Social media is a tool that has been just about talked to death. Everyone is using it, everyone knows it is a great venue for content sharing, and everyone is probably sick of hearing about it. Yet, surprisingly few people are properly utilizing it.
Instead of making the most of the opportunity to reach new audiences, content creators are using it as a dumping ground. They post links, badly thought-out visuals, and spam their followers with pleas to check out their latest video.
It’s time to take things to the next level.
Your social media pages are not just a platform for auto-sharing your blog posts. When you promote content, you should be doing it smartly. That starts not with the social strategy, but with the content itself.
This is perhaps the most important question you can ask, and you should ask it before you even get started on the content. Where do you intend people to find your posts? How can you better reach those audiences?
By having a clear understanding of how you are going to utilize each platform, you’ll also find it much easier to come up with your own ROI. Traffic is a bad metric for social media marketing. Instead, look at:
How can you best ensure that your content is reaching the audience you want? If you have a blog post that is targeted towards a certain demographic, you want to go where that demographic is. Pew Research did a survey last year that showed the different groups that are prominent on different platforms.
Some interesting statistics you may want to keep in mind:
This information can help you come up with a realistic strategy when creating content, based around certain platforms.
No, not recycling for the environment (though you should be doing that, too). I am talking about reusing your old content to create more. It is a fantastic way to not only give you more traction from a single piece, but to attract audiences on other platforms by offering the same content in a different way.
Text Optimizer is a great tool to come up with various recycling or follow-up ideas. You can run the tool to find popular questions on the topic and come up with popular questions to branch out to:
You should never let a piece of content remain singular. A good rule of thumb is to resolve to make five new items from everyone you create. If that is your goal, you will never be short dynamic content for multiple platforms, and your social strategy will be sound.
The more content you provide – the more opportunities will come your way. Just make it a rule to think: “How long can I make that chain?”
Arguments about the “perfect” amount of words have been around as long as blogs have. The truth is that there is no formula that will ensure success. But there is a range that appears to do better by a large margin.
Most surveys show that blog posts that are within 500 and 1000 words perform the best, especially when it is on the longer end of that spectrum. Next is the 1,500 – 2,500 range, but that is getting into dangerous territory. You will have to really sell the content to keep people reading that long.
For videos on sites like YouTube, shorter videos that reach the average length of 4½ minutes seem to do the best. Though anything from 30 seconds to 10 minutes seem to perform relatively well. Longer videos are better off on more creatively focused sites, like Vimeo.
Podcasts are hard to gauge, because it depends largely on content and topic. But certainly some of the most popular podcasts are those who routinely clock in over 30 minutes, and at the longest point around an hour.
This has to do with the listener’s, probably. How many people listen to podcasts when they are working out, or cleaning, or shopping? Consider that when recording, as no one likes to have to constantly stop what they are doing to switch to new files.
Ultimately you want to come up with the best format based on your internal analytics. Finteza is a good platform to use to collect meaningful insights. You can set up multiple funnels to track user journeys based on a content asset or social media channel that brought them to the site:
All it takes is a little creativity to really give your content and social strategy a boost.
Have any tips? Leave a comment below.
The original version of this article was first published on V3Broadsuite.