REGISTER NOW: Uncomfortable Conversations: The Skills Crisis
REGISTER: 8THIRTYFOUR Skills Survival School Founding Cohort

You Can’t Escape Social Media

Written by

Share This Post:

8THIRTYFOUR's owner, Kim Bode, browses her phone while icons for Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter are superimposed over her.


Maybe you’ve noticed it, maybe you haven’t. The latest trend in social media is apparently to not be on social media. Brands like Lush and even our favorite congresswoman are opting out and taking a break from social media platforms. (Side note: we find that super annoying. If you don’t care about social media, then why do you need to dramatically announce you’ll no longer participate?)
Social media is everywhere, which means marketers are drawn to it like flies. The entire industry buzzes about what’s happening on Twitter or Facebook or Instagram or whatever. Everyone lives and breathes social media.
But here’s the catch: social media’s a big ol’ (somewhat entertaining) beast that has its claws in all of us. No matter how much brands and celebrities try to quit, they’re never really free.

You Can Run

We all know someone who doesn’t have any social media accounts (gasp!). A lot of the time, these people think they’ve somehow cheated the system, and as far as their personal accounts go, they might have.
But as soon as you’re a tastemaker or an influencer or a brand, there’s no running. Brands without social media accounts are missing out on a huge touchpoint for their audiences. According to recent studies, people spend over 16 hours every week on social media. That’s two and a half hours a day!
Brands that completely opt out of social media are missing out on sixteen hours of interactions for every prospect. Start multiplying that number by the reach of a single post, and you’ll start to see why it’s a big deal.

You Can Hide

That’s why some brands are starting to close down accounts without nixing social media completely. The UK extension of Lush announced earlier this month that it’s going to close its social media accounts because it’s “tired of fighting algorithms.”
Okay, we get that, and we feel you, Lush.
But the brand’s trying something else. Lush has announced that it’s going to be engaging through a hashtag. A valiant idea, sure, but here’s the problem: brands need an official presence.

But You Can’t Escape

Sure, it’s easy to close an account on most platforms, but once you do, then what? Brands can follow a hashtag, but the way users interact with companies all comes down to one of those age-old rhetoric appeals: ethos.
Back in the old days, philosophers taught that in order to sell an idea (or product) to someone, you needed to use pathos (emotion), logos (logic), and ethos (credibility). Brands have gotten pretty good at those first two parts (hello, Maslow’s hierarchy), but they rely super heavily on the credibility part.
In short, ethos is the same thing as brand recognition. Your Twitter account with the little blue checkmark next to it assures your audience that you really are who you say you are. Without this reassurance, misinformation spreads like wildfire.

Because It’s Coming for You

When social media doesn’t know what’s true and what’s false, it makes up its own facts. These “facts” get shared and reposted and liked and promoted and soon what social media users believe to be true sort of becomes true.
That’s how social media disasters happen, and it’s why brands need an official hub. Social media is the cheapest and one of the most effective ways to get information out quickly to a mass audience. Posts can set the record straight about potential disasters in literal seconds.
In short, if brands don’t embrace social media, it’ll eat them alive.
 
Need a team that can help you tackle your own social media accounts? Grab some coffee with us, and we’ll help you meet your audience where they are. After all, social media isn’t going anywhere any time soon.
 
 

Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Recent Posts

Something on Your Mind?

Everyone knows the skills gap exists. Not enough people are asking what it's actually costing us.

Kim is partnering with mibiznetwork for a new series focused on the Hard Cost of Soft Skills - what skills are missing, what businesses are doing because of it, and most importantly... the fix. 

You can watch the first episode intro at the link in bio.
This is your Monday reminder that nobody has it all figured out at first.

Owning what makes you weird and unique takes time... and work. 

You can start that work at a Big Deal Energy workshop. First one is on June 23. Link in bio.
The brands winning in AI search aren't doing anything new; they just never stopped doing what worked.

Kim was quoted in incmagazine alongside business leaders talking about generative engine optimization, and her message is one worth hearing right now. The terminology is different, the tools are different, but the foundation is exactly the same.

Full article at the link in bio.
Big Deal Energy starts with questioning the status quo and the rules you've been told to follow. They were built for blending in, not standing out.

Thank you to fox17morningmix for the spotlight on our upcoming workshops. 

Watch the full segment at the link in bio.
Being open and being honest aren't the same thing, and according to Grace Gavin, most leaders haven't figured that out yet.

Grace is the co-founder of Know Honesty, and she joined Maddie on the Happy Hour Hustle podcast to talk about the communication gaps costing teams more than they realize.

If you lead people, this episode is for you. Link in bio.