Posts Tagged ‘Gail Z. Martin’

Q & A: Planning Social Media Activities For Your New Business

December 16th, 2010

By Gail Z. Martin

What time and personnel resources will social media activities require from me?

In my book, 30 Days to Social Media Success, I recommend setting aside 30 minutes a day for 30 days to get your social media strategy up and running.  After that, you’ll need to allow some time each week to keep your sites updated with fresh content.  The key thing is to create your strategy based on your top business goal and key target audience to keep you from getting distracted by time-wasters like cute pictures of kittens and online games like Farmville.  As far as personnel resources, that depends on whether or not you want to do the work yourself.  If your company is heavily dependent on e-commerce, then it may be worthwhile for you to have a dedicated social media person.  For most companies, a virtual assistant can handle uploading posts and keeping sites fresh (with content you provide) for just a few hours a week.

How often should I be actively engaging in each site to keep up a presence and » Read more: Q & A: Planning Social Media Activities For Your New Business

Back to Top

Q & A: FaceBook Primer

September 19th, 2010

By Gail Z. Martin

I opened a Facebook page and people I don’t know tried to friend me. Is it OK to accept?

The whole purpose of Facebook and other social media sites is to connect with people and meet new people. If you went to a networking event, you wouldn’t scream and dive under the table if a stranger approached you. You shouldn’t react with panic on Facebook, either. Begin a conversation. Find out what attracted the person. Perhaps they are interested in your topic, need your professional assistance (a prospective client), or you may know someone in common who recommended you. If a Facebook friend sends inappropriate messages or gives you bad vibes, you can always “unfriend” them with the push of a button. Just remember to never share sensitive personal information on any social media site, such as when you’ll be gone on vacation, photos or personal information about children, or anything about yourself you wouldn’t want to see on the front page of the newspaper.

I don’t know how to get more friends and followers, what should I do?

First, invite all the people you know in “real life” to join your social media sites. Then invite the people on your opt-in email list. Go looking for friends, colleagues, classmates, neighbors and » Read more: Q & A: FaceBook Primer

Back to Top

Career Transition: Are Social Media Myths Stalling Your New Business?

September 9th, 2010

By Gail Z. Martin

When you’re starting your own business, you need every edge to make the most of a slippery recovery.  Yet many new business owners fail to integrate social media in their marketing arsenal due to common, yet mistaken, ideas about what social media is (or isn’t) and how social media works.  By incorporating social media in your marketing strategy from the beginning, you give your company the best head start possible.

Social media is a concept that embraces thousands of different types of sites, online communities and helper applications. At the heart of social media is the old fashioned concept of networking within a community. Once you realize that social media is really networking by another name, it can be a lot easier to allocate time to invest in creating a presence for your business. And where most real-life networking events or trade shows have a limited geographic range and schedule, social media is a global opportunity that never sleeps.

Myth #1: Social Media is just for kids. It’s true that Facebook started out as a platform just for college students at select schools. But that’s ancient history by Internet standards. Take a look on Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, and you’ll see marketing giants like the Mayo Clinic, AARP, 3M and others who understand the value of being where their customers are already congregating.
Browse profiles, and you’ll see that social media isn’t just for teens. A large and growing percentage of users are over 30 years old. There are no shortage of sites for midlife women, retirees, mid-career » Read more: Career Transition: Are Social Media Myths Stalling Your New Business?

Back to Top