Social Networking and Marketing – Are you up for the virtual challenge? - ReachForce Book Club
Thursday, October 2nd, 2008This week’s focus on The B2B Lead seems to be social networking, not sure if we planned that or if it’s sheer coincidence. Laura, Leigh Anne and I have been busy these past weeks building out our LinkedIn Profiles and making sure we are answering any of the LinkedIn Answers questions out there that apply to what we do on a daily basis. So this chapter (19) is right on time for us. Here’s a few new things we’re planning on doing or checking out in the coming weeks…
- Squidoo – Do you squidoo? We don’t currently but we will be looking into it very soon. If anyone is currently using Squidoo, we’d love to hear what you think? Does it drive the right kinds of traffic?
- Max Pipeline – like Helga in the Volkswagen example – will be out there exploring the B2B Lead Generation world and will be sharing his findings right here on The B2B Lead. Check him out on FaceBook and be sure to check back here for his updates.
- LinkedIn Groups – oh the possibilities here…
As you can see, we’re jumping in the social networking world with both feet. If you’re just getting started or considering a social plan, here’s a few other tips David recommends to get the most out of your social networking sites:
- Target a specific audience – think niche market/long tail here
- Be a thought leader – provide valuable and useful information, remember this is not where you do company promotions
- Be authentic and transparent – just be yourself please
- Create lots of links – links “makes the web what it is”
- Encourage people to interact with you
- Participate – you can’t just put it out there and hope they’ll come, you have to engage with others in your space.
- Experiment – if what you’re doing isn’t working, try something new – there’s definitely enough choices out there.
What are you doing? What have you learned? Please share as this is a new world for most of us. Making the leap can be scary but the benefits are there if you’re willing to work for them, right?
Implement Lasting Plans to Align Marketing and Sales Today - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #153
Wednesday, October 1st, 2008With economic times the way they are today, it is more important than ever that Marketing and Sales teams be aligned. Together you must decide and figure out what activities make the most impact to the top line of the business. Focus on all types of initiatives
1. To retain, cross-sell and up sell current customers
2. New customer acquisition programs
3. Channel partner marketing opportunities
We recently rolled out an ebook, 10 Tips for Marketing and Sales Alignment, with our partner Marketo. These 10 tips are just a few ideas on how Marketing and Sales can play on the same team to generate qualified leads and drive revenue.
Here’s a few more tips to think about as you are building out your Q4 Marketing and Sales plans.
1. Marketing and Sales teams should have shared goals
- Bookings and new customer wins are jointly owned by marketing and sales, and marketing bonuses are directly tied to the joint success.
- Revenue alignment and continued success programs for current customers ensure happier customers. And we all know it’s more expensive to find a new customer than it is to keep your current ones happy.
- Shared goals means shared success - when sales wins, marketing wins…and when marketing wins, sales wins … and overall the business WINS!
2. Do Reality Based Planning
- Use TRUE funnel conversion metrics to set marketing lead generation targets.
- Understand and plan based on sales team behavior - how many leads can they work at time, how many calls does it take each sales team member to identify a hot or qualified lead, etc.
3. Don’t forget those stuck in the funnel
- Deals get stuck in the middle stages of the funnel. Let marketing help by trying to engage with the prospect through best practice content offers, event invites, or new media outlets.
4. Don’t forget them when the deal is done
- Engage in current customer marketing programs. Use a newsletter, blog or customer community to stay front of mind for cross-selling, up-selling and renewal opportunities.
- Case studies and references are powerful sales tools, but marketing needs help with the set up and creation of these.
5. Communicate, Communicate, Communicate
- Share what’s working and what’s not – closed loop marketing is essential here
- Marketing should be involved in new sales rep training
- Celebrate WINS together
Organizations talk a lot about aligning their marketing and sales teams but many never put plans into action. By implementing the five steps above and adhering to the plan, Marketing and Sales teams can align for shared success.
I welcome your thoughts and feedback (successes and other tips you want to share).
5 Tips for Promoting Your Business Page on Facebook - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #152
Tuesday, September 30th, 2008Written by Ellie Mirman, blogger at the HubSpot Internet Marketing Blog and Inbound Marketer at Internet Marketing company HubSpot.
So you’ve got a Facebook Business Page… Now what? Building a Business Page is one of the best ways to increase your presence and engage more potential customers on Facebook, but it’s more than just clicking “Create Page”. As you venture out into the social media world, here are a few tips to help you promote your Page and reach more of the 100 million Facebook users.
Create a Facebook Business Page worth becoming a fan of.
