Social Selling Strategies

social selling susan gilbertAre you getting all the sales you want from social media?

Do you wish your followers showed more interest in your products or services?

Social selling isn’t a precise formula for making sales; rather, it comes from solid interactions with your business or brand’s community. As word-of-mouth grows online, it’s crucial to find ways to connect with your prospects and customers that capture their interest and fulfill their needs. This approach will lead to increased sales.

The Problem and the Benefit

With strong social networks like Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus, Instagram, and YouTube, consumers have the power to promote or harm a business. Reactions from the public happen fast, which can directly affect your sales—either positively or negatively. A recent case involves Best Buy, which had to issue a public apology on Twitter after mentioning a well-known murder podcast called Serial. The backlash from the public was intense:

BestBuy_Tweet

It’s important to be relatable and non-controversial while maintaining open communication with your connections. Content should be at the top of your marketing strategy list along with a few other steps that will help your business or brand attract more leads and sales:

Create a sales page

Take advantage of services like LeadPages, or create your own landing page on your website where your social media fans and followers can learn more about what your company has to offer. Use these links in between other content that you share to avoid “selling” directly to your community.

Post a steady stream of quality content

Utilize your resources and target market research to feed your followers with information they will love. This can include articles that have previously been covered, or be updated information with a new twist. You can also repurpose your posts through infographics, presentations, and videos to create a variety in your mix. Visual content is especially popular on social media, and can generate a great deal of visibility like this example from a recent SlideShare presentation I published:

susan-slideshare

These types of images and videos are great to share on other popular networks like Pinterest, YouTube, and Google Plus, and short snippets can even be condensed to be featured on places like Vine and Instagram.

Actively participate in conversations

Be on alert for buzz around your tweets and posts on social media or join in on a conversation that could help your community. This can be done through social services like Hootsuite and Rignite, which make it easy to track your social feeds. Try to respond in a timely manner, especially when it comes to customer service issues.

Post helpful information and tips

Instead of making a sales pitch or asking your community to go to your website or join your network, draw them in with something of value instead. This can include contests, free reports, a coupon, asking their opinions, and so on. Not only will they appreciate the chance to win or participate, but will also be more inclined to share your content.

Social selling is not about the sale, but rather building trust with your fans and followers on social media who will in return reward your brand or business with word-of-mouth advertising online. People no longer respond to sales presentations until they know your company is one worth engaging with.

It’s good practice to use the available analytics on places like Twitter and Facebook to track your progress and learn where your conversions are coming from. Thankfully most social networks have this capability built-in for free, and provides great insight into how your content and conversations are performing. Just remember that social media is all about people, and the sales will follow!