing environment and the only way to truly understand what your customers are saying, be it negative or positive.

2. Don’t Fake It
Let your employees post content, create aliases or star in viral videos, but don’t ever lie about it or try to deceive the public. People know a fake viral video when they see one and if they think you are trying to deceive them, it won’t fare favourably for your brand.

If you are securing sponsored blog coverage, always be up front if it is a sponsored post, otherwise you will end up looking bad as a result.

3. Reach Traffic with Sponsorship NOT SPAM
The days of spamming out your message to mass groups of people are long gone. People are disgusted with spam these days and anything that even closely resembles it immediately becomes a target for bad press among net citizens.

Sponsorship opportunities on Facebook & other social networks, or branded contest pages on YouTube may cost more, but your message is getting out in a more effective and ethical manner. This also ensures that the individuals who participate in your campaign, do so because they are interested and because it was their own personal choice to do so.

So have fun out there with your projects, be innovative, and let your customers have some fun too. Maintaining an honest open relationship with your customers will give you the sort of PR that you can’t pay to receive.

If you simply aren’t ready to dive into Social Marketing yet, hire a consultant, and let them help you navigate your way through the landscape. You’ll be glad you did.

  • Comment on this post
  • Send 'Social Marketing Etiquette' to a Friend
  • Permalink
Jun. 24 2008 09:00 AM | Posted by Selina Jane Eckersall | Comments 5 posted | Categories Social Media -

Are you passionate about a marketing topic? Would you like to write a post about it for the Canadian Marketing Blog?
  • Submit a new post


Subscribe to our feed

August
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31




Blog Roll