7 Easy Steps to Create a Social Media Marketing Strategy

marketing strategy

Social media marketing can help you build engaged audiences where your customers and target audience already spend their time.

Or, it can be a time-consuming obligation that spreads you thin, resulting in a drain on time and money rather than the asset you’ve seen it become for many established brands.

The difference is having a social media marketing plan that keeps your actions focused, along with a process that enables you to execute without taking too much attention away from running your business.

But starting from scratch can be a daunting task, especially with so many different channels to build a presence on and the commitment that comes with it.

That’s why we’ve put together this guide to walk you through how to approach your social media marketing strategy, along with tools and tips to help you pull it off.

What is a social marketing strategy?

A social media marketing strategy gives you a big-picture view of your social media marketing goals and how you can best achieve those outcomes. Brands continue to ride the wave of social media marketing, with 73% of marketers believing their efforts have been “somewhat effective” or “very effective” for their business.

Whether it’s TikTok ads or influencer marketing, social media lets brands access cost-effective marketing. Like a Swiss Army knife, a social media marketing plan can serve all kinds of marketing functions from:

      • Driving traffic and sales;
      • Tapping into influencer networks;
      • Building brand awareness;
      • Amassing an engaged audience;
      • Connecting with customers and prospects;
      • Providing customer support.

This is because you have a wide range of channels to incorporate, each with its strengths and weaknesses to consider.

For the sake of simplicity and making it easy to get started, we’ll split your social media strategy into seven parts:

      1. Goals: The outcomes you want from your efforts and how you’ll measure them.
      2. Target audiences: Researching and defining your easiest customers.
      3. Metrics: Creating a data-driven marketing strategy.
      4. Content mix: Recurring ideas or post types to include in your social media programming.
      5. Channels: The social networks you want to dedicate your time to and what you’ll use them for.
      6. Infrastructure: Setting up the process and tools to execute your strategy efficiently.
      7. Improvements: Adapt and innovate on your progress during the year.

This isn’t a prescription for digital marketing success, of course, only a framework to help you lay the foundation. By the end, you’ll be better equipped to understand how all of these pillars are connected and inform each other, helping you to make smarter decisions and revise your social media strategy over time.

How to create a social media marketing strategy

Analysis from Kepios shows that there are 4.65 billion social media users around the world in April 2022, equating to 58.7 percent of the total global population.

A good strategy will help your brand find the right customers in this growing space. It will also help you determine which social media platforms you should focus on. Whether you’re new to social media or revisiting your strategy for 2022, follow these steps to create your strategy.

      • Set social media goals that are relevant to your business;
      • Identify your target audiences on social media;
      • Decide your metrics and KPIs;
      • Create your social media content mix.

Set goals that are relevant to your business

Everything you post or do should be tied back to one of your goals as a business owner. To start, write your goals down and think about how you’ll measure the success of your efforts.

Social media marketing requires a lot of testing and trying things out. You can’t improve any particular aspect of it without knowing what signals to pay attention to. You can even use these signals to define targets for your social media marketing plan to help you stay motivated and on track.

Beyond branding, you need all the social handles. People need to find you. They need to be able to find you on social and on your website and have it all be clear and consistent.

John Cascarano, founder of Beast 

Here are just some of the goals you should consider for your social media marketing:

Drive brand awareness. Reach more people to increase the likelihood of your brand getting seen by the right people. You can measure this using impressions/reach, likes, shares, mentions, or any other signal that shows a real person has seen your post(s).

Create demand for your products. Get people interested in your products with relevant inspiration or education, which you can gauge by clicks to your site, products added to a shopping cart, or comments/messages from interested customers.

Acquire leads and customers. These are paying customers, or at least their emails, which you can nurture into sales. A large amount in itself, won’t help you drive sales!

Network to form partnerships. Engage with influencers or like-minded brands for influencer marketing or co-marketing campaigns.

Build a loyal following. Grow an engaged audience that wants to hear from you; don’t inflate your follower count with fake or bought followers. You want to build an authentic community of people who are interested in your products and who will promote your content or products to others. You can measure this by followers you’ve added or lost in a certain time frame, or your engagement rate (total engagement divided by the number of followers).

Establish social proof. Source positive testimonials or content generated by customers/influencers that cast your products in a positive light and can potentially be used in other marketing efforts. Sharing testimonials is an incredibly effective social media marketing tactic and can generate increased awareness and sales.

Provide customer service. A social media presence opens you up to customer questions, complaints, and inquiries. So one of your goals will be to provide this support to customers or direct it to another preferred, private channel. One way to measure this is through your response time for direct messages. (This is displayed as a badge on your Facebook page, for example.)

Become a thought leader in your target market. Social media gives you a voice that you can use to not only participate in conversations but shift them in the direction you think they should go in and build credibility around your products or services.

Everything you do should tick one or more of these boxes, and ideas and new tactics you plan to test out should be evaluated on their potential to achieve these goals.

Keep these broad objectives in mind as we get into the next step: figuring out who you’ll be trying to reach.

Identifying your target audiences

An effective social media marketing strategy starts with understanding your ideal customer. Building rich context on your target audience takes time, but there are steps you can take immediately that will provide lasting value.

Spend some time researching your target audience, looking for demographic and psychographic data or observable patterns that help you form a mental image of who is likely to buy from you. This exercise won’t just inform your initial strategy but also help you develop a voice and tone for your brand that resonates with them.

If your business naturally focuses on a specific niche market (like cat owners, for example), your job will be easier than if you’re trying to appeal to a more general audience (like telecom and airline brands). Check out places your audiences often hang out, such as in subreddits or blogs, to see what they’re interested in.

Facebook, being one of the largest social media platforms and, thus, a database of 2.89 billion monthly active users, is also a great place to do some audience research. Check out your competitors’ pages, clicking through on the profiles of some of their engaged followers to get a better sense of who they are.

Once you’ve done some digging, you can put it all together to create an ideal customer, or buyer persona, who is likely to buy your product.

You don’t have to fill out every trait, but describe what you can to paint an image of this person as it is relevant to your business. The more effort and detail you put into this section, the more impactful your findings will be for your social media marketing strategy.

personas checklist template

The point here isn’t to be 100% accurate but to outline your best guess at the kind of person who would be the easiest to convert into a customer.

As an example, let’s say I’ve started up my apparel brand that sells t-shirts catering to potential customers in the Toronto area:

      • Location: Toronto, Canada
      • Age: 22 to 34 years old
      • Gender: Male and female
      • Interests: Foodie, hip hop, bars, basketball
      • Career/Industry: Business or tech
      • Income level: $30,000 to $70,000
      • Relationship status: Single
      • Favorite websites to visit: BlogTO, Toronto Life, Instagram, Facebook
      • Motivation to buy: Show off their pride as native Torontonians
      • Buying concerns: Prefer to buy from an established competitor or avoid brands that don’t seem authentic or truly familiar with Toronto

Most of these traits can be targeted directly or indirectly through social media ads, but having them written down also helps inform the kind of content I can share to resonate with them.

Keep these buyers’ personas detailed. This is all subject to change or evolves as you begin getting feedback when you start to execute your strategy, pursuing the marketing goals we identified earlier.

Maybe one of your assumptions was wrong or your customers share another trait you didn’t expect at all. Either way, social media marketing is one of the best ways to find out who your customers are, and what you learn can even be incorporated into your larger business roadmap, such as what products you’ll come out with next.

You can go further and develop several audiences or “target segments” to speak to, such as a significant other looking for a gift (not the customer themself), shoppers who already buy from one of your competitors, and people or companies you want to build connections with.

But for now, you’ll be in a better position to consider the next part of your social media strategy: what you’re going to post.

Determine important metrics and KPIs for your social media marketing plan

When tracking your social media marketing performance, it can often like there are a million numbers to look at for your social media analytics. There’s a number for almost everything.

Each social media platform has a different analytics tool. What you decide to track on each one will depend on your goals above.

However, there are a few numbers you’ll want to keep an eye on to grow your social media accounts.

Engagement

Social media marketing engagement involves tracking the number of different metrics. It’s used to understand if your audience actively interacts with your content and how effective campaigns are. High engagement rates indicate audience health (i.e., how responsive they are) and that your content is interesting.