To quote David Meerman Scott, nobody cares about your products and services (except you). People care about how you can help them solve their problems. To extend that thought to Facebook, don’t use your Facebook Page to talk about your products all the time. People aren’t interested. Instead, create some interesting, useful content that people want to receive. This could be blog posts, whitepapers, or simply discussions.
Take advantage of the viral nature of Facebook.
Facebook provides great opportunities for viral marketing. Facebook creates a “News Feed” of your friends’ activities on Facebook, like posting photos, changing statuses, or becoming fans of a Page. What this means is that every time someone interacts with your Page in some way, that action is published across all of their friends’ News Feeds, giving you exposure to that person’s entire network. The best way to take advantage of this is to engage your users and give them more opportunities to interact with your Page, for example, by fostering discussions, inviting them to events, allowing them to post links. Leveraging the power of the News Feed is a critical part of establishing your presence on Facebook and building a fan base for spreading your messages.
Don’t forget to draw on your network.
All promotion does not need to take place within Facebook. Feel free to email your opt-in e-mail list, blog about your Page, and post a link to your Page on your company website. The best people to help you build up your fan base for your Business Page on Facebook are those people already subscribed to your blog or engaged with you in some way.
Optimize your Page for Facebook – and public – search.
Another way to get found and build your fan base is through Facebook’s search. Facebook – like all other search engines (Facebook was noted the most used people search engine) – has an undisclosed algorithm that ranks search results in a way that aims to return relevant and useful results to the searcher. The best think you can do to show up higher in these search results is to build a large following of your existing fans, because entities with a larger network tend to show up higher in search results. Also note that Facebook Business Pages are public and indexable by search engines. This potentially gives you exposure to those searching in broader search engines like Google. To make the most of this, start lots of engaging discussion threads on your Page, so that if someone is searching in Google on that very topic, they can stumble upon your Facebook Page and discussion thread.
Get an extra push with Facebook Ads.
If you want to give your Business Page an extra push at the beginning, you can also buy some advertising slots. Note that Facebook ads are much less effective than the viral marketing options on Facebook, and the click through rate for Facebook ads is notoriously low. Facebook advertisements show up on the sidebar as users browse through their friends’ profiles, groups, and so on. When you set up your ad, be sure to include “social ads” – these draw on a users’ network to see who in their network has already engaged with your Page and shows, for example, “Jim Smith is a fan of Company ABC” next to your ad, potentially improving your click through rate. Also, make sure that you give viewers a relevant reason to click on your ad by inviting them to connect with industry peers or offering a free whitepaper, for example. Also in this vein, note that you can target your ads by age, gender, interests, geography, and other factors, to reach users who may be more interested in your Business Page.
Bonus Tip: Measure your results.
Once you’ve built up your Facebook Page it’s good to measure what you’re actually getting out of your social media program. Some metrics you may want to measure are: number of fans, page views, and unique users. Facebook’s “Insights” provide some of these metrics, including demographic data. You’ll also want to track actions beyond your Facebook Page, namely, website traffic, leads, and sales that come from Facebook. Hopefully some of these tips will help you get your Facebook Business Page off the ground and build it into a valuable channel for reaching your potential customers.
All this said, social media, including Facebook, is by no means static. It is constantly changing and we, as marketers, are constantly learning the right way to leverage these channels for marketing. If you want to see what we at HubSpot have done, you can become a fan of our Page at http://facebook.hubspot.com. And, if you’re looking to network with other marketers on Facebook, you may be interested in the Facebook Pro Marketers group, a group for marketers passionate about marketing. Perhaps there we can continue discussing ideas for marketing on Facebook.
How to Create a Facebook Page for Your Company - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #151
Monday, September 29th, 2008Wikipedia’s definition of Facebook - a social networking site where users can join networks organized by city, workplace, school, and region to connect and interact with other people. People can also add friends and send them messages, and update their personal profile to notify friends about themselves.
I got on Facebook when I was in college (when only college students could be members), and used it to keep up with hometown friends, keep up with other students I had met, join groups that I cared about, send messages to friends and post fun pictures and wall posts reminiscing from the weekend before. Now that I am out of college and working, I still use Facebook to keep up with friends (maybe a few less pictures and groups), but I also use it now for networking and more business purposes. My personal and professional life are definitely colliding!
