LinkedIn is one of the most prominent platforms that can improve your chances of making connections, generate leads and enhance your business marketing.
It is considered to be the largest professional social media network with approximately half a billion usersall over the world. It is also found that 50% of B2B buyers use LinkedIn when making decisions whether to purchase or not.
It is also known that LinkedIn is the number one source of professional content. In order to stay in great shape with your content marketing and lead generation through LinkedIn, your LinkedIn Profile should be your absolute best.
Here are a few ways you can do to optimize your profile to improve your marketing strategy.
Let people know that you do and let your profile tell them that you are good at what you do in detail.
Moreover, whenever you make changes, you have to make updates on the current information about yourself. It will negatively reflect you and your business when you are presenting different information in your LinkedIn profile compared to your resume or other social media platforms.
THE PROFESSIONAL LOOK
As the saying goes, “When in Rome, Do what the Romans do”. Therefore, when in a professional networking platform, would you opt to look like a clown? No, I think not.
Avoid using inappropriate selfies. The environment where you are taking your photo also matters. Even if you have a professional shot but your background contains a party and some photobombers, that is hardly professional.
However, let your profile picture reflect you and your personality as well as your skills and abilities. If you are in the creative industry, edit your profile picture to make it creative-looking while staying professional-looking.
PERSONALIZATION IS KEY
In this era, with the growing use of Artificial Intelligence and bots, people rely on the default settings and the automatic generation of content.
You can personalize and show people that you are human and don’t just rely on the fast and easy method that bots and AIs can give.
This will also show that you took the time to personalize aspects of your profile which can be associated with ingenuity and dedication.
Own Your URL
Creating your Linkedin profile for the first time, your default link URL will be a combination of letters and numbers that are neither user nor SEO friendly.
Optimize it by changing and personalizing it with your name. It is recommended that you use the short version of your name to make it more memorable and easy to search for people who have taken an interest in looking for you.
Inviting Invitations
When inviting someone to connect on LinkedIn, make it more personal and sincere by making a personalized invite.
The people you are inviting are also a member of LinkedIn and they know if you are inviting them using default template invite of the platform. Sending personalized invites will also boost your chances for them to accept your invitation.
CONNECT, CONNECT AND CONNECT
The point of joining LinkedIn is to gain many connections and build relationships with various people that can improve your marketing.
That won’t happen if you keep to yourself. Even if you are a well-known brand, you still have to connect yourself to the world to gain more influence and reputation.
Therefore, the key here is to connect, connect and connect.
Join Groups
One of the ways to gain connection is to join groups with like-minded people who share the same interests. It could be a small group that shares the same job as you, it could be a group in the same niche.
There are millions and millions of groups existing that you can choose which group you’ll be joining to benefit you and your business more.
Search for People
Finding connections isn’t just limited to join groups and hope that the people you are looking for will show themselves to you.
You can also search for someone specifically using LinkedIn’s search and advanced search. Using this method will enable you to find potential customers, influencers or partners that can help your business.
RELATIONSHIPS MATTER
Don’t just start connecting people and sell them your product or services. That is a huge mistake to make and will immediately turn them off.
Cultivate and build a relationship with potential customers and fellow business owners. While in a group, you can be active to join and contribute to discussions. Comment, share, like and engage with other people’s posts and topics in LinkedIn.
This will make people aware of you and your expertise. This will also show people that you know what you are doing and will slowly build a reputation.
When you became established, that’s when you start to ask for favors with high chances of them accepting.
PRODUCE ROYAL CONTENT
Content is King. And that is not a saying that is easily exhausted no matter how many times it was repeated even though it is worth repeating.
Other than discussing topics with other people, you can also increase your influence and strengthen brand awareness by producing amazing and top-notch content. LinkedIn notifies followers contents that you have published. It is indexed and can be searched using search engines as well.
Therefore, content that gives value and helps specific and well-targeted people will gain quite a reputation in LinkedIn, boost brand awareness and improve their rankings.
TAKE AWAY
Known to be a platform which delivers professional and trustworthy content, it is a no-brainer that people expect members in LinkedIn to be professional and trustworthy also. Keep your profile professional and authentic.
Remember that your profile reflects who you are which in turn contributes to how people see your business.
Whether you work in a big company or a small company, having a well-updated and professional LinkedIn profile is essential. With a LinkedIn page, you will surely improve your reputation and increase leads as well as boost brand awareness.
Let’s put these figures into context. According to TechCrunch, no other platform has reached this many monthly active users:
YouTube has 1.5 billion monthly active users.
WeChat has 889 million monthly active users.
Instagram has 700 million monthly active users.
Twitter has 328 million monthly active users.
Snapchat has an estimated 255 million monthly active users.
Though YouTube and Instagram are putting in the effort, Facebook remains on top.
And 93% of marketers admit to using Facebook advertising regularly. That represents roughly 3 million businesses that use Facebook strictly for marketing purposes.
But despite Facebook’s widespread use, marketers are worried about the recent algorithm changes.
That might leave some skeptical about the future of Facebook for advertising.
