Building the strategy
First you need to understand what a
strategy is, and isn’t it. A strategy should define the main aim of your social
media presence and set the parameters for what it will deliver and how it will
be delivered. It will be supported by a tactical plan that defines how the
strategy will be delivered, including the channels, resource and budgets to
achieve it.
Strategy statement
A short, concise summary of what the
strategy is aiming to achieve, broken down into bullet points. Below is an
example from a homewares retailer I worked with:
• We
will undertake a full social media audit, benchmarking current positions,
implement key improvements identified and develop content plans and styles to
deliver consistent communications ongoing.
• We
will increase engagement from existing customers and connections, and draw in
new audiences - ultimately driving purchase through organic & paid
activity.
• We
will test and learn about the community and the brand in a social space, in
order to shape future growth of social media audiences and social driven
purchase.
Context analysis
Set-out where you are in your social
journey and where the business needs to be, and the reasons for this.
For example, are you a global organisation
seeking to consolidate a fragmented approach to social media, or a startup
looking to build a social presence from the ground up?
Goals & Objectives
Goals define your high-level aims and
objectives use SMART criteria to ensure each goal has a measurable set of
criteria against which to evaluate progress.
I still use SMART criteria for objectives
because they encourage you to think about the practicality of achieving each
goal, rather than focusing on things that sound good but might not be feasible.
S = Specific in terms of what needs to be
achieved
M = Measurable so that progress can be
tracked and evaluated
A = Achievable so that your team has a
realistic chance of success
R = Relevant to your business so it’s
aligned with overall business goals
T = Timeframe within which the objective
must be satisfied
Below are examples of high-level goals for
your social media plan:
1. Complete
social media audit and implement actions arising from it
2. Create
and maintain a social media content calendar
3. Begin
regular social media activity, in line with strategy and calendar
4. Create
and work within a measurement framework
5. Demonstrate
the impact and ROI of social media to the wider business.
An example of a smart objective for goal #5
is:
We want to increase our followers on
Twitter (Specific) to drive more organic social traffic to the website
(Achievable/Relevant). We want to gain 1,000 new followers (Measurable) from
our marketing by 31st January (Time based).
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