Facebook has made itself easier for professionals to use with groups, discussions and ads, but I think the best thing you can do for your business on Facebook is Facebook Pages. Facebook Pages help to build a business presence and engage with customers, co-workers, partners and fans on Facebook. Users can express their support by adding themselves as a fan, writing on your wall, uploading photos, and joining other fans in discussion groups. You can send updates to your fans regularly — or just with special news or offers. Add applications to your Page and engage your users with videos, reviews, flash content, and more. More importantly, it is free and easy!
To get started:
- You need to be a member on Facebook
- Go to facebook.com/business/?pages (or go the bottom of the page and click “advertising”)
- Click “create a Facebook Page” and follow the directions
- Upload a picture (best to use your logo for this)
- Fill in company information
- Take it from there…add photos, discussions, notes, video, etc. (you should see all the categories to edit right there on the page or if not click “edit page”)
- Click “more applications” if you would like to browse what other applications are out there (like RSS Feeds) - you can look or type in the search box
- Publish the Page (in red lettering at the top of the page)
- Ask co-workers and customers to become fans and start getting the word out
Now you know how to get started with a Facebook Page, how do you manage it? We over here at ReachForce just put up our own page, and are still working to get the word out. Luckily, our friend Ellie Mirman from HubSpot has some experience. Look for a post from her soon on how to manage your page and get fans. HubSpot already has 797 fans!
Podcasting and Video Made, Well, as Easy as Possible - ReachForce Book Club
Thursday, September 25th, 2008Podcasting and video can be very scary to use…buying new equipment and software, and then learning how to use it all. The procedure might be a little more difficult than just writing text, but the outcome of engaging your audience is worth it. And if that doesn’t sell you, then what David has to say about it will. It sold me!
“The potential to deliver information to buyers in new and surprising ways is greater when you use a new medium. And while your competition is still trying to figure out ‘that blogging thing,’ you can leverage your existing blog into the new worlds of audio and video and leave the competition way behind.”
Who doesn’t like to watch a short video (mostly if it is funny) while reading a blog post? I won’t speak for everyone, but I am willing to bet the majority does. And it might seem scary at first, but putting a podcast or short video together really is not all that hard. Luckily, David has some tips for us to use as well:
For Podcasting
- Show preparation -gather ideas and create a script
- Recording when you are near your computer -use a microphone that delivers audio into your computer (need software here)
- Mobile recording gear - is required if you are going to be moving around interviewing people at different places
- Phone interviews - require a digital recording switch device that connects to your telephone
- Editing your audio files - optional
- Postproduction editing - sometimes includes running a noise-reduction program and sound compression
- Tagging the audio -adding text-based information about the audio to make it easier for people to find
- Hosting and distribution - so people can easily obtain your podcasts
- Promotion - you must provide links to your show
- A companion blog - to discuss the content of each show, and will also help to be indexed by search engines
For Video
- Posting to video-sharing sites - like YouTube, just shoot and upload
- Developing an online video channel - usually used with a unique URL
- Attempting stealth insertions to YouTube - dangerous, YouTube will find inauthentic video
- Vlogging - “video blogging” by embedding a video into a blog post
- Vodcasting - a podcast with video tied to a syndication component
- Inviting your customer communities to submit video - to help generate viral marketing interest
Our friends over at HubSpot recently posted a really funny video about imbound vs. outbound marketing that was a real success. They told us it only took an afternoon to come up with idea, write it, shoot it an edit it. See…worth it!
The Five Marketing Mistakes Every Entrepreneur Makes (and How to Avoid Them)
Wednesday, September 24th, 2008Written by Kevin Epstein, author of the Stupid Marketing blog and VP of Marketing for Scalent, a ReachForce customer.
Every marketer makes mistakes. As an entrepreneur with a limited budget, and only a few chances to make your business a success, the goal is simply to avoid making too many.
The five marketing mistakes every entrepreneur is tempted to make are:
- Betting On the Big Event: Gambling Instead Of Planning
- Depending on Others / Outsourcing the Wrong Things
- Marketing Nonexistent Product
- Failing to Measure
- Adding Complexity
The good news is that you don’t need to learn from your mistakes – you can learn from other people’s mistakes, saving yourself trouble. Here’s how.
1. Betting On the Big Event: Gambling Instead Of Planning.
The first mistake many marketers make is to spend all their marketing dollars in one place without calculating the odds of success first.
Attending a trade show, local fair, or even taking the time to attend local business events can be prohibitively expensive. If the event doesn’t generate the expected associated volume of sales, you may soon have no company to market.
So be sure you plan, not gamble.
