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Posted by: Bryan Kramer
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6 Steps to Becoming a Good Social Listener

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Posted March 18, 2013
Keywords: Monitoring Tools, Social Media Marketing, Analytics, Listening, Marketing, Social Media, Social Networks, Tools & Apps

Too many companies treat social media as if it’s a one-way conversation. They set up Twitter and Facebook accounts and then start pumping out updates. But guess what? Your followers, fans, friends and customers are talking back.

1. Identify your audience. Once you know who your audience is, you need to know where they are. A common misperception is that everyone is hanging out on the same social network. But that’s not true. For example, according to a study by Anderson Analytics, Generation Z (13- to 14-year-old) social network users are slightly more active on MySpace than Facebook, only 9% use Twitter and none are active on LinkedIn. If you tried to listen to Gen Z on Twitter, you wouldn’t hear much. They’re not there.

2. Create a listening strategy. Once you know which social networks are relevant to your audience, you need to identify what words they’re likely to use in conversations. Create a list of keywords to listen for, including your brand, products, events, personnel and any topics relevant to your customers. You may also want to include your competitors and industry influencers as listening keywords.

3. Choose your technology. There are so many social media monitoring tools for both desktop and mobile. Google Alerts is a free Google service that monitors keywords and sends you aggregated notifications. Social Mention, also free, allows you to monitor social media, blogs and blog comments and get e-mail alerts and “sentiment” analysis (an indication of whether the content is positive, negative or neutral to your brand). Ice Rocket helps you discover trends, top keyword phrases and mentions in the blogosphere, and search your keywords across thousands of blogs—and it’s free, too. Radian6 and HootSuite are a few others. Do your research and determine what works best for you.

4. Appoint a savvy social media guru to be your designated listener. This is an important job. Big companies create teams of people to fulfill this role. You’ll also want to create a daily plan and regular schedule for monitoring. Ideally, you want to check your alerts and real-time tools every hour so you catch opportunities that are relatively fresh.

5. Create a response strategy. What are acceptable responses for different types of comments? Make a list. Ideally, your designated listener is authorized to respond so you don’t waste time with review and approval processes. One thing to remember—be human in your responses. Stiff and corporate don’t cut it in social media. It’s Facebook and Twitter, not the boardroom.

6. Be accountable. Be sure the execs know what’s happening on social media. Give them a report, yes, but also advise them on how the company may need to adapt. Things can spiral out of control quickly in social networks. Remember the latest brouhaha with Susan G. Komen For the Cure and Planned Parenthood? With social media, you need to be proactive. You’re not only trying to enhance your brand, you’re protecting it, as well.

Key Takeaway: Don’t just talk to your audience. Listen. Pay attention. How will you engage effectively with them if you don’t know what they’re saying?

I’d love to hear your thoughts or anything I’ve missed below.

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Authored by:

Bryan Kramer

Bryan has led PureMatter, an integrated communications and strategic business agency, for 10 years. He has worked as a senior advertising account executive, an interactive strategist, managing consultant, online producer, and consultant for Bay Area’s largest advertising firms and agencies. Under Bryan’s leadership, the agency has grown consistently in being honored by the Silicon Valley ...

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April 24, 2013

Charlotte Monk-Chipman says:

A key point which fits at the heart of this is making use of the hashtag. Hashtags are still a valuable tool to filter through the content to enable the right message to get across and can be used pro-actively to listen to what other businesses have to say on social media channels.

Have a read of this article giving advice to small and medium-sized businesses.

http://www.tsbsupplychain.com/news/small-businesses-how-to-use-social-media-to-your-advantage

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March 19, 2013

Aine Doris says:

Bryan - interested in the data you have pulled from Anderson Analytics. Do you know if they make any of their reports freely available?

Thanks for this article - point 5 is a good one. Listening is crucial, but so too is having your response protocol ready.

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March 18, 2013

Vladimir Yordanov says:

Very interesting post, Bryan! I completely agree with you on all points. 

One thing I would add though is that the goals of a social listening program could be different because listening to your customers can help you improve various aspects of your business, not only to engage.

In order to be consistent and focused, I would add one point in the very beginning - to clearly define the goal(s) of your social listening program. What do you want to achieve with it? Being clear on what do you want to achieve with your social listening program will help you define better your next steps, such as defining the right search strategy (location, time period, search terms, etc.) and the right tool(s) for you. 

Cheers

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March 18, 2013

Debi Davis says:

When identifying your audience (Step 1 in this post), be careful not to depend too much on traditional demographic descriptors such as age and gender.  A more reliable guide would be social or psychographics -- trends related to interests and engagement preferences.

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