Columns

Choose the Right Social Media Platform to Reach Your Customer Base

EVERYONE KNOWS WE as businesses should be on social … right? The logic seems obvious:

At a minimum, active and vibrant social media channels can give prospective customers a way to check you out before they buy. They provide instant social validation and customer trust.

Videos

Video: How to Host a Titer Testing Clinic at Your Pet Business

Videos

PETS+ Book Club: Watch Dr. Conor Brady Discuss “Feeding Dogs”

Trace's Store School

Video: Trace’s Store School: How to Build Community — and Grow Revenue — with Other Businesses

At a maximum, social done well can become a major sales channel, rivaled only by things like word-of-mouth and Google.

So creating an active and vibrant branded community on every social media channel you can find is a great marketing strategy, right?

Wrong. And I’d argue that the majority of pet brands I see probably won’t ever make back their investment in building those channels.

For the last 12-plus years, I’ve been teaching pet businesses how to achieve their business and marketing goals through social media. And for just as long I’ve seen the mix of shock, followed by relief when I frequently tell businesses to stop their efforts on the majority of the social platforms they’re using.

The reason is simple: Many small businesses aren’t really sure why they’re on social media to begin with. Worse, many are hoping to achieve goals that are super-duper hard to do on their chosen channels. Combine this with the fact that most social “best practices” involve a member of your team spending significant time on the platform, and suddenly you have a marketing money pit.

So how do you make sure your social is paying off? Easy. The first step is making sure you’re on the right one.

Ask yourself and your team the following questions:

Who am I trying to reach?

This is your core client or influencer. Write everything you know about them, leaving nothing out. Make sure to include both demographic information (age and gender) and psychographic information (your customers’ wants and fears).

Which social media channel does that person frequent?

Different social media channels attract different people. It may seem obvious that trying to reach teens on LinkedIn or business decision-makers on Instagram may be making your job harder, but don’t forget the nuances of the audiences these platforms attract, and that they change over time.

Is that social media channel compatible with my goals?

This is a big one many petpreneurs forget to ask, but the key is understanding the technical side of the platform and what it’s meant to do. For example, we find most brands struggling to drive direct sales from Instagram unless they pay for advertising. The reason? Instagram’s unpaid content usually doesn’t include any kind of links on the post. Alternatively, even though many brands abandoned Pinterest years ago, the platform is showing the second-strongest sales for consumer brands in the brands we’re able to sample.

What will have to occur to turn this into a sale?

Not all pet owners live on Pinterest, so pet brands leveraging other channels to build audiences will need to think about how that audience will then need to be directed in other ways to create sales. (Like subscribing them to a mailing list first.)

I teach a social media bootcamp for petpreneurs. Access the workbook for it for free as a friend of PETS+. It’ll provide you with facts and stats to help you fill in the questions above, to pick your channel and to get going. Visit causedigitalmarketing.com/petsplusmag.

Jane Harrell

Jane Harrell is President of causedigitalmarketing.com, a boutique marketing firm focusing on delivering real ROI for pet businesses of all breeds and pedigrees. Jane is also co-owner of WorkingWithDog.com, the marketing club for petpreneurs and small pet businesses. In 2013, Jane won the Rising Star Award from Women in the Pet Industry for her work with Petfinder.com. She’s a regular contributor to many pet-industry publications, focusing on topics that bring tangible results with less work. Jane's enjoying a busy COVID-19 quarantine living with her partner, their six animals and their foster son in Maine.

Recent Posts

Pet Retailers Share Their Most Successful Kickback Coupons for Adopters

Find out what works and what doesn't work for your fellow indies.

14 hours ago

Ransomware Attacks on the Upswing

Reported online blackmail surged by 67% last year and is expected to grow exponentially.

17 hours ago

Paygos Unveils Rebate Program Solution for Pet Food Brands

The solution aims to transform rebate program management for veterinary clinics and independent retailers.

18 hours ago

General Mills Acquires European Pet Food Brand Edgard & Cooper

Edgard & Cooper is "one of the fastest-growing and most-recognized independent pet food companies in…

1 day ago

Pet Sitters International Highlights Safe Pet-sitting Practices During Pet Sitter Safety Month

The association will cover important safety tips and new training opportunities this May during its…

2 days ago

Petco Love and Blue Buffalo Give $100K to Morris Animal Foundation

The donation supports lifesaving science, adding to the $7M already donated for dog, cat cancer…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.