- Always do the math on expected costs and resultant sales, underestimating sales when you plan. Remember this equation: your profit = [# of potential leads] x [likelihood of making sale] x [size of sale] – [total costs of attending event]
- Equip yourself to make the most of the event. Put yourself in the customers’ shoes – why should they stop by your table or chat with you? What will they see or hear? What will you talk to them about? What will they leave with? Why should they give you a business card? Answer those questions and come prepared.
- Shop around, and understand whether your money could be better spent. Given the profit equation above. Is there another way you could get as much in sales for less money?
2. Depending on Others / Outsourcing the Wrong Things.
The second mistake many marketers make is to make their business’ success or failure depend on your hired consultant’s success or failure.
Many entrepreneurs forget that if the consultant they hired fails to perform a critical task, it’s not only the consultant who fails.
So keep the critical things under control, and be sure of your help:
- Check references. Call people and ask about your consultant’s reliability and quality. Ask to see their prior work. Ask for situations where they failed. Be thorough.
- Communicate and align expectations. Have a written agreement on costs, timelines, ownership of final results, and what those results will look like.
- Have a backup plan. What happens when the consultant doesn’t deliver?
3. Marketing Nonexistent Product.
The third mistake many marketers make is to over-market without business substance to back up your claims.
Never over-promise and under-deliver on your product or service – it will permanently drive away customers. Strive to match customer expectations and product (or service) delivery.
It doesn’t matter if you’re delivering a lot or a little – either way, customers are happy when they get slightly more than they expect. So give it to them:
- Understand your customers, and what they value about your business. A customer who expects a burger and fries in 5 minutes for $2 and gets it in 2 minutes for $1 will be happier than one who gets a steak… in 30 minutes for $50.
- Sell what you have, not what you’re planning to have – presented so your customers can understand how what you have today matches what they value. Don’t sell the steakhouse you will be – sell the “fast and cheap… and tasty” you have.
- Use “vision” presentations carefully, in a pre-thought-out way, to stall competition or explain why owning the current product is of more value than waiting. Why wait thirty minutes and pay $50 when you can have a full meal now, and cash left over?
4. Failing to Measure.
The fourth mistake many marketers make is to complete a marketing program and realize they have no idea if it “worked” or not, or how to improve it next time.
What you’d like to know about any marketing program is how many people who became aware of you through that program went on to eventually buy something (vs the number of people who became aware of you through other more or less expensive methods).
So take the time to prepare. Remember, if you can’t measure it, it doesn’t exist:
- Understand what to measure – and always measure the program’s linkage to sales. Do you really care about cost per person lured to your storefront… or per person who buys something from you? (It’s usually the latter).
- Build ways of measuring into your marketing program. Are you asking people to call you? Set up a specific phone extension. Email? Add a special email alias.
- Change one variable – one aspect of your program – at a time, then repeat and re-measure. Did your sign not generate replies? Change the design or location, not both at once.
5. Making Life Complicated.
The fifth mistake many marketers make is to make it hard for prospective customers to understand and purchase their product.
Simple is good! Most people can only hold five to nine pieces of information in their short-term memory at one time. If you present a marketing message longer than that, people won’t remember it.
Your goal should be to make the purchase process as frictionless as possible for the buyer – as every barrier you put in their way is one more opportunity for them to change their mind about buying.
So keep it simple for your customer.
- Say it simply – use concise, basic descriptions. A “solution for business continuity” gets less attention than one that talks about “Zero failures”.
- Make it simple to do – it should be easy to do business with you. If your customer has to spend more time and attention on completing your process than they’ll see in return (use $100 per hour as a value of return), you’re doing them and yourself a dis-service.
- Don’t ask too much of your customers – all you really want is their business. Balance the value of that which you’re offering against the possibility of collecting multiple bits of information over a longer set of interactions – and don’t attempt to force the qualification process so that only the truly desperate reach your sales people
You now have a three-step plan to guide you through each of the five most common traps marketers experience.
So are you safe? Absolutely not! You’ll certainly make other mistakes as you grow your business. If you don’t, you’re not being aggressive and creative enough with your marketing.
But don’t worry. The unwritten “fourth step” in every three-step plan is the age-old lemon lesson: when life hands you lemons, make lemonade. Consider the number of great discoveries that were made by mistake – penicillin, Post-It brand notes, and Coca-Cola all originated with an error. As the entrepreneur, the final outcome of any situation often rests in your hands. So when it all seems to be going wrong, relax; take a deep breath, ask what the situation lets you provide to customers, and dive in.