While it’s unlikely that Facebook will abandon their advertisers altogether (they still earned $7.68 billion in ad sales in Q1 of 2017), it’s possible that new changes might affect paid ads at some point.
But even if paid ads go the way of the dodo, there are still plenty of ways you can use Facebook to market your business.
Here are 15 Facebook marketing strategies that will grow your business. And yes, they actually work.
1. Choose the right category for your business page
First thing’s first: You need a business page and not a personal profile.
I’ll go into more detail about why my page looks the way it does in the remaining tips.
But for now, take note of a few key features, including:
My profile picture
The “Sign Up” CTA
My sidebar tabs
These elements will all become important later on.
Before I get to all of that, however, I want to mention something important about the setup process.
You’re going to want to create your profile under a specific category. Facebook has six options:
For the majority of people reading this, you will probably fall under the Local Business or Brand categories.
The category type matters because each category has different features.
Local businesses, for example, will have a section for a physical location listing, while an online brand will not. This will be important if you’re looking to raise brand awareness.
And the popularity of videos appears only to be growing. Between April and November of 2015, the number of video views per day doubled from 4 billion to 8 billion.
Second, 80% of users are annoyed when videos auto-play sound, so be sure that you’re setting up your videos correctly when you post.
If you’re not into producing video, take advantage of Facebook Live. It’s the live video streaming service that lets anyone broadcast videos from a mobile device.
While it’s still a relatively new addition (Facebook launched it in 2015), Facebook Live has seen some good results in terms of marketing engagement.
9. Use Facebook Page Insights to analyze content
Posting quality content is only part of the battle.
Another part is monitoring your metrics to find trends in engagement so that you know what content is succeeding.
The best tool for this job is Facebook’s internal analytics tool, Facebook Page Insights.
This will provide you with a snapshot of the last seven days of your page’s performance, including:
Page likes — Measures the total and new likes for your page
Post reach — Measures the total number of unique views on your page and posts
Engagement — Measures the total number of unique people who engaged with your page and posts
You’ll also be able to access information about your page’s reach, including likes, comments, and shares.
Another thing you want to do is play around with the timing of your posts.
You can get that information from your Page Insights data.
It will show you when your followers are online, what types of posts do better during different times of the day, and which posts are the most engaging.
This will give you insight into the optimal time to post for your Facebook followers.
If you want, you can conduct experiments to test out the best timing of your posts and track your metrics to see if your theories are right.
You might try to post different content (casual humor posts, etc.) at non-peak hours to see how it affects your engagement, too.
By monitoring your post timing, you’ll have a leg up on engagement for your page.
11. Use Audience Insights to analyze user behavior
Another analytics tool you’ll want to use is Facebook Audience Insights.
This is a little different than Page Insights in that it gives you information about your core audiences rather than pure engagement metrics. (HubSpot has a step-by-step guide to Audience Insights.)
You get demographics overviews like age and gender breakdowns, education levels, and job descriptions.
Or you might find valuable information about your followers’ hobbies and interests.
This can be extremely helpful when you’re determining what type of content to produce or what topics would most interest your audience.
It will also help you narrow down your Facebook Ads (see #13).
12. Promote your page with Facebook Ads
Organic posts aren’t the only way to engage users.
I know that Facebook’s algorithm changes might have you wary of using Facebook Ads.
These range from location-based audiences to segmentation based on hobbies and interests (remember your data from Facebook Audience Insights?) and even life events.
Are you a wedding photographer? Target users who just got engaged in your area.
There are hundreds or even thousands of ways you can tailor your ads to improve reach.
The key is to take the time to analyze your customer base and form buyer personas.
When you have an idea of what your audience already wants, your ads will perform better over time.
14. Promote your page outside of Facebook
If you want to improve engagement on your Facebook page, you need to find ways to bring traffic to it.
Yes, using promoted posts and paid ads can highlight your page to Facebook users who are browsing the platform.
But what about your users who don’t even know that you have a Facebook page?
Include a link to your Facebook page (and other social accounts) on your website.
Add it to the bottom of your emails.
Put it in your other marketing materials.
Make your blog posts shareable on Facebook.
Include links on your business cards. After all, the point of a vanity URL is shareability.
You can also go a step further and give your audience a reason to become a Facebook follower.
Offer them exclusive deals, content, or promotions that get them excited about following you.
This gives them major incentive to actually engage with your brand on Facebook.
15. Partner with influencers
If you’re still struggling with Facebook engagement, partner with someone who already has it all figured out.
Influencer marketing can really impact your engagement if you do it right.
The trick is to find influencers who are already in your space and who want to work with you.
Try using a tool like BuzzSumo to help you find them. With their influencers and outreach feature, you can search for influencers using keywords relevant to your industry or business.
Sadly, there’s no search feature that will help you find influencers directly on Facebook due to their advanced privacy settings.
But you can find influencers on other social sites like LinkedIn or Twitter and then search for them manually using Facebook’s search bar.
On LinkedIn, you can enter specific keywords within the search box to pull up second-degree connections and users who are directly related to your search.
Twitter’s analytics tools will help you identify trending topics and hashtags related to your brand, which might also point you in the right direction.