As you begin to make resolutions for 2011, please don’t add a line item to your list about “building relationships online” or “engaging with customers through social media” without putting some real thought into how you will do it, and most importantly how you will sustain it.
But even before doing that, think about why you want to do this, what you’d like to accomplish and how you will know if you’re doing a good job. In other words, make it make sense for you, and give yourself some goals.
I continue to see so many abandoned efforts that turn out to be a monumental waste of time in the end because there was so much energy and enthusiasm at the onset that waned quickly because the results weren’t instant.
And many times, there were no real expectations for results, at least not justified expectations rooted in reality. Just pie-in-the-sky numbers and stats created on the fly, or a series of guesses based on what someone “thinks” is acceptable. Again, reality not included.
Any outreach or engagement efforts you start online should be for the long haul. And because overnight success stories are few and far between, you need a plan.
So allow me to make this recommendation for your checklist:
“Develop a short and long-term plan for connecting with customers online. Define my goals and determine who I want to engage. Commit to spending some time out of each day to work toward this goal, and if I don’t have time to do it right now, revisit in 30-days.”
Yes, that was a bit long, but the idea is simple. Commit, or leave it alone until you can.










5 comments
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December 27, 2010 at 11:32 am
Dolly Sickles
As usual, good, practical advice. I like that in your suggestion to revisit the goal, you only give it 30 days. There’s a lot that can be wrapped up in a month, whereas if someone takes off a full quarter or six months … Or even a full year … They’re probably more unlikely to ever return to the goal.
December 27, 2010 at 1:03 pm
Angela Connor
Hey Dolly: You know, so many have no goal from the very beginning. It seems crazy, but is so true. I think that acknowledging the fact that you need a purpose and goals, is a good start. It is lost on many.
December 27, 2010 at 8:14 pm
beckymoore
You’re right about that. I’ve worked in PR and marketing for thirteen years, and while I always earmarked a “wildcard” item, I always had a plan. In fact, I can even make a plan on the fly … visualizing 10 steps down the road is really important. But without an end goal, even the best plan in the world is useless. Like I said, you’ve always got a great distillation process.
December 28, 2010 at 3:17 pm
Building relationships online is not a line item for your checklist | SiliconANGLE
[...] [Cross-posted at Online Community Strategist] [...]
September 15, 2011 at 4:39 am
Emile Levell
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