You’ll look at different engagement metrics such as:

      • Likes, comments, and retweets. Engagement rates like shares or retweets are different on every platform. But likes and comments are universal across all.
      • Post engagement. This number takes the amount of post engagements divided by impressions for each.
      • Clicks. Closely tied with your click-through, this metric shows the number of times someone clicks on your content.

Awareness

Awareness metrics can tell you about your brand’s visibility on a platform and are critical to track for your social media marketing efforts. If you have goals for increasing brand awareness, look at:

      • Account mentions. The number of times someone mentions your brand on social media. These can be positive or negative and give you the chance to respond to people and shape your brand’s perception.
      • Impressions. The total number of times a post showed up in a browser’s timeline.
      • Reach. The total number of unique people who see your content.
      • Sentiment. Your brand’s share of voice. It shows how many people are talking about your brand compared to competitors.

Return on investment (ROI)

One of the most important social media analytics for any social media campaign is your ROI. You can track sales if you’re using an in-app store like Facebook Shops. You see how many people purchased something on your website from a social channel in your Shopify Analytics under Sales by social source.

Create your social media marketing strategy content mix

Managing a social media marketing channel is a bit like running your TV network. You can produce social media campaigns with new “weekly episodes.” You can syndicate your content to other channels. You can have reruns of fan favorites or #ThrowBackThursdays to fill in for empty time-slots and commercial breaks to sell your products.

Defining your content mix—recurring formats and post types—makes it easier to think up and produce social content while adding a rhythm to your posting schedule to offer your audience both variety and consistency at the same time. Otherwise, you’ll wind up scrambling for something to publish every day.

Most social media accounts worth following make an implied promise to their audience that they consistently fulfill. For business owners, it often starts with a question:

Beyond your products, how can you consistently provide value to your target audience?

It’s not only about what you post, but how you allocate your resources (time, money, creativity) to maintain your social media presence. Some ideas will warrant a greater investment because they help achieve a number of your goals at once.

Within your content mix, you want to have ideas you can plan for in advance, reproduce, and schedule to go out regularly. For example, you might feature a customer testimonial every Tuesday and share a quote graphic every Wednesday and Friday.

These pieces that are relatively easy to turn around can keep your social media calendar full while you build out more elaborate assets, such as a promotional video or a blog post.

The content mix you develop can incorporate:

      1. News. Information about what’s happening in your industry or posts that are based on what’s trending at the moment.
      2. Inspiration. Motivation to use your products or pursue a certain lifestyle, such as quote graphics or photos from around the world.
      3. Education. Share fun stats and facts or how-to posts from your blog or YouTube channel.
      4. Product/promotional posts. High-quality product shots of your products being used, demo videos, testimonials, or feature explanations can help you achieve your ultimate goal of getting sales. You can often run these as ads after you create them.
      5. Contests and giveaways. A contest or free download in exchange for an email is a great way to promote something of value to both you and your audience other than your products.
      6. Customer/influencer features. Shots or videos featuring your customers or the people they follow.
      7. Community events. Share meetups, fundraisers, or learning opportunities, especially if you’re a local business.
      8. Q&A. Ask your audience a question or request to elicit responses, such as ‘“Tag a friend who’s always late,” or answer a common question that you get from customers.
      9. Tips and tricks. Share useful information and tutorials about your products.
      10. Behind the scenes. Share how your product is made or what you’re doing to grow your business to offer some transparency that your audience can relate to. Giving your audience a look into the humans behind your business can go a long way in creating a trust or building your brand as a founder.
      11. And more. Get creative and try to come up with a content mix that differentiates you from your competitors. Only through publishing content on social media regularly can you get an idea of what works best.

Aim for about five to seven content archetypes to start off with, balancing your content mix with post formats that you can quickly create with a couple that might take some time to produce, like a product demonstration video, as well as posts that aim for sales and posts that just seek to delight and grow your audience.

Based on my hypothetical business selling t-shirts to Torontonians, I might start with the following content archetypes, tying each one to a different goal:

      1. Share a link to a popular product in my store. (Sales)
      2. Create and publish an original meme about life in Toronto. (Awareness and reach)
      3. Share a post from BlogTO or another Toronto-focused publication. (Engagement)
      4. Share a high-quality photo of a popular hangout spot in Toronto or a local event. (Audience building and engagement)
      5. Ask the audience for feedback on potential t-shirt design ideas. (Engagement)
      6. Share a photo featuring a model wearing my shirt and tag them. (Create demand and attract influencers)

Try to vary your programming throughout the week. When new social media followers land on your account, their perception of your brand will be your last three to six posts. If they’re all explicitly selling your products or services, it will turn them off.

Note: Keep in mind that anything you create can potentially be promoted again and again to your audience over time, or on other channels. Don’t shy away from eventual “re-runs,” especially if a certain post has proven to drive traffic, engagement, or sales.

To get you inspired to come up with your content mix, here are some ideas you can borrow from brands that are doing well on social media.

User-generated content

user generated content for social media

Fashion Nova relies on style education via its blog and YouTube channel to market its clothing, which no doubt takes time to produce.

But on its website and in its marketing communications, it lets shoppers browse looks from its Instagram account. These photos are then shared on Fashion Nova’s own Instagram account or store using one of the available Shoppable Instagram apps.

If your products beg to be shared on social media, you can harness that and source social content that you can use for your own social media posts.

Shots of your product being used

letterfolk social commerce on Instagram

While it’s great to have several content formats to add variety to your social media marketing mix, even one proven content format, published consistently, can do wonders for growing your audience.

Letterfolk’s Instagram is a great example of how developing a theme through what you post can make social media publishing less work in the long run, without sacrificing engagement. Nearly all of its posts feature the same premise: a shot of its bestselling products being used in people’s lives.

It can succeed with this strategy because each post helps it achieve several of its goals at once, namely:

      • Create high-level engagement with relatable quotes.
      • Grow a following through an account with a clear and consistent premise.
      • Drive sales by showing off the product in action.

Think about how you can develop your content formats to chase several of your goals with a single post.

Video

The introduction of smartphone cameras and video editing apps has made it easy to hit Record. A Biteable survey revealed that 60% of businesses use video as a marketing tool, and 94% of marketers who use video plan to continue in the coming years.

YouTube is the most popular social channel for videos, with 88% of marketers using it, followed by Facebook, with 76%.

social media marketing stat

Taking videos is easy and convenient. You don’t need an entire production studio to create engaging videos. Video tours, product updates, how-to guides, and general entertainment videos make great content that attracts followers and drives them to your website.

While it’s clear YouTube is the king of video content, there are other video channels to take advantage of:

      • TikTok;
      • Instagram Reels;
      • Instagram Stories;
      • IGTV;
      • Snapchat;
      • Facebook Stories.

Good video content normally falls under two categories: helpful or entertaining. Fashion designer Justine Leconte, for example, runs a YouTube channel focused on ethical fashion, lifestyle, and trends. She teaches women how to create a wardrobe for their body type, work with colors, and more.

Justine’s video content sees millions of views per video, attracting the right audience to her brand.

youtube creator example on social media

The above video from Justine has over 7.8 million views and over 3,600 comments, which shows just how engaging video content is. She also links to her Shopify store, where viewers can shop her product lines, helping prove the ROI of her video marketing efforts.

Livestreams

Livestreaming went from zero to hero over the past few years. From 2019 to 2020 alone, the online live streaming industry has grown by 99%, according to the latest data from StreamElements. Conviva’s latest State of the Streaming report reveals that live content also earns 27% more minutes of watch time per viewing compared to on-demand video.

Platforms like Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and LinkedIn all have live videos on their platforms. Social media live streaming is authentic and engaging. And the best part? You don’t need any fancy video equipment to start a broadcast, just your smartphone.

Some fun Livestream ideas:

      • Organize a Q&A session where fans can send questions about your brand and have them answered.
      • Create tutorials of tools you use.
      • Share your thoughts on a relevant industry topic.
      • Show behind-the-scenes of you creating products and services.
      • Run a flash sale.
      • Host a giveaway contest or fundraiser.

Try one or two of the ideas above for your brand. Test what resonates with your audience the most, and expand on more ideas over time.

