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    Social Media 2010 – 7 Assets of Successful Social Media Enterpreneur

    by Paul Shuteyev
    05.11.2010
    7 Assets of Successful Social Media Enterpreneur

    7 Assets of Successful Social Media Enterpreneur

    Hi friends, Starting with 2010 is the time for Email Marketing and Social Media salvation. Becoming leader in Email Marketing gives you +1000 handicap for Social Media success, and other way round. We've talked much about email marketing strategies, success stories, tips and tricks, and it's real pleasure for me to talk sometimes about social media as something really unique. Today I'd like to provide 7 assets of successful Social Media enterpreneur.  So let's start! 1. Passion Passion for the job is an important characteristic of any employee, but it's fundamental for a social-media manager. Many public relations and marketing folks use social media, but they aren't passionate about it. Social media goes 24/7, so you need someone who can live and breathe it without burning out. A good social-media manager will have the drive of a sales representative but has a light touch that influences people without appearing to "sell" to them. 2. Credibility Social media is not a silo. You need to balance technical skill with business acumen. Research the candidate's professional credibility in your particular industry. The social-media manager will become one of the "faces" of your company, so you need someone with a broad business background and a grasp of marketing, sales, operations, P&L, product management, business process, and customer relationship management. 3. Strategy Because social media is fun, many people can get caught up in using it without a clear purpose. If a social-media program is implemented companywide, it can become a big time investment. Therefore, it's vital that the social-media director provide leadership for senior management as well, ensuring that they buy in to the program and understand its goals. Strategic, big-picture thinking coupled with a willingness for shirtsleeves implementation is a must. 4. Service-orientation Because social-media managers are the face of a company, they need to be relentlessly committed to helping people in social channels. Customer service should be part of that person's DNA. Customer interaction is not a bother; rather, it's something to enjoy, it's the new marketing. Customers, partners, prospects, and analysts will need help and advice around the clock, which puts the social-media manager in a unique position of acting as an advocate for the company and brand, as well as the community. As an advocate for the community, the social-media director helps the company design better products and services, leading to happier and more-loyal customers. And when the products and services are better, the social-media director can evangelize on the company's behalf in a more natural way. 5. Risk-tolerance The social landscape is changing at breakneck speed. The social-media leader must be comfortable with constant change and course correction. Because many social efforts are in uncharted territory, the perfect social-media manager will be the proverbial self-starter, a true pioneer, unafraid to head into the darkness. The social-media leader can't wait for directions from the boss, since the boss may not know as much about social media. And if there's a failure, the social-media leader must dust off and start all over again. 6. Decisiveness It seems as if there's a new social-media product every other day. Social-media practitioners must keep their tool set full of sharp new tools, but they need the wisdom and experience to recognize which trends have lasting power and which are ephemeral. It's also crucial that they commit to social-media programs and stay with them long enough to evaluate their success or failure, yet be willing to jettison what isn't working. 7. Action hero(ine) As noted earlier, change is the only constant in the social-media world. To say that the social populace expects real-time action is an obvious statement. Although creating quality content is important, it's equally important to avoid "analysis paralysis" or get caught in an endless loop of approvals. If you wait to publish a blog post or tweet, it will be yesterday's news tomorrow. The social-media director must strike the right balance between perfection and action, with action being paramount.
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    Paul Shuteyev
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