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As a social-media consultant, I often deal with a company's " social media guy" who's trying to sell social media to a skeptical boss.

These folks are passionate about social media and want their company to "join the conversation." But the problem is, when they go to their boss to sell him on using social media, they often talk about the importance of "the conversation" and engaging with online customers.

The reality is that in many cases the skeptical bosses don't care about "the conversation." They don't care about interaction and comments because they don't understand why these things are important.

So if you approach your boss with "the conversation" as the main selling point for why he should use social media, odds are you will be quickly shown the door and told to get back to work.

If you want to sell your skeptical boss on why he should use social media, you have to find ways to remove his skepticism and speak in terms he understands. This article offers six tips for convincing your boss that social media is right for your company.

1. Speak in terms your boss understands

The quickest way to kill the chances of selling Skeptical Boss on social media is to tell her that she needs to "join the conversation." Skeptical Boss is skeptical for a reason: She can't see how her business would benefit from using social media.

She doesn't understand why "the conversation" matters, so save that for later. Instead, speak in terms she understands. Talk about how social media usage can help her company grow awareness for its products and services. How a well-positioned blog can increase inbound links (which might make it possible to stop outsourcing SEO work to that pricey firm), and how it can be leveraged as a tool to drive traffic back to her company's website.

Then, after she has taken the earplugs out and is listening to you, show her how interacting with customers via social media can help improve the company's online reputation, which can lead to even more incoming links, and likely more positive endorsements of the company. Which is also a big benefit when it comes to search results.

Key point: Frame your social media sales pitch to your boss in terms that are important to her. Look at what your company is already measuring, such as website traffic, incoming links, etc., and show her how social media can help improve those efforts. Your boss might not understand social media, but she likely understands the importance of search engine optimization. Work with that, and point out that social media can help with SEO. Just make sure you frame your argument from her point of view, not yours.

2. Tie your proposed efforts back to measurable metrics that matter to your boss

This tip is in line with the previous one. If your boss doesn't understand the importance of averaging three comments per blog post, then don't focus on that. Focus on what happens as a result of those extra comments, such as the commenters' becoming more likely to subscribe to the blog, to visit regularly, and to link to the blog.

And if you get your boss's buy-in for your social media efforts measure everything from the get-go. Because most social media efforts take a while to get rolling. Your boss might not understand this, so when he calls you in after a month and wants to know what's happening with the blog, you'd better be able to point to some numbers. You'd better be able to show how traffic is growing, how more traffic is being sent to the website, how emails from the blog are increasing, etc.

Key point: Measure the metrics that matter. Look at you company's online communication efforts to see what your boss is tracking. Does he place a premium on traffic? Incoming links? Emails from visitors? Newsletter subscribers? All of these metrics can be measured as a result of your social media efforts as well. Even if you start measuring things like comments per post or the number of RTs (retweets) a post gets on Twitter, make sure that your boss understands why those metrics are important. (Make sure you understand why, as well.)

3. Show your boss how social media will affect the company's bottom line

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Mack Collier

Mack Collier is a social-media strategist based in Alabama. He helps companies build programs and initiatives that let them better connect with their customers and advocates. His podcast, The Fan-Damn-Tastic Marketing Show, discusses ways that brands can turn customers into fans. His first book, Think Like a Rock Star: How to Create Social Media and Marketing Strategies That Turn Customers Into Fans, was published in April 2013 by McGraw-Hill.

Twitter: @MackCollier

LinkedIn: Mack Collier