Additional tips and resources

      • Be visual. Even if you’re not a designer or video editor, you can use free tools like Canva (social graphics), Adobe Spark or Lumen5 (videos), Meme Generator, and more to produce shareable content.
      • Be purposeful. Tie each part of your content mix back to your target audience and one or more of the goals you established in the previous two stages. Knowing what to measure will help you evaluate the success of a particular idea and inform your strategy over time.
      • Curate and create. To avoid becoming overwhelmed with creating original content, try to curate and remix content as well. Be sure to tag and credit your sources.

Choosing your social media channels

Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Pinterest, Snapchat—there’s no shortage of social media networks for you to build a presence for your brand.

But two mistakes are easy to make when you’re just starting on social media:

      1. Building your presence on more channels than you can maintain.
      2. Treating every channel the same and not playing to the strengths of each.

We’re always testing new platforms. I would say that Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok have been huge drivers from the social media standpoint.

Each channel you choose is another you have to potentially manage. You need to prioritize what you’ll be focusing on in the beginning and that starts by understanding the strengths and weaknesses of each channel.

For the sake of this post, we’ll cover some of the most popular social media channels. But this is by no means an exhaustive list. Look at similar brands and competitors to get a sense of where your audience lives and where you could be building your presence.

Instagram

As a marketing channel, Instagram lets you focus on building a following through a variety of visual mediums.

Unlike Facebook, you can get pretty good results without necessarily paying to play, although if you have the budget available, there’s the option of pursuing Instagram advertising and influencer marketing. But also, unlike Facebook, almost half of its users are millennials and Gen Z between the ages of 18 and 34.

Instagram lets you post images and videos, which are discoverable through hashtags. But there are also Instagram Stories and Instagram Live, which let you put out photos and videos with a 24-hour lifespan. This gives you the unique option of keeping your Instagram feed consistent and clean, while using Stories to test out ideas and share behind the scenes that have a more casual and personal production quality to them.

People are prepared to spend a premium amount for a fashionable product. You need to focus on what looks visually good, because being able to sell on Instagram has been a really big game changer for us.

You can also add product tags and stickers to your business profile. These tags let users tap on a product in your post and story, get more information, then head to your site to purchase it.

instagram shop example

Want to market your business on Instagram? Read Getting Started on IG: A Beginner’s Guide to Instagram Marketing. You’ll learn about setting up your profile, what types of content to post, marketing tips, and more.

TikTok

Genuine content leads the way for brands on TikTok. More than other social networks, viewers prefer engaging, raw videos over highly edited content. It’s this difference that gives TikTok creators a chance to connect with their audience authentically.

If you’re targeting a younger crowd, TikTok is a useful social media channel for your brand. 62% of its audiences are between the ages of 10 and 29 years old.

TikTok is often used for building brand awareness, but it can also be a sales driver thanks to its “link in bio” feature, which allows you to showcase a range of content and products from a single link. Shopify merchant SendAFriend was able to scale to $5 million in sales in two years driven by its TikTok marketing strategy.

tiktok profile example

If you want to run TikTok campaigns for your business, read Authenticity Sells: A Beginner’s Guide to Marketing on TikTok.

Facebook

Few social channels are built for businesses quite like Facebook. On top of a Facebook shop, the ability to add customer reviews, and a popular Messaging feature that can be used to provide customer service, Facebook is also one of the most widely used social media apps worldwide.

But its biggest downside is that, unless you pay to promote your posts, you won’t be able to reach many people, even if they’ve opted in by liking your page.

That said, Facebook can be an incredibly powerful way to use social media for advertising. It’s a database of information that you can use to deliver targeted ads to your ideal customers. If you amplify content that’s set up to produce engagement (likes, shares, comments), such as a viral video, you can generally lower the cost of your advertising, so keep that in mind.

You can learn more about Facebook Advertising in our guide and by checking out these 7 common mistakes to avoid when planning your campaigns.

YouTube

YouTube is another popular way to reach your audience as an online business. It’s the second most-visited website in the world and has a global viewer base, with 42.9% of web users accessing YouTube each month.

You may think that YouTube is only for big brands getting millions of video viewers. However, the number of small businesses advertising on YouTube doubled over the past two years.

You can produce many different types of videos for YouTube, including:

      • Customer testimonials;
      • Product demos;
      • Explainers and tutorials;
      • Reviews and case studies;
      • Vlogs;
      • Education videos.

Whether you’re a creator or an eCommerce brand, you can create video content for YouTube that attracts potential customers. It’s a tactic that the Jeremy Fragrance channel uses to gain visibility for its online store, Fragrance. One.

The channel creates a mix of reviews, tutorials, and curated lists around the topic of fragrances. His videos see millions of views each month. Each video links directly to the Fragrance.One store so people can purchase products directly from YouTube.

youtube channel example

Creating a YouTube account is free. Yet the big investment will come from producing high-quality videos to outpace your competition. Get set up on YouTube today by reading Your Starter Guide to YouTube Marketing: Tips, Strategies, and Tools.

Twitter

Twitter’s greatest strength is that it lets you listen to and engage with other voices in the world. That said, it might not be as strong as a sales channel for many brands but can be used to showcase your brand’s personality (see the Wendy’s or Moon Pie accounts for examples).

wendy's social media marketing example

What you can use Twitter marketing for instead if you choose to, is networking with other brands and journalists, and connecting with potential and existing customers on a smaller scale. Many Twitter users also rely on the platform for news, if that’s a part of your content mix.

Pinterest

While Pinterest isn’t exactly a “social media site,” it often finds itself in a company’s social media marketing mix, especially among eCommerce brands. That’s because users come to Pinterest with more intent to buy something than they do when visiting any other social platform.

Unlike the channels above, Pinterest has a clearly defined user base consisting mostly (71%) of women with disposable income. So it’s not for everyone. But if you’re in the apparel, home decor, or food industry, you’d be missing out on an opportunity to get traffic and sales through both organic and paid Pinterest marketing tactics.

LinkedIn

LinkedIn’s greatest strength is its position as a social network for professionals. If your target audience can be identified by a particular profession or some businesses need your products or service, then it might be worth building your presence here.

LinkedIn is also a great platform for networking, hiring talent, and pursuing business development opportunities by reaching out to brands or people of interest you would like to partner with. LinkedIn continues to invest in helping users distribute their content through the likes LinkedIn newsletter as well.

At the very least, it’s worth having your own personal LinkedIn profile set up for networking and a company page so others can learn more about your business and its employees.

Plan your social media content

With an understanding of your goals, your target audience, and how you’ll be using different channels, it’s time to create the framework you need to manage and schedule your social media calendar.

There are a wide variety of social media management tools you can use for this purpose, but I recommend using Trello for planning content, and LaterHootsuite, or Buffer for scheduling, because they all have free plans to get you started.

Collecting ideas and planning content

Ideas often seem to strike at random. So you need a place to collect and develop them as inspiration comes. Trello has worked wonders for me because I can not only save ideas to a Trello board, but attach links, files, and notes to each idea as it comes to life. It gives you the flexibility to be as meticulous or as barebones as you want with your planning.

The content archetypes you developed earlier are good to fall back on as you plan out what you’ll be posting, but you can also stray from them with new ideas and experiments. There are always going to be aspects of your social media marketing that are reactive, organic, and experimental.

Regardless, you want to create a process that lets you keep a backlog of ideas and develop them until they’re ready to schedule.

I’ve mocked up a template in Trello that you can copy and adapt to suit your purposes.

social media calendar example

If you’re planning to post quality content to multiple channels, make sure the content and copy are optimized for that channel. You can attach channel-specific variations to each card for easy access when you start to the schedule.

Scheduling content: when, where, and how often

With posts in the pipeline of your social media content calendar, it’s time to schedule them. Once you’ve prepared the copy, images, and whatever else you need for your posts (don’t forget to get team approval!), you can start adding them to a queue using the scheduling tool mentioned above.

But how often should you be posting on each of your chosen channels?

While some answers can be prescriptive, the real answer is to start slow and then ramp up to a higher frequency as you develop your routine and figure out what works.

You don’t want to spread yourself too thin or spam your audience’s feeds. It’s fine if you only have time to post once every few days in the beginning. You can build up to one post a day and then test to see if a higher frequency nets you better results on specific platforms.