Blogging to Reach Your Buyers - ReachForce Book Club
Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008This is a fantastic chapter for anyone thinking about or embarking on starting their own company blog. I have blogged about this subject quite a bit in the past but I want to pull out a few great tips from David (and one of my own) that I have not covered before.
Following the ethical guidelines for blogging David outlines is very important. Here are the high points:
- Transparency - Let readers know that the blog is tied to the company, don’t try to pass it off as a third party. When commenting always leave your real name and don’t comment for someone else.
- Privacy - always ask for permission to blog about anything that could be considered private. If a customer emails you to share their success using your product, be sure to ask permission before sharing it on the blog.
- Disclosure - Always disclose any connection you might have to what you are blogging or commenting about. If you are recommending a product be sure to reveal that they are a partner.
- Truthfulness - Don’t lie, period.
- Credit - It is very common practice to read someone else’s blog post and write about it on your own blog. This is fine but always give credit to the source. (Tip: be sure to add some new idea to the topic and don’t just regurgitate their ideas)
Another tip David suggests is password protecting your blog in the beginning so you can get input from those you trust before opening it up to the entire online world. I would add that it is a good idea to build up a few posts before you begin promoting your blog so that visitors can get an idea of what your blog is all about. When we launched The B2B Lead, we wrote about ten or fifteen posts before we actually posted a single one. That way it was easy in the beginning to post something everyday.
One of the best reasons to start a blog is for SEO, but keep in mind you will be not be ranked #1 on Google your first day. From what I understand (and please correct me if I am wrong) Google searches sites only every few months. When it notices that content changes have been made it will crawl that site again sooner that a site with no or only minor content changes. Your blog should have lots of new content so you want Google to crawl it everytime you have a new post. Over time, Google will recognize that it it a site to be checked frequently, but there is a way to “train” Google to crawl your site frequently. You can submit a new site map to Google everytime you post. I am not a technology expert so my advice is to ask your webmaster how to do this in your blogging software.
For more blogging tips, check out these posts:
Blogs – Don’t Underestimate Their Reach - ReachForce Book Club
Measuring the Effectiveness of Your Corporate Blog
Keep Your Blog on Track to Support SEO and Other Business Objectives
Twitter Envy - Marketing WTF?
Monday, September 22nd, 2008Attention Conservation Notice: The post below is a rant about having it all (work-life balance and a high Twitter Grade) with only one useful nugget of information. Read at your own risk.
First, let me apologize. With the exception of a few posts like the ones on LinkedIn’s new Social features and a Hitler Twitter video, I have been MIA for most of August and September. It was a busy August for this Mom and B2B Marketer, and I’m feeling restless and disappointed that I haven’t been posting, sharing results, and then sending out Tweets to let followers know the posts are live.
We had the most amazing B2B crisis communications case study on how our Twitter following came to our defense when a writer hyped up a security story without regard for the facts. Yet, I haven’t had the time to document the story. And, we’ve cooked up a killer little direct mail campaign involving warm cookies that I’d love to write about. But alas, children, pediatricians, Steiner Ranch elementary, and the demands of my position at BreakingPoint call.
So, while I manage to squeak out a blog post here and there, my Twitter feed has suffered badly. I haven’t been able to keep up with all of the messages each day, despite having Twitterific on my phone. Every day that goes by without sending a Tweet makes me feel more inadequate. Which got me to thinking, can we have it all? Super Mom? Super Marketer? Super Tweeter?
Apparently not.
The extremely smart and innovative folks over at Hubspot have launched a clever new tool for assessing your Twitter mojo. I believe this gadget was conceived for the sole purpose of pouring salt into my wound. It’s called Twitter Grader. My score: 52. My hope for significant improvement: 0.0.
You see, one of the most important of the grading criteria appears to be frequency. Another – the power of your followers. While I don’t want to name drop, I do have a few very impressive Twitter friends. Just a smaller circle. Must make me a true Introvert.
But on the frequency part, I am doomed. I often feel like I don’t have that much to say. Do you really want to know what I had for lunch or that I’m frustrated by the traffic on 360? So, I try to reserve my precious Tweet time for suggestions, ideas, and other helpful information. Not just updates on how my day is going.
On the positive side, I have yet another glorious metric for measuring the performance of BreakingPoint social media programs.
The New Rules for Reaching the Media - ReachForce Book Club
Friday, September 19th, 2008The Web, of course, has made getting in touch with the media much easier. However has anyone had luck with emailing a journalist (you don’t know) a story and actually get published? If so, what is your secret? In most cases however, (in the words of David) “PR people are spamming journalists with unsolicited and unrelenting commercial messages in the form of news releases and untargeted broadcast pitches.”
