Getting people's attention on social media is more difficult than ever.
Between content shock and ever-changing social-network algorithms, reaching your audience via Facebook, Twitter, and other platforms isn't easy.
Certainly, quitting isn't an option, either. So, what should marketers do? Create focused and well-written campaigns that cut through the static, of course.
Follow along and we'll cover how to write killer social media campaigns from start to finish. You'll learn...
- How to generate truly creative social media campaign concepts that connect with real audience needs.
- How to successfully execute those ideas and drive results.
- How to analyze and measure your results (so you can duplicate what works and stop what doesn't).
Let's get started.
It All Starts With an Idea
Big ideas are the basis for much of creative marketing. Although much has been said about the death of "the big idea" in the classic advertising sense, it's still possible to adapt it to our digital times.
Here's what David Ogilvy had to say about ideas in 1983: "It takes a big idea to attract the attention of consumers and get them to buy your product. Unless your advertising contains a big idea, it will pass like a ship in the night. I doubt if more than one campaign in a hundred contains a big idea."
A caveat here: we're talking about organic social media, not paid advertising (although social media advertising is important, it's not the focus of this article).
Everything in that Ogilvy quote applies to our social media battleground as much as it did to traditional advertising.
A disconcerting volume of uninspired posts is being published every day because of a "quantity over quality" mindset. There's an alternative to that spray-and-pray approach, however. It involves generating a solid angle (or "big idea") and writing a connected campaign of posts around it.
Start by identifying an idea for a core piece of content your social media campaign will promote. This could be...
- A conversion-optimized landing page.
- A high-quality article or blog post.
- An entertaining or informative video you've produced.
Your campaign messaging should address the intersection between your audience's interests or pain points and a solution your company is uniquely qualified to provide.
One example of a classic big idea that combines an audience's interest with a company's mission is Nike's "Just Do It" slogan. That simple phrase still informs the company's brand strategy, even on social media.
For example, consider this Instagram post:
826,443 likes. Now that's solid engagement.
Let's break down a few things this post does well:
- It incorporates a relevant hashtag.
- The post copy is on-point.
- It connects the audience's interests and Nike's brand with something relevant.
Best of all, it's not that complicated to integrate this big-idea approach in your social media content.
How Do I Write a Killer Social Media Campaign?
If this kind of creative execution really is within the grasp of any competent marketing writer, how do you get started putting together a campaign with this kind of power?
Let's start with the basics.
1. What Do You Want Your Audience to Do?
Figure out what exactly what kind of action you want your post to inspire. Here are some examples:
- Improve a skill.
- Solve a common problem.
- Gain useful knowledge.
For your brand, your desired actions might be...
- Clicking through to a landing page
- Reading a blog post (and maybe even completing an opt-in form)
- Engaging with your brand (liking, commenting, sharing, or otherwise indicating you made a positive impression)
The key is making sure your posts bridge the gap between these two sets of desires.
2. Finding the Right Words