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Business Social Networking for New Zealand Businesses

Fiona Powell

Is your business up to speed with social media?

Introducing social media courses for businesses
Social media isn’t a fad - Twitter boasts six million unique monthly visitors, Facebook has 300 million users, 80 percent of employers use Linkedin as a primary tool to find employees, in January alone internet viewers viewed 14.8 billion YouTube videos. In fact, Social Media has overtaken porn as the number one activity on the Web.

Yet this change has happened at speed – Twitter is just three years old. And businesses are having trouble keeping up.

One of the biggest barriers (according to 43% of companies surveyed by PR Week’s Social Media Survey 09) to incorporating social media into marketing campaigns is simply lack of knowledge.

Yet businesses understand the impact social media is having – 79% say social media will have an impact on connecting with customers in the next year - and 63% acknowledge the impact social media will have on generating sales and revenue. In line with this 41% of companies are shifting funding from other marketing activities or allocating additional funding to social media activities in their business.

We’ve been encouraging businesses to blog and use social media tools for awhile now – and now there’s no escaping the fact that social media skills are a necessity for a growing business of today.

So we’ve launched a range of courses including an introduction to social media and blogging for business, with the first course on November 16th in Auckland in a computer lab. We’re passionate about helping businesses get up to speed with social media.

And here’s 7 reasons why businesses should be getting serious about social media:

Connect with your customers: Your customers are on Facebook and Twitter; get in front of them and converse with them in their space. You can address questions or complaints quickly and openly.
Build your brand: Social media is open and transparent – and shows off the human side of your business. Your customers – and even future employees - get to see what you’re all about.
Keep your finger on the pulse: Social media tools allow you to monitor conversations about your brand, your products, your industry and your competition; and react accordingly.
Part of your SEO strategy: Influence how and where your business is discovered via search as social content can boost links to website content, improving search traffic.
Take on the Goliaths: In social media size doesn’t matter so much; engaging with your community does. Social media tools are not only accessible to any business at low cost, they’re also new – so we’re all learning, even the biggest businesses.
Increase media coverage: A presence in social media will help get you noticed (hopefully for the right reasons) organically, rather than ‘pushing’ your PR.
A source of great leads: Building a community around your brand through the social web increases lead generation, impacting on sales.

About SocialMediaThink.com
Fiona Powell, a former award winning magazine publisher and editor, is the founder of online network entrepreneurette and blog network flokka – both designed for women in business, and is Principal of BusinessBlogSchool and SocialMediaThink – designed to help businesses leverage their social media activities.

The Introduction to Social Media and Blogs for Business Course is held in Auckland on the 16th November 2009. For information contact: Fiona@socialmediathink.com Ph 09 629 4306. www.socialmediathink.com.

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Sheldon Nesdale Comment by Sheldon Nesdale on October 28, 2009 at 8:14pm
Cool, thanks for clearing that up. :)
Fiona Powell Comment by Fiona Powell on October 28, 2009 at 6:53pm
Hi Sheldon
Thanks; this statistic was challenged from my source too; and I included it only as example of what Linkedin is being used for and its potential (and I guess statistics can be scewed to prove anything as Mark Twain said) - but here it is: http://socialnomics.net/2009/08/11/statistics-show-social-media-is-bigger-than-you-think/
And Erick Qualman's source is: 10.Source: Jobvite Social Recruitment Survey
Which is the same source as yours and says: The survey results showed that 80 percent of companies use or are planning to use social networking to find and attract candidates this year. Among those using or planning to use social network sites for recruiting, LinkedIn use grew from 80 percent in 2008 to 95 percent of respondents in 2009.
And it's certainly not bullying - more highlighting some shifts that are happening - we're offering an 'introduction' to social media at a VERY competitive price; so lots of value for those wanting to know more.
I'm really passionate about social media - and am been increasingly asked to share with other businesses so they can know more too. So I am.
Thanks
Cheers
Fiona
Sheldon Nesdale Comment by Sheldon Nesdale on October 28, 2009 at 3:54pm
Perhaps this will help: "this is corrected to '80 percent of companies use or are planning to use social networking to find and attract candidates this year', which sounds rather more believable."

Source: Espen.com

Can we expect this level of inaccuracy during your business course?

I'm being pretty hard on you, but I don't think it's cool to bully business people with impressive sounding (but inaccurate) statistics, scaring them into thinking they are missing out on "the next big thing", and the only way to prevent that from happening is to attend your course.
Sheldon Nesdale Comment by Sheldon Nesdale on October 28, 2009 at 3:46pm
"80 percent of employers use Linkedin as a primary tool to find employees"???

Please provide me with a source for this statistic Fiona. I am skeptical of its accuracy. (And therefore, the rest of your statistics)

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