How to Use Social Media to Market Your Online Store

How to Use Social Media to Market Your Online Store
If you harness its power right, social media can be used to promote your online store. Here’s some expert advice to get you started.
May 14, 2015 — 6 min read
How to Use Social Media to Market Your Online Store

If you’ve been dragging your feet on setting up your e-commerce site, it’s time to seize the day. It’s now easier than ever to get started — and get started right

It can be hard as a startup e-commerce store to build yourself a loyal following. After all, Facebook algorithms hide brand pages from user feeds (unless those pages are as engaging as Red Bull’s), and Twitter takes a lot of time to build a decent-size following (gaining a thousand followers in the first year is considered good). So how do you sidestep all of that? How do you build a social presence for your brand that will gain followers, attract potential new customers, and ultimately help to foster repeat customers and lifelong fans?

First of all, don’t discredit social. That gut feeling telling you that social is just as important for a retail brand as it is a publisher is spot on. Let’s take a look at the numbers:

Social Media Engagement Stats

 

In all, after you create your Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest pages (at the very least — you might want to explore other networks, too, based on what you’re selling), here’s how to start using your brand personality to build a following while still managing to grow your business.

Know the platform capabilities

Familiarise yourself with how the different platforms function. Below are a few tips to get you started:

OK, let’s be honest. It might take some advertising dollars to win over your target audience. And that’s totally fine. Before you blow a huge budget on social media campaigns, though, be sure you follow these best practices.
Clarify your campaign’s objective: Decide what makes this campaign a success. Some options include increased traffic, engagement, leads generated, or clicks. Each network’s metric choices are slightly different, so be sure you’re measuring the success both through the network and via your e-commerce site’s sales, traffic, and other relevant areas that you expected to see a bump in due to a promoted post.

Choose the type of advertising you want: Your campaign’s objective determines the type of ad you run. There are basically two types of ads.

  1. An ad that gives the appearance of being “organic,” for example, boosted posts on Facebook, sponsored posts on LinkedIn, or a promoted Tweet on Twitter. These have no tracking tokens. It is content that you’ve already shared with your followers and that shows up in their regular feeds.
  2. An ad that is sent specifically to a targeted audience, i.e,. it does not appear on your business page or news feed. Examples of this include promoted posts on Facebook, promoted Tweets with tracking tokens, and direct sponsored content on LinkedIn.

 

Pick your audience: Each social network has a tab where you can use data to target a specific audience. Make sure you’ve got a clear definition of your ideal buyer persona before you start, including demographics, psychographics, interests, and more.

Set your budget: Know your spending limits for the campaign. Set a daily budget for the first week and a total monthly budget. The first few days are critical and monitoring ad performance is essential. If your ad doesn’t generate enough clicks, the networks will begin fading it out of the prime ad times. Clicks are how these social networks make money, after all.

Design and create your ad: Each network has different requirements for the content of its ads — number of words, images, and sizes, etc. Prepare several different versions of your ads so you can perform A/B tests to see which is most effective. It takes some close monitoring and tweaking, but it’s worth it to get the biggest bang for your buck.

Check your results: This is an essential step in understanding the process of paid social campaigns. You must examine the results. How? First, come back to your campaign objective: Did you get the results you wanted? If so, what was the ROI (return on investment)? Then, check all the ads you’re running by network and by the type of ad. Which ones worked? Which ones didn’t? You can get some key learnings from this data to determine the best place to spend your money going forward. Maybe you want to keep doing what you’re doing or continue experimenting and try something different. Again, always measure everything you do.

Caution: Don’t put all your eggs in the social advertising basket. Make it one of many ways you’re driving traffic and sales on your website. Social advertising doesn’t work for every brand, every product, every audience, every time. And it rarely scores the first time. Test, learn, and try again.

Take engagement tips from the bigger brands

Even if you’re a smaller seller, it’s worth taking a page from the playbooks of larger brands that have cultivated an impressive social presence. Look at companies like ModCloth, Converse, and Nike –– all of which are driving high engagement and loyalty via social.

Here’s their secret sauce:

 

In all, familiarise yourself with the platform you’ll be using to drive traffic and conversions to your site. Take tips from brands or startups that have broken out of the mold to see how you can increase engagement with colourful photos, a strong stance, or whatever other social media tactic is currently winning loyal followers. And, finally, be sure to advertise a bit to get people to your page, but don’t spend all your money there.

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