5 Social Media Tips for Startups

Social Media. We’ve heard this before. We’ve all been there, been awed by its presence, laughed at the funny cat pictures and marveled at the brilliant campaigns run by Businesses like Star Sports (#MaukaMauka?).

As a startup, we all know and understand the power of Social Media. We would all also like to get in on the action and have our own pages roaring with likes and User Engagement. We want our videos to go viral and we want people to talk about us in their networks.

At this point however, it makes sense to think about the First Moon Landing. Neil Armstrong did not just build a ship out of scrap aluminum, fill it with Kerosene, light a fuse and land on the moon. There were endless hours of trainings, practice landings (first of which required him to parachute out of his ship) and design refinements prior to eventual launch.

Similarly, there is a structured approach to building and maintaining a vivid presence on Social Media. We at Inquirly have been in this space for almost 2 years and after managing Social Media Presence of almost 200 brands, we’ve decided to share some tips that helped our clients grow.

Tip #1: Create a Social Media Strategy before creating your profiles.

The first step would be thinking about what you want to achieve from Social Media. Brand Awareness, Lead Generation, Driving hits on your website, Customer Engagement there are a large number of things Social Media can do for you. We usually prefer to host brainstorming sessions with Startup founders to decide what their strategies should be. We remove the clutter and present simple, workable ideas that founders can then choose.

SocialMedia1Tip #2 – Identify your target group

This is important. More-so because each target group responds to a different type of messaging on Social Media. Take the example of SpaceX. SpaceX knows its target group and a large number of its followers will be people who love…wait for it…Space!! It’s target group is mostly comprised of tech-savvy adults, people who like Science and geeks/nerds (just like us). SpaceX therefore tailors its tweets to appeal to its target audience. Building content that appeals to target groups is usually handled by the founders at very early stage startups, however some founders do prefer to stick to what they’re best at, be it Product design, sales or hunting down investors.

Social-media2Tip #3 – How much do you post?

One point commonly noticed by us during our interactions with various startups is that they have created a presence on Social Media but eventually stopped posting because they decided to focus on other, more important things. This should be avoided at all costs. An inactive presence on Social Media gives your followers and customers the impression that you are unreliable and sloppy. These negative aspects are automatically attributed to your product or service and voila, you suddenly have a negative brand perception in the mind of your customer.

Here’s the solution – If you cannot actively engage on Social Media, DON’T POST ON SOCIAL MEDIA. We understand start-ups don’t have time to look beyond daily operations, cannot afford expensive agencies but brand creation through social channels is one of the most important aspects in your Go to Market strategy. There are several tools available for a DIY model which can be leveraged for saving time. For example we have reduced the time required to manage all the different channels by creating an omni channel platform with industry specific templates and images.

Tip #4 – Types of Posts

In an ideal world, we would like to post content, have visitors engage with the post and then have these same visitors BUY our product or service. The real world works a little differently. At Inquirly, one of the first things we tell our customers is that before trotting out their lovely campaigns with Incredibly Creative calls-to-action (BUY NOW! CLAIM COUPON NOW!), they need to engage with their audience, build a place in their minds, show them a solution and then sell them the solution. Customer engagement has a value all of its own and sometimes that value rivals that of a closed sale. By engaging with your customers, you are not just interacting with them, but you’re also visible to their immediate network. Suddenly, your reach is multiples greater than the page-likes or followers that you have!

Tip #5 – Measure, Measure and Measure some more

You absolutely need to keep track of how your posts are doing. Which ones are performing the best and which ones get absolutely no engagement. A/B testing is essential for your Social Media campaigns. It is the job of a Great Digital Marketing Strategist to run these tests and identify ways of improving your campaigns. There needs to be a keen belief in your team or your partner agency that things can always be improved upon. Forming good habits at an early stage helps any startup manage its growth in a more effective manner.

Fun Fact – For some of our more “complex” clients, at Inquirly, we have in-fact deputed a team (not One or Two) of strategists to brainstorm, create and execute amazing campaigns

Once you’ve incorporated a few of the tips mentioned above, you’ll be on your way to setting up a great Social Media presence. We are working with a lot of start-ups and in fact planning to open start up specific cells in key co-working spaces as with a combination of one of a kind technology, data-driven expertise and a world class team, our goal is to save time for the start-ups through a unique ‘we do it for you’ model and enable start-ups to build relationships to drive customer satisfaction, increase revenues and manage their Sales and Marketing workflows. And we do it all at a price that’s just right. You can learn more about us on www.inquirly.com

