What’s your social media personality?

 

The persona you project through social media can make it or break it for you.

You can do all the right things like posting consistently and engaging with fans, but if you are boring or you roller-coaster through different personality styles, people will break up with you.

And breaking up is hard to do.

You can increase fan retention and draw new fans simply by establishing a consistent online personality that people will associate with your brand or author platform. Are you a homespun country wisdom type? Authoritative and professional? Edgy with a touch of sarcasm? Charming and witty? Informal and fun? Urban and intense?

If you feel unsure about your social media personality type, try this exercise suggested by Phillip Davis of Social Media Examiner. Compare your brand to a type of car, a hotel chain, a favorite author, a television show or movie, or even nature to ascertain what best represents you. Are you a well-loved old Volkswagen Beetle or a substantial shiny new Hummer? Motel 6 or a luxury spa resort in Tahiti? Shakespeare or Stephen King? M*A*S*H or Criminal Intent? Mt. Vesuvius or Mt. Rushmore?

Once you’ve honed in on your style, you’ll have more success if you keep a few pointers in mind on using your social media personality effectively.

 

Be authentic.

Be yourself. Be open, conversational, responsive, respectful and engaged. No matter what your personality type is, be real. Fans love getting to know the person behind the platform, brand, or product. Do show some restraint with radical opinion, unless your platform is equally radical – then go for it.

Be flexible.

Share your latest event or piece of news, but also post relevant photographs, quotes, videos, and third-party content that your particular set of fans would enjoy. Comment on them to spark conversation.

Be responsive.

Interact when people comment, share your information, and ask questions. If a fan leaves negative feedback, respond to them quickly and respectfully. Even if that fan cannot be satisfied, others are watching and will view you positively for addressing the issue. If you encounter a fan who becomes hostile, uses profanity, and wreaks havoc, delete them from your social media account. And don’t feel bad about it.

 

Figuring out your social media personality and using it consistently will draw fans and keep them there. You want them to stick around because when the next big thing happens – like a new book published or a fun event – your loyal fans will buy your book or attend your event and tell other people via social media.

Now get out there and be social, edgy Mt. Vesuvius in a black and silver Hummer.

How to Entertain Your Social Media Fans

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At the risk of being labeled the social media preacher, I can’t tell you often enough: social media is about relationships.

Think about your real-life relationships. Do you spout business statistics every time you speak with your best friend? When you talk to your grandmother, do you fill the conversation with your frustration with back-ordered goods? Do you scream “look at me, look at me!” whenever you accidentally-on-purpose meet your neighbor at the mailbox?

Exactly. You don’t. So why do you behave that way when using social media? The biggest thing we are looking for as business owners, authors and service providers is to sell our widgets, bottom line. But to create loyal buying fans, you must also entertain while utilizing social media as part of your marketing plan.

Try these ideas.

Humor

If you are naturally gifted in the funny department, this will be easy for you. Posting humorous one-liners, short jokes, and wry observations on life will get the attention of your fans.

If you need a little help, go on a mining operation to dig up funny stuff from other sources.

  • Search for and follow Facebook and Google+ pages with humorous cartoons, funny photographs, and interesting quotes. It’s easy to use the share option to post their funnies on to your page.
  • Search for funny videos on YouTube and post to your social media accounts.
  • Follow funny personalities like Ellen or Jim Carrey and share their stuff.
  • Find humorous blogs – and there are tons – and share content.
  • Pinterest has tons of funny photos and infographics to share.

Heartstrings

Show no mercy when pulling heartstrings. Your fans love a good warm and fuzzy story, photograph, or video. Stories about rescued animals always do the trick, as do triumph-over-all-odds stories, and help-others-in-need stories. These are readily available on news sites, animal sites, and YouTube.

Photographs

Fans love anything visual, so give them what they want by posting photographs.