Don’t worry, David is here to help with The New Rules of Media Relations:
- Nontargeted, broadcast pitches are spam.
- News releases sent to reporters in subject areas they do not cover are spam.
- Reporters who don’t know you yet are looking for organizations like yours and products like yours-make sure they will find you on sites such as Google and Technorati.
- If you blog, reporters who cover the space will find you.
- Pitch bloggers, because being covered in important blogs will get you noticed by mainstream media.
- When was the last news release you sent? Make sure your organization is “busy.”
- Journalists want a great online media room!
- Some (but not all) reporters love RSS feeds.
- Personal relationships with reporters are important.
- Dont’ tell journalists what your product does. Tell them how you solve customer problems.
- Does the reporter have a blog? Read it. Comment on it. Track back to it (send a message whenever you blog on a subject that the reporter blogged about first).
- Before you pitch, read (or listen to or watch) the publication (or radio program or TV show) you’ll be pitching to!
- Once you know what a reporter is interested in, send her an individualized pitch crafted especially for her needs.
Now your rate of getting noticed will hopefully be much more successful when you use these tips. And now let’s fast forward a bit, you have used the New Rules and started building relationships. How do you pitch to these journalists now? David has a few tips on this as well…woo hoo!
- Target one reporter at a time.
- Help the journalist to understand the big picture.
- Explain how customers use your product or work with your organization.
- Don’t send e-mail attachments unless asked.
- Follow up promptly with potential contacts.
- Don’t forget, it’s a two-way street-journalists need you to pitch them!
Mainstream media is still very important and hopefully you will follow the New Rules and tactics to start getting noticed. To close the same way David did, “you need to be smart how you tell your story on the Web-and about how you tell your story to journalists.”
Next week we will cover chapters 17 and 18 on Blogging to Reach Your Buyers and Podcasting and Video Made, Well, as Easy as Possible.
Get In On The LinkedIn Groups Party but Establish Rules of Etiquette First - B2B Sales and Marketing Tip #150
Thursday, September 18th, 2008In a good example of “better late than never,” LinkedIn finally added group discussion functionality to its professional networking network. Here on The B2B Lead I wrote about how much I was looking forward to LinkedIn going social and why I believe it will be so important for B2B marketers.
While commenters on the TechCrunch blog were quick to cry “inadequate,” we at BreakingPoint are happy with the early results and look forward to using the functionality to grow the group and make new connections. BreakingPoint’s Director of Marketing and Engage in PR blogger Kyle Flaherty got the party started right away in the BreakingPoint Application, Network Performance & Security Testing group. He produced this handy video tour of the new features.
So those are the new features. What are the benefits? Well, for week one, I can sum it up with the words: connections, market research, and web traffic. While our LinkedIn group is still very new, membership has grown to 60+ qualified professionals interested in testing tools. We’ve already connected with several influential buyers, shared helpful resources, conducted research, and benefited from a small burst of web traffic. LinkedIn jumped into our top 10 web site traffic referrers in the week following the introduction of user discussions. Notice I didn’t mention closed a few deals?
On the Lessons Learned front, I advise readers of The B2B Lead to set up the rules for behavior on the group right away. Kyle clearly established our group as a Sales- and Marketing-free zone after one newbie launched into a blatant sales pitch. Blasphemy, you say? This is The B2B Lead, after all. Why create a group at all if you aren’t going to use it to market to your customers?
If you are asking yourself these questions, then I recommend you read more of Kyle’s blog. While I sometime tease Kyle about being a social media purist (OK, I actually use the word “boy scout”), Kyle is a perfect example of how to build relationships with potential customers and the community at large by actually engaging in online conversations, providing value, and earning trust. In a recent post he wrote called “Seeking Inspiration” Kyle wrote:
“Inspiration comes down to a measure of trust, which comes from a solidly built relationship. The same goes for your marketing. A trusted brand has an easier time inspiring because they have created a relationship with you over a period of time. When a company enters social media they, of course, need a strategy, but the idea of building trust must be in conjunction with building relationships.”
And, when Marketers take this approach, the benefits will follow. If you are looking for real tangible ideas for leveraging social media and want to see exactly how serving your community can deliver big results, have a look at Kyle’s 3 part case study on BreakingPoint’s social media programs.
Here on The B2B Lead I’ll be posting about how we integrated social media into our overall programs along with our laser-targeted direct outreach. Look forward to your first hand experiences with LinkedIn and other community building efforts. Do tell.