Ultimately, you want to focus your attention on where it will have the most impact and when your audience will be scrolling through their feeds. If you need a good place to start, think about when people check their feeds: in the morning, at lunch, during their commute, and before bed. The “best posting times” for your particular audience are something you’ll only discover through trial and error. Popular posting times will also vary depending on seasons and other variables.

What’s more important is that you schedule your posts in batches, at least a week in advance. Do it in one sitting, dedicating a few hours at a time so you can focus on other things while your social media publishing runs in the background.

Automate what you can to make time for the tasks you can’t

The reality of social media marketing is there are activities that you won’t be able to simply schedule and forget if you want them to be effective. In-the-moment posts such as Instagram Stories or real-time tweets will need to happen at the moment, and you can only plan so far in advance for them.

There are also other social media activities, such as replying to your audience, community managementrunning ads, and, of course, creating content (although you can outsource any of these functions whenever you’re ready).

Social media marketing, especially early on when you’re doing it yourself, demands that you are deliberate about how you spend your time. Think about how you can be more effective with your time by republishing old posts or allocating some money to paid promotions to get a better return on the time you spent creating content.

Additional tips and resources

      • Create templates. Wherever possible, create design and copy templates based on what works to make it easier to turn around new content on an ongoing basis, especially for recurring content series. For example, you can save your most used Instagram hashtags so you always have them handy when you post, or apply the same filter to your photos to achieve a consistent look.
      • Keep an eye on the calendar. Holidays are a great opportunity to be topical and timely with what you post. Pay special attention to what’s coming up so you can brainstorm social media marketing ideas in advance. Sprout Social has a great calendar that includes hashtag holidays too, if you want something handy to reference.
      • Tailoring your post for each channel. You can share the same post or image to different social channels, but make sure to take the time to optimize copy, images, or videos for the channel you’re posting to—no Instagram posts shared directly to Twitter or tweets that automatically share to Facebook.

Track performance

As a marketer, you expect your social media efforts to grow company revenue. One way you can do that is by tracking what’s working and what’s not. Otherwise, it’s hard to know whether you’re delivering on expectations.

Monitoring your metrics lets you make small changes to your strategy, rather than huge overhauls. You can be proactive in the short term and use those learnings to inform future campaigns.

Use a social media tool like Sprout Social to measure performance across channels. You can deep dive into one channel, or quickly compare multiple channels at once. Sprout Social also gives you access to:

  • Engagement and trend reports
  • Social listening reports
  • CRM integrations to build customer profiles
social media analytics dashboard
Source: SproutSocial

With this data, you can learn what KPIs still align with your business goals and see if they need any adjustments. Analytics tools like Sprout Social also make data easy to access and share, so you can distribute to marketing teams and make smarter decisions, faster.

Improving your social media content strategy

It sounds obvious, but it needs to be said: Social media is a lot different for a business owner or marketer than for a casual user.

Your aim now is to get a positive return on the time, money, and effort you spend. That requires deliberate action.

Your social media strategy is your plan of attack. But in a space like social media that changes by the day, with newsfeed algorithm updates and audiences, always ready for something new, you need to remain flexible and remember to keep your finger on its pulse and constantly improve.

Above all else, remember three things: be authentic, find ways to provide value, and when in doubt, guess, test, measure, and learn.

Illustration by Elena Xausa

Source: shopify.com ~ By: Braveen Kumar ~ Image: Canva Pro

Level Up Your Social Media Strategy for E-commerce: 7 of the Best Campaigns We’ve Ever Seen

Let’s face it:

Social media is a noisy marketplace.

With millions of images, articles, and videos published every day, it’s challenging for new businesses to get noticed.

And it’s only getting harder.

Today, there are currently 4.48 billion social media users around the globe. That means there’s a lot of potential to drive engagement and increase revenue.

The problem, though, is social media users don’t like being sold to. You only need to turn on the news to see the recent backlash regarding ads and sponsored posts on Facebook, among other platforms.

So, how can you design a social media strategy for e-commerce that drives more sales without being salesy?

This post will share seven social media campaign examples from brands killing it on social media, and what we can learn from them.

Example #1: ASOS – Let Your Customers Promote The Brand

ASOS is an online fashion and beauty retailer.

In its #AsSeenOnMe campaign, the brand proved that user-generated content sells.

In the campaign, ASOS asked customers to share pictures of themselves on Instagram with the hashtag #AsSeenOnMe. Pictures then went into a gallery on the ASOS website and feed.

This led to massive engagement and responses from customers.

As a result, the campaign went on for more than four years.

Example post from ASOS campaign

As Seen On Me Instagram Page

The takeaway?

Customers like to feel both seen and heard. They want to express themselves using your products, so create opportunities to make them feel seen and heard.

User-generated content campaigns are a great idea, not only because they give customers a chance to engage with your brand, but also because the content they create can attract people from their personal network to buy from you, too.

Example #2: REI – Sell a Lifestyle

When creating the best social campaigns, it just makes sense to promote lifestyles rather than products.

Why? Because customers are swayed by experiences.

They don’t just buy a certain product to perform a certain action. Rather, they choose a brand because it helps them achieve their goals or remove a pain point. Whether it solves a problem or just makes them feel good, they want to keep reliving that experience.

Imagine you’re a luxury brand that sells expensive bags. Why would consumers buy your products when there are a lot of cheaper alternatives? Why would they need it? When would they use it? Is the bag associated with a certain type of lifestyle?

People purchase lifestyles, not products. The right approach, then, is to connect your products with your customers’ personal identities. Rather than selling a product based on its color and physical attributes, focus on the lifestyle or identity that a customer can obtain.

One example of a brand that successfully sells a lifestyle is REI, a retailer that supplies outdoor recreational gear.

During Black Friday, REI did the opposite of most brands: they closed down and encouraged customers to go outside instead of shop.

Post from REI Opt Outside Campaign

The campaign went viral, and grew in scope from there.

The brand created a search engine on the REI website where users could search for other people’s #OptOutside experiences.

They tapped into a like-minded community of people who wanted to #OptOutside on Black Friday, and other brands jumped on board:

Examples of other brands participating in Opt Outside campaign

What can we learn from REI’s success?

Do something unexpected.

If it’s Black Friday, you can’t easily catch people’s attention with a simple “buy now” message. Think of a creative way you can tap into a community of individuals. You have to know your ideal audience and sell an experience – not just your product.

Example #3: TOMS – Pull on Customers’ Heartstrings

Campaigns with emotional storytelling drive sales and attention to your brand. In fact, a study showed that emotion-based campaigns, like ones that tug at people’s heartstrings, are 31 percent more effective than any other type of marketing.

This is because humans are naturally emotional. They get swayed by emotions when making purchases, interacting with people, and many other scenarios.

As a result, when you’re brainstorming your next e-commerce campaigns, think about the emotional response of your customers. You don’t need to make them cry, but you should make them feel something to stand out from thousands of brands online.

This campaign from TOMS shoes is a good example of emotional storytelling done right. Wanting to give back to the global community, TOMS realized that millennials are socially conscious buyers. They don’t want to buy from just anyone, but they love brands that are doing good for the community or the world.

Inspired by this insight and their own altruistic goals, TOMS created a “one for one” business model. When customers bought a pair of shoes from the company, the brand automatically donated a pair to people who need them. This initiative was dubbed the One for One campaign.

The company has gone even further with its #withoutshoes campaign – for each user who posted a photo of their shoeless feet on social media with the hashtag, TOMS would donate a pair of shoes, up to a total of 100,000.

TOMS without shoes social campaign post

The campaign generated huge exposure and awareness to the plight of the less privileged from around the world. Even influencers like Hal Rubenstein and Patti Stanger joined in:

Patti Stanger without shoes

These campaigns from TOMS reveal an important lesson:

Making customers view your brand positively is important.

Through emotional campaigns, you can influence audiences to have a positive perception of your brand and the products you sell.

Example #4: Glossier – Get Stuck in Their Mind

If you want customers to buy your products, then you need to get them to remember your campaigns first.

But this is harder now than ever.

