According to a new study involving more than 1,700 small business leaders, companies marketing to small businesses would be well advised to focus on social media tactics requiring little IT investment, such as webinars, podcasts and establishing a presence on top social networking sites, before pursuing more IT resource intensive initiatives such as creating a company-managed online community. The study, conducted by Business.com, finds that that four of the top five most effective social media tactics for engaging small business decision makers do not require significant IT investment or involvement. The exception – company blogs – should be backed by both a strategic content strategy and the resources necessary to create this content on an ongoing basis before it allocating IT resources to blog creation or management.
The small business social media study examined the social networks and other social media resources small business owners and managers turn to for business-relevant information. In contrast to the common perception of social media as inherently “social” or interactive, study participants using social media for business were much more likely to use resources which don’t require interaction, such as webinars and podcasts (67%) or reading product reviews (63%), than they were to participate in online discussions (29%).
The top five social media resources used by small business leaders are:
Webinars / Podcasts – small business leaders consider webinars and
podcasts to great resources for professional development, industry
research and learning about potentially-relevant products and services,
saving them the time and expense of attending in-person training.
Ratings & Reviews – provide useful input into the business buying
process, particularly those ratings or reviews provided by other small
businesses using the product or service.
Company / Brand Pages on Social Networking Sites – social network
participation is now mainstream for U.S. adults, with 46% using sites
such as Facebook and 25% participating weekly. Small business leaders
are increasingly turning to these sites to find the latest information
about important vendors, products and services.
Company Blogs – small business leaders praise company blogs – at least,
those that are “well written, current and with good thought leadership
articles” – as great sources of information about business-relevant
products, services and the underlying character of a company.
Social Media Search – while some of the business-relevant information on
social media sites can be found through general search engines, a great
deal cannot. Realizing this, over half of small business leaders using
social media search for business-relevant information directly on sites
such as Facebook, LinkedIn, Business.com Answers, SlideShare and many more.
B2B social media marketing initiatives require Marketing and IT to work
closely together to prioritize projects, allocate resources, manage
execution and maintain new systems and features. One key implication
from this study for companies marketing to small businesses is that
Marketing can, and should, actively pursue B2B social media initiatives
which require little IT investment before taking on more
resource-intensive projects.
For example, rather than placing a company-managed online community the
core of the emerging social media strategy – a community where,
according to this research, it will be very challenging to build
participation by small business leaders – establish a company presence
on one or more social networking sites and focus initial community
development efforts on those sites. By focusing first on external, IT
‘lite’ social media opportunities, companies marketing to small
businesses are more likely to reach a far larger portion of their target
audience in the short run, begin developing a following and learn key
lessons that inform what social media features and functionality are
actually necessary on the company web site.