Guest Post by Anjan Choudhary, Inquirly

Voice of Customer Digital platform for Indian SMEs – the Inquirly story #BootUpINDIA

inquirly-logoInquirly is an integrated Voice of Customer Digital platform, designed exclusively to help Indian SMEs listen to their customers, engage with them, act on specific requests, all of these, using a single integrated platform. Product Nation interviewed Anjan Choudhary, founder of Inquirly to understand about the start-up, its products and experiences working with Indian SME customers. Read on… 

Tell us about the circumstances which led to creation of Inquirly

Inquirly came into existence formally about a year ago. However, the thought process behind it started some time during 2012 – when I was working at Accenture. Inquirly was born primarily due to the culmination of my prior experience as an entrepreneur in the manufacturing sector, and later as an IT professional working in an MNC.

While at work for Accenture, in the US, I noticed that digital technologies were disrupting the economy in many different facets – bringing about new ways to perform marketing and sales activities, financial transactions etc for an enterprise. Immediately, it stuck to me that I could leverage these technological advances, and put it to use to serve the sales and marketing needs of many SMBs in developing markets. This led me to start small experiments to validate my thoughts and concepts. After a few iterations, and early customer validation, I quit my job to start Inquirly.

What is unique about your product – and how do you think it differentiates itself in the marketplace?

Inquirly is an Integrated Voice of the Customer Digital platform that enables companies to move beyond the limitations of traditional marketing, Sales, and customer service. Inquirly offers a holistic platform to listen to the customer, engage with the customer and act on real time and continuous actionable data thereby enabling businesses to get precise insights leading to proactive business decisions that result in greater efficiency, enhanced customer satisfaction & engagement and ultimately propelling continuous business growth.

For example, a restaurant owner, can monitor all online review comments from one screen with sentiment and Intent analytics, influence scores, by using this platform she can also understand the prospective customer preferences of dining, identify and target the prospective customers more effectively by offering discounts and other incentives, review whether these promotions worked effectively or not, and most importantly, get actionable feedback from customers – all of these in real time. Most of these could not have been done on a single platform earlier – and at affordable price points. This is how Inquirly differentiates itself from other point based solution providers.

Describe your experiences from the field during your first six months. What were the key learnings you obtained from these initial days of operation?

AnjanWe have had both good and bad experiences as we started to work full time on this product. The good part is that we have been continuously getting positive feedback on the features and utility of our product from our customers. Early adopters have given us constructive feedback on how things can be improved further – and we have been at it.

On the other end, one of the key things we misread during the early days was our assumption about the Indian market opportunity. During the controlled launch period, we learnt that the market penetration was not going to be at the pace we had initially assumed, and so, we had to rework on those projections a bit. We also learnt that India is not a Do It Yourself (DIY) market and so we had to start our services arm much early than we anticipated. Another important one was that recurring payments in SaaS based platform is not possible as per the Government guidelines and the market is not ready to make yearly/quarterly payments in advance.

As a result of the above experiences, we have learnt that we need to remain agile, identify the right ‘Market’/ buyer persona and target the same with perseverance, and to invest in inbound marketing while building the product.

How has internal operations at Inquirly evolved based on the above market place realities that you narrated?

Clearly, the learning we have had from the field has impacted our internal organization. On the sales front, due to our experiments in our early months, we now have a good understanding of the sweet spot for our product and also on its applicability in different domains. We now have been converging on this set, and have built up case studies and business scenarios, which is helping the sales team to close more deals.

Having a very strong, balanced development team is always one of the key assets to a start-up. We have ensured that our development team is staffed with the right mix of experienced folks and young talent – so that we are able to iterate on new features within weeks and release the updates to the market. On the financials front, we have been bootstrapped all this while, we are on target to break even by March 2015, post which, we expect to get more financial leverage to expand our business to other cities in India in the short-term. In the long-term, we do plan to go international.

Thank you for your insights! In closing, can I ask you to share three things that you deem as priority for product entrepreneurs targeting the Indian customers?

Sure. First and foremost, make sure that you converge on the target market which has the most burning need to use your product. This may take few iterations in the early days, but be at it and ensure that you have greater clarity on the sub-set of customer segment that you want to target to begin with. Second, ensure that you simplify user experience dramatically. The adoption rate of Indian customers, in my opinion, is directly dependent on how easily they can use your product. Last, perseverance is required when working with emerging market – since, given the nature of the market, and the background of customers, you need to continuously work with them to reassure the value that they will obtain, by using your product. This will mean that your sales cycle will be longer. Hence, plan for it in advance and execute accordingly. Good luck!