Do you want to rock your social media marketing game? Keen to learn from the legendary Guy Kawasaki?
If so, check out “The Art of Social Media: Power Tips for Power Users” co-authored by Guy Kawasaki and Peg Fitzpatrick.
Providing over 120 “power tips for power users”, the slim volume provides practical hands-on “tips, tricks and insights” culled from Guy and Peg’s years of battle-hardened experience at the forefront of social media and content marketing.
Unlike other social media marketing self-help books, this one is virtually BS free. There are no theories expounding the virtues of A versus B, no research citations from university professors, and no third party case studies from companies X, Y or Z.
Instead, everything is written heart-on-rolled-up-sleeve. Narrated with Guy’s characteristic wit and candour, the book provides painstaking detail of how things are done, what works and what doesn’t.
Creating Your Platform.
Organised into 12 sections, I love how the book begins with the art of the start, ie “How to Optimize Your Profile”. From profile photos, cover images, biographies to URLs, we are taught how to maximise our online presences on Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn and Twitter.
What’s new to me was the idea of crafting a mantra – two to four words which explain why we exist. Guy’s mantra is “I empower people”, while Canva (a wonderful free design tool) uses “democratizing design” as its mantra. I guess mine would be “geek marketer”.
Content, Content, CONTENT.
Focused on content curation (ie finding and sharing other people’s content) as opposed to content creation, the book describes a system of planning, calendaring, finding, and sharing of posts on social media.
To find the right content to share, you could use curation and aggregation services (eg Alltop, Buffer, Feedly, Reddit), trawl lists, communities and groups (eg Google+ communities or LinkedIn Groups), or look at what’s hot and trending.
Perhaps the most useful rule in feeding the “content monster” is what’s termed the Reshare Test, ie ask yourself the following question: “Will people reshare my post?”
Perfecting Your Posts.
Once you’ve located the right content to share, you need to preen, polish and package it in the form of a shareable post.
Here, there are several of the ‘Be’s to take note of:
- Be valuable – make it informative, analytical, helpful or entertaining
- Be interesting and bold
- Be brief (just like the book!)
- Be thankful – credit your sources, provide hat tips and links
- Be visual – a picture paints a thousand words
- Be organised – use bullet points, headings and subheadings (just like this post of mine!)
- Be sly (ie use blog title templates like the ones here)
- Be found – use #hashtags
- Be active – share between three to 20 different posts a day (Gulp!)
- Be distributed – use tools to schedule and distribute posts like Buffer, Hootsuite and Post Planner
- Be a Mensch – give to others without an agenda
- Be promotional – ie pay to advertise if you need to
- Be analytical and curious – find out what works best for you
- Be defiant – well, this means just creating great content and ignoring all the “SEO witchcraft” out there
Commenting and Sharing.
On the issue of responding to comments – and trolls – I like how the authors adopt a “glass half full” approach in giving negative commenters the benefit of the doubt. This is probably best summarized by this quote (cited from the book):
“Don’t take anything personally. Nothing others do is because of you. What others say and do is a projection of their own reality, their own dream. When you are immune to the opinions and actions of others, you’t be the victim of needless suffering.” – Don Miguel Rutz (The Four Agreements)
The spreading and sharing of posts (whether created and curated) is also well covered. Some of the tactics include…
- Including share buttons on your blog posts
- Starting an email list
- Writing guest posts
- Pinning every post on Pinterest
- Adding a ClickToTweet link
- Using Slideshare
Socializing Events.
Events present great opportunities for social media and content marketing. Three different events are covered in the book:
- Real life events – From hashtags (use an evergreen one like #coolerinsights) and photo corners to live tweets, conferences are great opportunities for social sharing.
- Google+ Hangouts – An entire section is dedicated to powering your live video chats on Google+. Includes the equipment to get, colours to wear, and the creation of trailers and event pages. Plus a nifty checklist!
- Twitter Chats – Ditto for Twitter, where everything from hashtags to speed of typing is covered.
Optimizing for Different Social Platforms.
Last, but not least, readers are taught how to optimize their content for different social media platforms. Some of the key takeaways include the following:
- Facebook: Use Facebook Page’s insights, embed videos (YouTube videos don’t play well on Facebook these days), and interact with other Facebook pages
- Google+: Check how your post looks, use comments and +1s to run polls, use replies to generate attention, and stylize your text.
- LinkedIn: Write a personalised connection request and keep it serious (duh).
- Pinterest: Rotate your Pinterest boards, add categories and descriptions, share your pins with other social networks.
- Slideshare: Differentiate between a powerpoint slide and a slideshare – your audience is not around to hear you present! Also, ensure that your title, category and tags are well crafted.
A Power Packed Guide.
Pragmatic and fluff-free, “The Art of Social Media“ is a must-have for anybody keen to use social media for business. Candid and unabashed, its approach to social media marketing requires a significant amount of discipline, determination and diligence.
Admittedly, not everybody can do what Guy and Peg can do. After all, both authors are stalwarts in the social media spaces, especially Guy – the former chief evangelist for Apple. However, there are certainly gems in the book worth considering.