Posts Tagged ‘friends’

Irony can be very entertaining…especially in the social media fishbowl. On one hand, we hear the SM kids shouting from the rooftops that it’s all about one-on-one conversations. How it’s high-touch. How pushing out messages from the top-down is no longer effective. It’s about grassroots and bottom-up now.

And then they tell you to reach out to influencers.

Do you see the irony here? You reach out to influencers in hopes that they’ll broadcast the message to their audience (we’ve talked about before). Which, you know, wreaks of top-down marketing.

When it comes to building communities or ambassador programs, both ways – top down and bottom up – can be effective. But here’s where it gets interesting. We will use influencers to broadcast that we’re looking for a specific type or person – and one of the qualifiers IS NOT which social sites they are on or how many followers/friends they have. The main qualifiers are based on passion. That’s the core that we’re looking for. And believe it or not, most of the time those good folks are what us marketers would refer to as “the bottom” when it comes to influence and status on social media.

So it takes both. But instead of starting at the top and hoping that your message gets pushed down, or starting at the bottom and hoping something magical will happen, you need start at both ends and meet in the middle. It might be counter-intuitive, but it works.

Do you want to find out who your true fans and “followers” are? How badly do you want to know?

via caen98 on flickr.com

What would happen if you deleted your Twitter account today or maybe even deleted your Facebook fan page (or profile)? Then turned it back on a month later. How many of the people that you’re currently connected to would seek you out again? Ten percent? Thirty? What if you shut down your ambassador program? Would there be an uproar? Would there be protests? Would a core group organize and start their own to pick up where you left off?

Of course, that idea scares the bejeebees out of anyone that has any significant amount of connections, but I digress…

You can draw your on point from the above questions. I have a few myself. The first one is that if you really matter, if you’re really adding value, then people will seek you out. They’d miss you.

The second point is that I believe that people suffer from “unfollow” indifference. Or “unfriend” and “unfan” indifference. Even if they added you to their social media stream and end up not caring about you, it’s a lot easier to just not read your updates instead of clicking the button to   not be connected to you anymore. You have to offend them or spam them in order for them to make the series of clicks it takes to get rid of you completely.

So think about that when you’re putting your online strategy together. Because I’ll take a small group of hard-core fans over a large group of indifferent people any day.

From the collection of posts I wrote while at Brains on Fire:

A Brand’s Best Friend – Part 2

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