When we hear the term “social media”, many tend to think instinctively of the giants that deliver and dominate the world's everyday online conversations – Facebook, Twitter and now Google+. After all, we make extensive use of these platforms in our personal and our professional lives, both as consumers and publishers.
But, the frontrunner in the B2B social media space isn't any of the sites mentioned above. Instead, it's the rather more serious and business-like LinkedIn. And when you look into its killer demographics, you see why. Steve Rayson's recent slideshare puts LinkedIn's membership at 250 million, 69% of whom are in the higher-income decision-making bracket, and 79% of whom are 35 or older. It's hardly Facebook, is it?
So what, then, are the dos and don'ts of effective B2B content marketing in a social media environment where work is the thing and inexpert youth is largely absent?
When Rayson refers to the LinkedIn as “the preferred B2B social marketing platform”, he's not joking. His figures, although assembled from different sources, present a pretty convincing overall picture - LinkedIn scores:
So what is it within LinkedIn that attains such stellar metrics - and how should your business engage with it?
With the number of business people using LinkedIn as a networking tool, it lends itself to a B2B content marketing approach that is based around communities and groups that share similar interests and/or challenges. Two sets of insight on the most and least effective online marketing strategies for LinkedIn have featured in recent posts from Fortune 500 entrepreneur Kevin Daum and Hubspot specialist, Diana Urban. Let’s explore some of the salient points that their combined wisdom proffers:
Despite LinkedIn's impeccable B2B community credentials, some of its derivative activities rely on processes and procedures that are not altogether credible. Buzzfeed's Scott Bryan, for example, in an entertaining, tongue-in-cheek rant, bemoans both LinkedIn's automated recommendation system (which is something they could do better, I suspect) and the tendency of people to “big themselves up” in their profiles and updates (which is something LinkedIn can do nothing about at all).
Equally, for every vendor, recruitment consultant and distributor that has understood the primacy of involvement and quality content in building an influential presence on LinkedIn, scores haven't. Indeed, LinkedIn experts have confirmed to me that unsolicited sales approaches have caused many users to change their preferences in order to avoid unwelcome overtures - thus screening out many legitimate approaches, too.
But perhaps the biggest challenge to LinkedIn's content marketing effectiveness is the growing "noise" in a number of the Groups created by people who don't heed the best-practice wisdom about not being "spammy." Experienced LinkedIn users will recognise that the enjoyment and effectiveness of some Groups is being hampered by people posting updates that are entirely self-serving and uninteresting.
Content opportunities notwithstanding, then, LinkedIn still poses some challenges - for its own members and for B2B marketers alike. If you are ready though to embrace the social networking benefits of the platform, engage with it in a way that is useful, insightful and informative to your business connections and beyond, then there's a lot to be gained from it as part of your B2B online marketing.
Image Esther Vargas