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30 things learnt about running social media campaigns
Here's a list of 30 things that we, as cross-discipline creatives in the King James Group, have learnt about running social media campaigns over the last year.
- Content is more important than channels: as long as people look at the content, it really doesn't matter if they're on the brand website, Facebook or YouTube.
- If it's worth creating a social media campaign, it's worth booking some online media spend to support it.
- Consumer-generated content is more powerful than brand-created content.
- Managing conversations and communities in social media campaigns requires skill and experience (it's not a job for the intern…). [see Social media is a people problem - managing editor]
- Be current and be quick.
- Go to where your consumers hang out; don't force them to come to you.
- The more arb, the better.
- The starting point for any campaign should be: “What can we give the consumer of value that they can't get elsewhere?”
- Flash sucks (most of the time).
- “Virals” do too (as this is causing some debate, it's worth clarifying that while I think getting content to go viral is great, creating a ridiculously expensive, Flash-heavy piece of programming that relies on going viral to be successful, is asking for trouble. I think Sturgeons Law that “90% of everything is crud” certainly applies to the grubby genre of viral marketing).
- We're competing with everything else on the Internet; our work better be pretty damn relevant and entertaining.
- Social media campaigns aren't a 9-to-5, Monday to Friday, job.
- Bloggers are harder to pitch stories to than journalists (they work out of passion; journalists often don't, sadly).
- There is a free app for everything.
- Don't get caught in a fight about whether Wordpress or Tank is the best platform.
- Don't take trolls personally.
- The best campaigns adapt and learn as they grow.
- We are telling stories with our campaigns. They need mystery, sub-plots and panache.
- Tweet-to-win competitions give social media marketing a bad name. Just say no.
- Don't talk like an ad; people will hate you for it.
- Don't drive traffic to a web campaign with print, billboards, TV or radio. It's pointless.
- Persuade clients to allow us to post social media content without having to sign everything off - they'll just have to trust us to get it right (this is one of the reasons the Steri Stumpie campaign in particular really works)
- Delete things that go wrong quickly...
- Don't pretend to be something you're not; someone will notice. [once again, see Social media is a people problem - managing editor]
- The first question clients ask us is: “How do we measure this?”
- Clients love Google and Facebook Analytics. [learn more about web analytics - managing editor]
- You still need a good idea.
- Things need to happen in the real world to talk about online.
- Actually, there is no such thing as a good social media campaign, only good integrated campaigns (everything else sucks).
- Don't ask consumers to upload videos of themselves; they can't be bothered.
• Adapted from original blog post published on 13 March 2010.
For more:
- Bizcommunity.com: PR & social media