  • Take close-up photos of everyday objects or your products and ask your fans to try to identify what the item is.
  • Post photos of yourself doing something interesting, crazy, unique, or scary. Dyeing your hair pink, purple, and blue can meet all of those criteria, for example.
  • Search for photos, or take your own, of interesting scenarios and ask your fans to caption them. Spice it up by offering a freebie for the funniest one.
  • Ask fans to post their own photos. Set a theme or run a contest, and then make the best photo your Facebook cover photo for a week or give them a prize.

Your fans will love you even more when you entertain them using social media, and well-entertained fans are buy-your-stuff fans.

5 Ways to Ignite Fan Engagement on Your Facebook Page

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Fan engagement is the key to Facebook success. Number of fans doesn’t matter if nobody engages with you. A fantastic landing page doesn’t matter if nobody engages with you. Just having a page hanging out there in the Facebook ether world to prove you’ve written a book or have a fabulous service or product doesn’t matter if nobody engages with you.

 

The most difficult part of social media as a whole is figuring out what your fans will consistently respond to. It’s a lot art and a little science with some elbow grease thrown in.

 

1.  KISS, baby

Adopt this mantra: Keep It Simple and Short. Studies show that fans respond more often to shorter posts. One study found 80 characters to be ideal – which I think is tough to stick to – and a more recent study found 250 characters or fewer to be optimal. That’s the “science” – here’s the art: you’ll have to experiment with varying post lengths and monitor response rate. You’ll figure it out if you are consistent. Oh…that’s the elbow grease part.

 

2.  Call to Action

A call to action on Facebook can be as simple as asking for likes and comments in a post. It’s amazing how much engagement increases with this easy tactic. “Like this if you read every day like I do!”

Fill in the blank is a useful strategy as well: “My favorite time of day to read is ___________. ” “The cupcake flavor I love the most is __________.” Pick one that relates to your platform, product, or service in some way, or post one that relates to a current holiday, situation, weather season, celebrity, or news item. Be creative.

Ask questions, but ask them the right way. Keep them short, keep them easy to answer, steer away from yes and no questions, and put the question at the end of the post for the best response rate. Be sure to answer the question yourself, but wait until several fans have added input. Putting yourself into it too soon appears to stifle engagement rates. Another trick: respond to fans by name. “Fran, I agree. Fried okra is not for everybody!”

 

3.  Variety is the Spice of (Facebook) Life

I’m pretty sure you’ve noticed the amount of noise happening in your Facebook news feed. How the heck are you going to stand out in the crowd? Remember this – Facebook loves visuals. If you post a beautiful photo, a picture with a funny quote, or a video, fans will interact. Label it in the status field with something short like “Ahhhh, a beautiful vacation spot” or one of my favorites “Bahahahaha” to show how hysterical you think your funny quote is. (Really, my fans LOVE that).  If they don’t love it, they might tell you so and that’s okay. We call that engagement.

 

4.  Get in the Zone

80% of the U.S. population lives in the eastern and central time zones; only 4% in my beloved mountain time zone. Study your insights to figure out what time zone the majority of your fans live and post accordingly. A very rough guideline to start with is before work starts at about 7 a.m., around 5 p.m. at the end of the work day, and late evening near 10 p.m. after the kids have gone to bed. Remember, that may be 7 a.m. ET if that’s where your fans live – which make it 5 a.m. for MT folks.

In other words, not during the oh-so-convenient standard 9-5 work day. Studies of best post times are all over the board, so you’ll be fine-tuning this one to figure it out.

 

5. Days o’ the Week

Certain days see higher engagement rates overall and certain industries get better engagement on specific days. Saturdays show higher engagement across Facebook, and Monday mornings are low as are Friday afternoons. Weekends are active in the entertainment industry, food and beverage on Saturdays, Sundays are best for retail and sports, Wednesday and Thursday for business and finance, and health and beauty on Thursdays. Yeah. It’s a mix of art and science to figure this out for your particular widget.

 

By utilizing these techniques on a consistent basis, your engagement rate should improve. Engaged fans are loyal fans, and loyal fans are customers who see value in your product or service and will PAY you.

 

Now get out there and KISS, fill in the blank, get spicy, get in the zone, and embrace Saturdays. You’ll thank yourself later.