jeudi 30 janvier 2014

Best Practices for Those Who Pay to Play

In this day and age of digital marketing, the options are nearly endless of what you can do for your business. Most businesses have taken advantage of social media, using Facebook and Twitter to get their message out to the masses. Social media, as you probably know by now, allows you to really get to know your market. A smaller group of businesses have taken that further and paid for advertising to get even closer to their market.


Yes, businesses can pay to play on social media and the ones that do it have gotten quite good at it.


Paying to play is almost becoming a new norm on Facebook. Everyone and their brother knows about Facebook’s decline in the amount of people who see your posts. Because of that simple truth, businesses are devoting advertising dollars to that platform to make sure their content reaches their market. Let me say though, you can pay to play on Twitter and LinkedIn as well – it’s not just limited to Facebook.


If you are going to pay to play, here are some basic best practices to make sure you getting the most bang for your buck…


Know why you are doing it. Simple enough, right? Not really. I see businesses promoting Facebook posts and tweets that are honestly a waste of money and it’s obvious they did it just to do it. Like in using social media, you have to have intent in every.single.thing you do.


Know who you are targeting . You may be having an event that interests only a portion of your market, so when you pay to advertise it, target only that group. That’s the sheer beauty of social advertising – targeting. You can target so specifically that you know your market is going to see it.


Have a budget . I know this seems like a no-brainer, but it’s easy to lose track of your money on social advertising. Yes, you may only be spending $2 per day, but if you have that plus $15 on a promoted post plus $10 per day on Twitter, it adds up quick. Keep a spreadsheet of what you are advertising, how long it’s running and how much you are planning to spend and stick to that. Trust me, it will save you many accounting headaches later.


Don’t promote every post on Facebook. This is a hard truth, but not everything you post is worth paying to promote. I’m not saying your content isn’t awesome (because I’m sure it is), but when you promote a post it shows up more in your fans’ news feeds and the more they see it, the more likely they are to hide/unlike/report your page for spam. A good rule of thumb is that unless it’s a contest, event or sale/special, don’t promote it. Blog posts are sometimes okay to post, but only if it’s one that is getting a ton of response or it’s something you really want people to read.


Those seem easy enough, right? These are just some basic things to keep in mind when you go to pay to play. Do you have any best practices you use when you advertise online?






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