There’s a lot of controversy about attention span and how long you can get people to pay attention to your content. It’s often said that people may have an attention span of only about eight seconds but you’re in luck, because people have different types of attention to give.

So how can you keep customers thinking about you?

Glossier is a cosmetic retailer that uses a distinctive shade of pink as a cornerstone of its branding.

Pink has become so synonymous with Glossier’s brand that fans use the #glossierpink hashtag when they see the color in virtually any everyday item, regardless of whether Glossier made it.

Here’s what you find with the #glossierpink hashtag:

Glossier Pink examples

Glossier also shares posts showing that they understand the priorities and self-awareness of their fans, which transcends those fans’ differences as individuals.

Will customers get dewy skin if they use the product regularly? Will they get healthy, younger looking skin? Will it make their skin color lighter or tanner? Will it get rid of acne?

Whatever their needs, Glossier shares content in which the people in their audience can see themselves:

Glossier Meme

The takeaway?

Don’t limit your brand and its product to one thing.

Instead, diversify your branding. Boast about the results that come from using your product. Or associate your brand with a color, aesthetic object, location, etc.

That way, customers can easily recall your brand – no matter the reason.
Example #5: Chubbies Shorts – Entertain Your Audience

Customers detest pushy marketers and boring ads or messages.

So how do you catch their attention and transform them into brand advocates?

Create content that informs, delights, or entertains customers. Your initial goal is to build relationships with first-time customers – not to go for a hard sell right away.

Building relationships is important because you don’t want them to buy just once. Instead, you want to keep customers coming back to buy your product or service again.

You have to be your customer’s friend.

But how can you do this?

Chubbies is an e-commerce store focused on men’s shorts.

They understand that no one likes brands with obvious sales pitches, so they took an alternative route to become a brand people would want to hang out with.

Chubbies writes copy laced with witty humor and a casual tone, and offers customer service that surprises people and drives engagement.

In one campaign, the brand sent packets of Big League Chew gum to customers as a surprise. The response? Customers shared photos of the gum to Chubbies and their friends:

Chubbies Big League Chew Tweet

The brand also runs a weekly comedy sketch on Snapchat, which attracts hundreds of regular viewers:

Chubbies Show

What can we learn from their successful social media campaign examples?

Don’t be eager to sell. Instead, focus on building long-term relationships with your customers.

In addition, develop a personality that your target audience is fond of.

Are you selling to millennials, Generation Z, or baby boomers? Think about the psychographics of your audience. What characteristics resonate with them? Should you be cool, casual, or classy?

Think about the personality that would resonate with your customers, and consider adopting it.

Example #6: Dollar Shave Club – Entice Followers with Engaging Content

There are different kinds of content, but all great content has one thing in common: it needs engagement.

You want customers to react to the infographic, blog post, or video that you created. You want them to click the “like” button or react with an emoji. And you want them to subscribe to your content or visit your website.

But how do you create engaging content?

Dollar Shave Club is a razor subscription service that knows how to market their product, and one of their strategies is to attract customers by using educational content.

They keep followers coming back for more using fun, playful, and visual content. For example, they use infographics to share interesting facts, and they create tutorials that show customers how to use shaving products depending on their skin and hair type.

Dollar Shave Club Infographic

They also create polls around their branded hashtag #DSCdebates. The branded hashtag is a great strategy, not only because it lets people know that it’s theirs, but also because it draws in a huge response as their focus shifts to age-old questions.

Dollar Shave Club Poll

Dollar Shave Club’s success reveals an important lesson:

Content marketing is just as powerful for e-commerce as it is for B2B. Educational content and curiosity can entice followers to come back for more. After all, people love to learn interesting and unusual facts.

Example #7: Everlane – The Backstage Pass

What happens behind the scenes shouldn’t always stay behind the scenes.

This is because showing off your team or how you create a product is great marketing material too.

Remember the last time you watched an interview with your favorite celebrity or artist? Do you like learning the juicy details about how they created their art? Do you want to see videos of their rehearsals? Would you like to get a backstage pass to their film or concert?

Understanding the hard work and effort behind a product or service can make customers value it even more.

Imagine you own a fancy restaurant. By showing customers the meticulous process of creating a dish, they may appreciate it even more.

Everlane is an example of an online retail store that emphasizes transparency in its production and sales process.

They use social media to strengthen relationships and humanize their brand. Their posts feature in-house employees and behind-the-scenes photos of product development.

This ties in with their brand’s ethical approach.

Everlane boasts that it finds the best factories around the world to create their products. This way, customers can rest assured that people who created the products they love get fair wages, work reasonable hours, and have a good environment.

The brand also sends selfies back to customers who interact with them on Snapchat:

Everlane Transparency Tuesday

Transparency can make your brand a lot more relatable.

How much does it take to create product X? How do you ensure that the product is safe? Who are the people who help create the product or service?

Let customers know what happens behind the scenes.

Ready to create YOUR social media strategy for e-commerce?

Now that you have an idea of what netizens want, it’s time to brainstorm your next campaign.

You can sell to your audience on social media by introducing user-generated campaigns, selling a lifestyle, and branding through emotional connection, education, and humor.

Remember to engage social users in a natural way. Don’t make them feel as if they are being sold to.

Source:  https://meetedgar.com/blog/7-of-the-best-e-commerce-social-media-campaigns-weve-ever-seen-and-what-you-can-learn-from-them/ ~ By:

How to Sell a Product Online

Make a plan for what you’ll sell online, who you’ll sell it to, and how—using these 10 steps.

The world of e-commerce holds great promise for small businesses. In the U.S. in 2020 alone, online sales increased 44% and represented 21.3% of total retail sales for the year. Of course, the coronavirus pandemic had something to do with the jump, but these numbers had already been steadily on the rise. If you have a brick-and-mortar business that you envision bringing online or if you’re thinking of launching a product for the first time, this could be your moment.

Selling products online may seem like a straightforward proposition—and it can be, once you’re up and running. But you’ll have to do some research first: You need to find products you want to sell, figure out who your potential buyers are, and determine how you’ll deliver those products seamlessly into your customers’ hands. This preparation will provide the foundation for a winning e-commerce strategy. After all, when you think about how to start a business online, knowing how to sell your product is essential.

Here’s your 10-step guide for how to sell a product online.

Finding Your Products Illustration

1. Find your products

There are 3 ways most online sellers source products: do it yourself (DIY), wholesale, and drop-shipping. Each method has its own benefits and drawbacks. Whatever method you choose, when you think about how to sell a product online, look for products that you feel passionate about and that meet a need in the marketplace.

DIY product

These are products you make yourself, whether it’s a small-batch baking hobby you’re turning into a business or a 3D print factory in your garage. DIY items are usually the most expensive products to produce, but they can also be the most gratifying if you have a creative urge.

In many cases, you can charge a premium for handcrafted or highly specialized items, just be sure to factor in the time it takes to make the product. Be prepared to reassess your process and strategy if you can’t charge enough to make the business sustainable.

Wholesale products

The traditional retail model is to buy items in large lots from a manufacturer or wholesaler and sell them individually. You can find wholesale items on sites like Alibaba and Etsy Wholesale. You can also find suppliers by searching for wholesale lots on eBay.

Be sure to check your source carefully. Read reviews, look at Better Business Bureau (BBB) listings, and ask lots of questions before you place your first order. You want to make sure that the products you purchase are of high quality and match the specifications in person that they claim online.

Dropshipped products

In the dropshipping model, you market the products and take orders, but your supplier handles fulfillment. The convenience is offset by a lower profit margin and tough competition—there are many other online shops offering the same merchandise. Popular drop-shipping suppliers include OberloAliExpressWholesale2BInventory Source, and Megagoods.

The best way to compete in the dropshipping market is to select a cohesive catalog of items and market them to a niche audience.

Identify Your Niche Market Illustration

2. Identify your niche market

The market is massive for an online seller, but it’s also competitive. The best way to stand out is to find a niche.

Narrow it down

For instance, if you wanted to sell yoga mats, you’d be up against brands that are already well established in the market. But if you decided to sell yoga mats designed for travel, with hand-painted designs that might increase the cost, you could target a more specific audience—like globetrotting women between the ages of 40 and 55.

