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Looking for small-business owners? Try advertising on social networks :... http://www.btobonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080609/FREE...
Looking for small-business owners? Try advertising on social
networks
By Kate Maddox
Story posted: June 9, 2008 - 6:01 am EDT
Small businesses are rapidly venturing into social networks, providing
a prime opportunity for marketers trying to reach this sometimes
elusive segment.
Warrillow & Co., in new research released at last month's 2008
Warrillow Summit in Las Vegas, found that 28% of small-business
owners had registered for at least one social networking site. The
most popular social network for small-business owners is
Classmates.com (18%), followed by LinkedIn (15%), MySpace (14%)
and Facebook (10%). The study was based on an online survey of
2,036 small-business owners, conducted in March.
About 450 marketers gathered at the Warrilow conference to discuss
strategies for reaching the lucrative small-business market, while
small-business owners talked about their needs and how to best
market to them.
One of the hottest topics was how to use social networking, both as a
tool to reach small businesses and for small businesses to market to
their customers.
FAST-GROWERS LINKED IN
Warrilow's research found that fast-growth companies, defined as those having annual revenue growth of 20% or more, are
much more likely to participate in professional social networking sites than slower-growth companies. For example, 67% of
fast-growth companies surveyed had signed up for LinkedIn, the survey found.
The study also looked at how small businesses are using social networks.
The No. 1 application is personal use (52%), followed by marketing or promoting a business by creating a profile page (49%)
and peer-to-peer dialogue (37%).
In a keynote presentation, LinkedIn CEO Dan Nye discussed how marketers can use social networks to market to the
small-business market.
"Communities will continue to play a significant and influential role in the business decision-making process," Nye said. "Often it
is not clear to marketers what to do with the information or how to put social networks to use."
ENGAGE IN DIALOGUE
Nye gave marketers several strategies for using social networks to market to small businesses. The first is leveraging a
company's employee base, having employees set up profiles and engage in dialogue with customers.
"Your employees' profiles are part of your brand," Nye said. For that reason, companies should issue guidelines on how to set
up profiles in order to provide brand consistency. IBM Corp. currently has about 116,000 employees registered on LinkedIn;
Microsoft Corp., about 25,000, Nye said.
Another strategy is understanding customers and addressing their needs, using polls and question-and-answer features (such
as LinkedIn Answers) to show expertise on a topic.
Companies can also use social networks to build their own communities of customers and prospects. Bank of America, for
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Looking for small-business owners? Try advertising on social networks :... http://www.btobonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080609/FREE...
example, ran a campaign on LinkedIn giving small businesses a chance to connect with other small businesses.
A key strategy in using social networks is to add value to the community, Nye said. Recently, Southwest Airlines CEO Gary Kelly
posed the following question on LinkedIn Answers: "How could an airline make your travel more productive?" and solicited
feedback in order to learn how to improve the carrier.
Nye said marketers need to be proactive in regard to dialogues among customers on social networks. "With community,
someone can be your biggest advocate or your biggest adversary," he said.
During a panel discussion titled "Is Old Media Dead?" marketers and media executives discussed how they're using new media,
along with traditional media, to grow their businesses and communicate with customers.
"We have more and more choices to make on the corporate side, and we have tougher choices now for the money we have,"
said Andy Miller, advertising manager at FedEx, pointing to increased media fragmentation. "You have to spend the money to
get the awareness up and get certain messages out, but you also have to find ways to have conversations with customers in
meaningful ways."
Miller said FedEx uses a broad mix of old and new media--from Super Bowl commercials to viral marketing--to communicate
with customers.
"The biggest change in the last 24 months is the increased focus on ROI," said Evan Blank, executive director, multimedia
business development at The Wall Street Journal and the Wall Street Journal Digital Network. "Every marketing dollar spent
needs to have a return. There has been a big change in metrics. How do you measure the 30 different marketing messages that
got a person to click? Those are the big questions being asked that weren't being asked two years ago."
Jennifer Howard, head of b-to-b markets at Google, said marketers are finding innovative ways to engage with customers. For
example, 3M recently ran a video campaign on Google-owned YouTube, asking people to post videos of ways in which they use
3M Post-it Notes.
"LET'S NOT BE AFRAID'
"Let's not be afraid of [new media]," Howard said. "We need to be open to taking some risks with the media plan. We need to
make sure we have digital experimentation budgets set aside to take advantage of new media when they come out."
In a series of panels, small-business owners discussed the most effective ways that marketers can reach them.
"I do 90% of my stuff at night, away from the office," said Cathy McBride, president of M-Truss & Components, a manufacturer of
steel trusses and frames. "The easier you make it for me to access your information on the Internet, the easier it will be for you
to be able to get into my office."
Brannon Allison, president of event organizer SourceOne Events, said the most important thing for marketers is to understand
his business.
"It is important to understand the cyclical nature of what we do and understand our business as a small business and how it
differs from a larger one," he said. M
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