Think about your own niche

One way to begin with niche marketing is by thinking about areas where you already have a presence—and perhaps a passion. Maybe your niche market is one that you’re already involved in. Are you a member of any social media groups, message boards, or other online gathering places? Is there a niche where people know you or do you have a lot of contacts? If so, that offers a meaningful place to start.

Make sure it’s viable

Whether or not you have a personal relationship with the niche you’re considering, being informed about your market is key. To get to know your niche:

  • Use Google Trends to see what’s popular.
  • Join social media groups and online communities related to your market to see what people are talking about.
  • Monitor what’s hot on sites like Trend Hunter and Trendwatching.
  • Check out your competition and see if you can fill a gap.
  • Use the Google Ads Keyword Planner tool to see how big the market is for your niche.
Conduct market research illustration

3. Conduct market research

Once you know who you want to sell to, it’s time to figure out if those people will buy what you plan to offer—and if so, how much they’re willing to pay. This means you must assess the value you can offer in your market. Questions to research about how to sell a product online include:

  • Is the market for your products growing or shrinking?
  • How satisfied are people with the existing products in your market?
  • What needs aren’t being met?
  • What features do people value?
  • What is the average price point of your competitors’ products?
  • What are your potential customer’s pain points

Study your competitors

You need to determine if there will be a sustainable demand for your product at the price you’ll ask. Start by looking at your competition. Are your competitors doing well and expanding, or do you see companies going out of business? What are your most successful competitors doing right? What’s missing from the online sales marketplace?

Ask your audience

Conduct surveys—formally and informally—to see how people react to your product idea.

As you begin to flesh out your idea, post about it in a social media group and ask for input. You can also find people in your niche to interview in person and ask them about their needs, the products they love, and their reactions to your product ideas.

Once your idea is more developed, online surveys provide a simple, streamlined way to understand what people in your target market want and need. Plus, you can use this opportunity to collect their contact information, grow your audience, and then follow up when your product is for sale. Check out how Mailchimp’s free online survey maker stacks up against the competition.

Price it right

When looking at competitors, don’t make the mistake of assuming that a lower price is automatically better. People are willing to pay a premium price for high-quality products. On the other hand, if your target customers feel that your competitors’ products are overpriced, you could step in to offer them a more economical alternative.

Create Buyer Personas illustration

4. Create buyer personas

A buyer persona is a visualization of your target market as a specific person. Buyer personas are a way to refine your thinking about how to sell a product online and personalize your marketing.

Betsy and Lucy

Using the example of hand-painted yoga mats targeted at female travelers over 40, imagine marketing to a specific woman. But who is she?

You might imagine her as Betsy, a fitness buff with a high discretionary income who likes to take cruises to the Caribbean with her friends. Betsy would love to have a one-of-a-kind yoga mat that’s easy to transport, works well under various weather conditions, and that her friends admire at the yoga classes they take together at resorts and on cruises.

Or you might imagine her as Lucy, a frequent business traveler who often works late into the night. A hand-painted yoga mat would give her a reason to take time out for herself and enjoy a relaxing practice.

In this example, the personas are Betsy and Lucy—fictional people you keep in mind to make your marketing more relevant and human.

Target each persona differently

The images, language, and price point you would use to market to Lucy might be slightly different from the ones you would use to reach Betsy.

Betsy would probably respond well to an image of a resort yoga class, with rows of solid-color mats and one beautiful hand-painted one that stands out from the rest. Betsy would pay a premium price to have that mat. However, Lucy might respond to an image of a well-appointed hotel room with one candlelit corner, where a woman sits in meditation on a colorful mat.

Your business can have more than one buyer persona, with ads and even product lines targeted to each one. Each persona should be fleshed out with details like:

  • Age
  • Gender
  • Income
  • Hobbies
  • Interests
  • Family/relationships
  • Values
  • Priorities
  • Favorite social media channels
  • Club memberships
Brand Your Business Illustration

5. Brand your business

Your brand identity is built on your logo, website, marketing materials, and other communications with customers. If you make deliberate choices, you can shape your brand identity to be unique and appealing to your customers.

The best way to begin this process is to summarize the qualities you want your brand to convey in just a few words. Is it funky, friendly, and casual? How about sturdy, high-quality, and reliable? Could it be youthful, vibrant, and fun? In the case of a business that sells hand-painted travel yoga mats, the brand might be artistic, unique, and uplifting.

Brand persona

One way to distill your brand identity is to give it a persona, too. Imagine your brand as a cartoon character: What does it look like? How old is it? Does it have a gender? How does it sound? How does it dress? What kind of things does it do? Is it a surfer, a college professor, a bookworm, a hippie, an artist, a nature lover?

Your brand identity will be expressed in the way you use language, your logo, the images you choose, and the colors you select. If you make those choices without a plan, your brand will be hard for customers to discern. Here’s what to focus on for a strong brand identity.

Visual identity

Every brand has a recognizable, consistent look that’s tied together with color, a logo, and your product imagery.

Choose a color palette with one main color and 2 or 3 secondary colors that express your brand identity—for example, red is often perceived as bold, dark blue as luxurious, and green as organic. Keep in mind that color associations are often culturally specific, and what appeals to customers in one part of the world may not communicate the same things in another.

Your logo should be simple and expressive. Complicated designs don’t work well when printed in small spaces or if reproduced in black and white. Since your logo will be on everything you create, it should be carefully built to convey your brand’s identity. You can create one yourself using a free online logo creator such as Canva (most will charge you to download your design) or hire a graphic designer.

The images you choose for your website, advertising, and social media should be consistent and express your brand’s image clearly.

For example, the yoga mat brand would market to its 2 personas with imagery in a specific context for each—either a resort class or a hotel room—with a spotlight on the product. That’s a consistent type of image that could quickly become associated with the brand and convey the brand’s identity.

Brand voice

Your words should be carefully chosen to protect your brand’s identity—this is your brand voice.

Keep in mind your buyer personas and your brand persona when writing copy. Who are you talking to, and how are you talking to them? Are you a fun friend, a knowledgeable expert, or a calming confidant? This will help you hone your brand voice and keep it consistent across channels—email, product copy, social media, and advertising. Here are areas in which you can be deliberately expressive:

  • Headlines
  • Ad copy
  • Website copy
  • Product names
  • Email automation
  • Social media posts
  • Phone greetings

To help stay on track, you might make a list of certain words you’d like to incorporate into your copy often—for the yoga mat sales, these might include “artistic,” “elegant,” and “unique.”

Build E-commerce Website Illustration

6. Build your e-commerce website

Building an online store has never been easier. And when you build your website in Mailchimp, it can also be free.

Start by creating a website that incorporates the elements of your brand identity. Using Mailchimp’s content studio, you can upload your logo, photos, colors, and other files to incorporate into your website and then use them across marketing channels to stay on brand.

Make sure your website design makes it easy for shoppers to find your products. Upload images, write specifications and include details about shipping so that your customers understand exactly what they’re buying (and why they should). Simply add a Stripe buy button to your fresh new website, and you’re ready to start selling.

Sell via landing pages

If you’re not ready to build a full website, Mailchimp shoppable landing pages offer another speedy way to get your products for sale online. These are a particularly good solution when you want to focus on a single item, test an idea, launch a new product, or run a promotion. Best of all? They’re also free. You can even set up Facebook ads to drive traffic to your landing page from right inside your Mailchimp account.

Set up Process for payments illustration

7. Set up processes for payment, shipping, and staying in touch

Before you start selling online, you’ll need to have systems in place for collecting payment and shipping things out.

With a website built in Mailchimp, you’ll connect a Stripe account to start selling. If you build a landing page instead, you can connect to Stripe or to Square. Either way, be sure you understand their fees and take them into account when you price your products.

If you’ll be handling shipping yourself, you’ll need accurate numbers to set up your shipping options on the site. If your company is US-based, compare pricing and services from the USPS, UPS, and FedEx—or look at other options in the country where you’re headquartered.

Customers love free shipping, but if you plan to offer that, those costs should be built into your product pricing. Also, don’t forget to add in the cost of boxes and packaging materials when you set up your pricing and shipping rate structure.

When someone makes a purchase, be sure that their information is stored using customer relationship management (CRM) software. That way, you can send order notifications, follow up after their purchase, and keep in touch to build customer loyalty.

create product content illustration

8. Create high-quality product content

Ideally, your site would be assembled by experienced copywriters, photographers, and marketing professionals. Realistically, that’s not how most small businesses operate.

If you’re doing it all yourself, here are some tips.

Images

Your images should accomplish 2 things: Make the product look desirable and align with your brand image.

If your product supplier provides you with professional product photos, check to see what rules you need to comply with when you use them. If you’re allowed to alter them, consider cropping them and adding your own logo to make them unique to your site.

If you’ll be taking your own photos, you don’t need the best, most expensive equipment. Many of today’s smartphones take amazing photos. Keep these things in mind to get good shots:

  • Set up bright lighting. Use shop lights, take the shades off lamps and move them close, or use natural light. If you’ll be photographing a lot of smaller items, invest in an inexpensive lightbox.
  • Lean in. You’ll get much better results if you move closer to the product.
  • Get level. Instead of photographing your product from above, get down to eye level with it and snap some close-up shots.
  • Highlight details. You don’t have to frame the entire product in every photo. Take shots of specific details that show why your viewer should want this product.
  • Take tons of photos. Even pros take hundreds of shots to get one great photo. Try a variety of cameras and phones if you can, and shoot from different angles and in different lighting.

For each product, choose one signature image plus several detailed images. It’s good for search engine optimization (SEO) to give your image file names that include your target keywords when you upload them or add alternative (alt) text.

Description

Your product descriptions should be thorough, but easy for a busy person to take in at a glance.

  • Don’t waste headline space. Use descriptive product names that tell people (and search engines) exactly what the item is—like “Hand-Painted Lotus Travel Yoga Mat” instead of just “Lotus Mat.”
  • Start with an overview. At the top of the page, tell people in a sentence or 2 why they should care about this product and how it meets their needs.
  • Be brief. When busy people see a wall of text, they often click away. Limit yourself to a couple of short paragraphs.
  • Use topic headings. Headings can break up the page and make it scannable. Some people will only skim the headings and not read the text below, so choose compelling, descriptive words for your headings, and include keywords when possible.
  • Make the details digestible. Use bulleted lists to keep your page attractive and readable.
  • Solicit reviews. Always encourage your customers to leave reviews. Consider offering free products in exchange for honest reviews to a limited group of people to get your first reviews on the page.
Promote Your Products Illustration

9. Promote your products

When your website or landing pages are built and you’re ready to sell, there are many ways to get your product in front of potential customers:

  • Social media: Use hashtags and paid ads to expand your reach.
  • Influencer marketing: Send free samples to “celebrities” in your niche.
  • Facebook groups: Connect with your target market on this platform.
  • Google advertising: Put your products in front of people all over the web.
  • Content marketing: Publish blog posts to bring organic traffic to your site.
  • Word of mouth: Encourage your customers to spread the word.
  • YouTube videos: Start a channel to showcase your products.

Although it’s possible to sell directly on social media pages, it’s good practice to drive traffic to your website so you can entice customers to join your email list. That way you’ll be able to follow up and maintain a connection with them in the future.

Funneling traffic to your website also allows you to send abandoned cart emails and other targeted promotions if visitors wander away before buying anything. You can also use Google Ads to retarget visitors who left your site, reminding them of the products they showed an interest in.

Refine your approach illustration

10. Continue to refine your approach

All the details that go into how to sell a product online may seem daunting. Besides the product itself, you need a brand identity, a target customer, a web store, and solutions for processing payments and handling shipping—and all of that needs to be in place before you even begin to market your product.

But these steps are manageable if you take them one at a time. Remember that you can continually change and refine your approach as you go.

The important thing is to take your first step, and before you know it, you’ll be riding momentum toward your goals.

How to Use Social Media for Ecommerce

A social media eCommerce strategy can help you build brand awareness, communicate with customers, and generate more sales for your online store.

Social media and eCommerce are a match made in heaven.

Marketers have been using social platforms to connect with eCommerce customers for a while now. And for a good reason — more and more internet users shop online and use social media to research brands.

Take a look at these recent stats:

  • 76.8% of global internet users purchased a product online in 2020.
  • 44.8% of global internet users use social media to search for brand-related information.
  • More than half of global internet users between the ages of 16 and 24 use social media to research brands (55.9% female users and 51% male users).

Ecommerce Activity Overview

Source: Hootsuite

Most social media networks currently offer free built-in solutions for advertising, selling, and customer service — a.k.a tools that can push the needle on your sales.

In this article, we will go over all the ways you can use social media to market your eCommerce store. So, if you’re building a social media presence for your eCommerce from scratch or looking for ways to refresh your marketing strategy, you’ve found the right place!

But first, let’s get some definitions out of the way.

Bonus: Download a free guide that teaches you how to turn Facebook traffic into sales in four simple steps using Hootsuite.

What is social media eCommerce marketing?

social media eCommerce strategy is a set of social media tactics you can use to market your eCommerce business.

Depending on your business model and goals, your strategy may focus on:

  • promoting an eCommerce destination, i.e. driving traffic to a website or branded app,
  • selling products directly on social media,
  • communicating with customers, both pre-purchase and post-purchase,
  • collecting insights about your industry (your audience, competitors, benchmarks for success)

… or combine some (or all!) of the above.

Is social media eCommerce marketing the same thing as social selling or social commerce?

Not exactly. Social media eCommerce marketing is the broadest term of the three and can include elements of both social commerce and social selling.

Let’s brush up on the definitions:

  • Social commerce is the process of selling products or services directly on social media, using Facebook Shops, Instagram Shops, Product Pins and other native social media shopping solutions.
  • Social selling is the process of using social media to identify, connect with and nurture sales prospects.
  • Social media eCommerce marketing can involve building brand awareness, advertising, community management, social customer service, social listening, competitive analysis, social commerce, and social selling.

Venn diagram illustrating the overlap between social media ecommerce marketing, social commerce and social selling

How to use social media for eCommerce

Here are all the different ways social media marketing can help you promote your eCommerce business and sell more products.

Building brand awareness

If you’re launching a brand new store or product, you should start building buzz around it before you are ready to go live with sales. The sad truth is that you won’t be able to make any sales if people don’t know about what you’re selling.

In 2021, social media is busy with brands. But there’s still room for newbies. A unique voice and a consistent posting strategy will help you build brand awareness and reach your target audience. For a head start, follow the tips we listed at the end of this article.

Building brand awareness is a process, and it does take some time. If you wish you could speed things up just a bit — paid social can help you do just that.

Advertising

Recent statistics show that:

  • 190 million people can be reached by Facebook advertising,
  • 140 million people can be reached by Instagram advertising,
  • 170 million people can be reached by LinkedIn advertising

… in the United States alone. (Source: Digital 2021 report by Hootsuite and We Are Social).

Instagram Audience Overview

Source: Hootsuite

Of course, not all of them are your target audience, and your budget will likely get in the way of reaching that many people.

But most social media platforms offer advanced targeting tools you can use to carve your perfect audience out of this bulk — and serve them ads that will support your goals.

Speaking of goals, make sure that you set up the right objectives for your social media ads. As an eCommerce business, you will likely want to use social media advertising to attract people to your store, or a specific product or collection.

Facebook and Instagram, for example, let brands pick one of three conversion-oriented objectives:

  • Conversions. With this goal, you can encourage your target audience to take a specific action on your website, e.g. add a product to your cart.
  • Catalog Sales. Use this objective to pull products from your catalog into ads.
  • Store Traffic. If you have a brick-and-mortar location, this ad goal is great for promoting your store to potential customers who are in the neighborhood, based on their location.

Here’s an example of an eCommerce ad with a “Shop Now” call to action on Instagram:

Conversion Ad Instagram - Click and Grow

Source: Click & Grow

If your goal is to build awareness or engage your target audience, you can pick an objective from the Awareness or Consideration categories.

But just picking the right objective doesn’t quite set you up for success. You also need to choose the right ad format for your campaign. On Facebook and Instagram, the main format categories are:

  • Image ads
  • Video ads
  • Carousel ads
  • Collection ads

Collection ads are designed specifically for eCommerce. They use a mix of creative copy and items from your product catalog to grab your audience’s attention and seamlessly guide them to checkout.

While Facebook’s advertising toolkit is perhaps the most robust, other social media platforms do offer similar solutions. So, if you use Twitter or LinkedIn to reach your customers on social media, fear not. You can learn more about ad objectives and formats across different platforms in our guide to social media advertising.

Selling products directly on social media

This is where social media e-commerce marketing overlaps with social commerce, a.k.a. selling your products directly from your social media accounts or “shops.”

Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest offer native shopping solutions for business accounts. Snapchat has partnered with Shopify to work out a social commerce tool of their own, but at this time, the feature is only available to a few handpicked accounts. Keep an eye out for updates if Snaps are your social media format of choice.

Using social commerce solutions has many benefits:

  • It’s completely free to set up.
  • It creates a memorable, interactive, social shopping experience for customers.
  • It streamlines the sales process. Users can shop directly from their feeds, without clicking through to an external website. Shortening the distance between discovery and checkout can improve your conversion rates.
  • It’s what social media users want! 70% of shopping enthusiasts use Instagram to discover brands and products. Why not help them discover your products?

Here’s what a product page in a Facebook Shop looks like.

Facebook Shop - Lisa Says Gah

Source: LISA SAYS GAH

Note how in this example, you have to click through to the brand’s website to complete the purchase. The on-platform checkout feature is currently only available in the United States.

If you’d like to give social commerce a try, check out these guides to setting up:

And also! Watch our video on how to sell more products on Instagram by tagging your products in shoppable posts, Stories, and Reels:

Customer service

Your main social media goal may be reaching new customers — and that’s reasonable. But don’t forget about your existing customers.

Even if you have a dedicated support team who communicates with customers over the phone or through email, your social media will occasionally become an ad hoc customer service channel. Your customers may come to your profiles to find information, ask questions or give you feedback. And when they do, you should be prepared to handle the incoming comments and DMs.

How you answer inquiries on social media is representative of your brand as the content you post. Opinions from happy customers serve as social proof for customers who are still in the consideration stage of their customer journey. By engaging with comments, you can show your audience that you value your customers and appreciate their feedback.

And what if the feedback you receive is negative? Treat negative comments as an opportunity to provide solutions and, again, showcase how seriously you take your customers’ opinions.

In the example below, Bailey Nelson did just that — they apologized for the problem the customer raised and provided them with a way to contact customer service to resolve the issue.

What is E-Commerce?

Want to start selling online? Here are the basics about e-commerce that you need to know.

Are you thinking about starting a business where you sell your products online? If so, then you’ll be joining the millions of entrepreneurs who have carved out a niche in the world of e-commerce.

What is e-commerce?

At its core, e-commerce refers to the purchase and sale of goods and/or services via electronic channels such as the internet. E-commerce was first introduced in the 1960s via an electronic data interchange (EDI) on value-added networks (VANs). The medium grew with the increased availability of internet access and the advent of popular online sellers in the 1990s and early 2000s. Amazon began operating as a book-shipping business in Jeff Bezos’ garage in 1995. eBay, which enables consumers to sell to each other online, introduced online auctions in 1995 and exploded with the 1997 Beanie Babies frenzy.

Like any digital technology or consumer-based purchasing market, e-commerce has evolved over the years. As mobile devices became more popular, mobile commerce has become its own market. With the rise of such sites as Facebook and Pinterest, social media has become an important driver of e-commerce. As of 2014, Facebook drove 85 percent of social media-originating sales on e-commerce platform Shopify, per Paymill.

The changing market represents a vast opportunity for businesses to improve their relevance and expand their market in the online world. Researchers predict e-commerce will be 17 percent of U.S. retail sales by 2022, according to Digital Commerce 360. The U.S. will spend about $460 billion online in 2017. These figures will continue to climb as mobile and internet use expands both in the U.S. and in developing markets around the world.

Categories of e-commerce

As with traditional commerce, there are four principal categories of e-commerce: B2B, B2C, C2B, and C2C.

  • B2B (business to business) – This involves companies doing business with each other. One example is manufacturers selling to distributors and wholesalers selling to retailers.
  • B2C (business to consumer) – B2C consists of businesses selling to the public through shopping cart software, without needing any human interaction. This is what most people think of when they hear “e-commerce.” An example of this is Amazon.
  • C2B (consumer to business) – In C2B e-commerce, consumers post a project with a set budget online, and companies bid on the project. The consumer reviews the bids and selects the company. Elance is an example of this.
  • C2C (consumer to consumer) – This takes place within online classified ads, forums, or marketplaces where individuals can buy and sell their goods. Examples of this are Craigslist, eBay, and Etsy.

Getting started

If you have a simple product to sell and a desire to expand your sales online, there are a few tools you can use to get started.

Websites such as Squarespace and WordPress offer mobile-friendly, ready-to-go e-commerce templates that help you get a store up and running quickly. As a shop owner, you will need a way to collect credit card payments from consumers online. PayPal, Square, and Google Wallet are all popular ways of accepting and managing online payments. You can also sell your merchandise through online giants like Amazon.

If you are selling physical goods, you’ll need to consider how you’re going to ship them. PayPal and other processors have worked with shipping merchants, including USPS and UPS, to offer one-stop postage processing. You will also need to research your state laws to determine if you are required to obtain a permit for selling online, or if you need to collect sales tax for your state or municipality.

Dropshipping is a way to outsource your inventory and shipping. Dropship services store and ship the products you sell as a merchant, many times for wholesale prices. These companies act on your behalf, using your branding and packaging. The best of these services have integrations with Amazon, Shopify, and other e-commerce platforms.

As your company grows, you may want to consider more advanced ways to process payments, such as using a merchant account and a service such as Authorize.Net. Services that integrate more fully with your bank frequently offer discounted transaction costs compared to processors such as PayPal.

E-commerce strategy

As in any new venture, the first step in succeeding in e-commerce is to set goals. Do you plan to increase revenue from existing customers? Gain new customers? Increase the average order value? Sell through new channels? Lower prices? Once you have figured out your goals, it’s time to set a plan.

SWOT analysis can help you assess the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of your company’s current environment. What does the market look like? Where does your business excel, and where does it falter? Review your entire business, not just segments of it. Evaluate external opportunities, because this is often the primary place to invest time and money. Be honest with yourself when analyzing weaknesses and threats, or else the analysis will not be helpful.

After the SWOT analysis is done, see how it fits into your overall vision. Where do you see your business in five years? In 10 years? This will help you set business objectives for the current year, for sales, profits, customers, traffic, new systems, and new staff. After the objectives are set, you can set a strategy into place yourself or hire an e-commerce consultant to help you.

Other methods to help you determine how to best grow your company into a new segment include PEST (political, economic, social, and technological), MOST (mission, objective, strategies, and tactics), and Porter’s Five Forces analyses.

E-commerce law

In addition to a strong business strategy, it’s important to have a basic understanding of e-commerce law. Online sellers, particularly those selling internationally or across state lines, face different legal and financial considerations, especially regarding privacy, security, copyright and taxation.

The Federal Trade Commission regulates most e-commerce activities, including the use of commercial emails, online advertising, and consumer privacy. Businesses collect and retain sensitive personal information about their customers, and your company is subject to federal and state privacy laws, depending on the type of data you collect. Even though the best processing companies all have high standards when it comes to data protection, you’ll still want to make sure all the information you’re storing on customers is secure and legal.

There are also online advertising laws that protect consumer privacy and ensure truthful marketing practices online. As an e-commerce business, online advertising is a major part of your strategy. Over the past decade, federal and state governments have passed new online advertising laws. As you expand into online marketing, it is important to be familiar with these. The CAN-SPAM Act, for instance, sets the rules for advertising through email, the most important rule being that consumers must be able to opt-out of messages from businesses.

In addition to protecting consumers from data leaks and misleading online advertising, digital works are protected on the internet via the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. There are several provisions that e-commerce businesses need to be aware of, including copyright infringement liability and a service provider’s responsibilities.

Source:  businessnewsdaily.com ~ By: Andreas Rivera ~ Image: Canva Pro

 

Ask Michele Today Skip to content Secured By miniOrange