Publication Giants Shut Down Facebook, Instagram and Twitter Pages

Publication Giants Shut Down Facebook, Instagram and Twitter Pages
By
Evgeny Chereshnev

One of today’s modern misconceptions is that social media (SM) is essential for business. The truth is, most companies mix cause and effect; they invest lots of money in SM as if those channels were a business goal in itself, but in reality, SM is just a tool for talking and listening to your clients. Is social media the only way to perform those two tasks? Definitely not. There are numerous examples of companies being weak or absent across social media and still remaining insanely successful at the same time. Apple, for example, has never run contests or produced a huge amount of content for Facebook and it is still able to sell billions of devices. Same with Google, Tesla or SpaceX…and the list goes on.

Most companies prefer to talk whilst not really having anything important or valuable to say. As a result, a huge amount of content is being produced every day by tens of thousands of Facebook business pages and, in most cases, this is a total waste of money and time. Seriously – every human being has a cap on how much information they can handle during the day or even wants to read to start with. Most content produced by businesses is never even read. Even when you as a company seem to have likes and shares for a promoted post, those are often just bots. The truth is, when you are a company that has something truly unique and valuable to say, people will always find a way to get in touch with you. They will come to your blog or get information from a traditional source like a well-known and trusted media outlet. On the SM front, people are more inclined to subscribe to a more credible source, like a CEO’s private channels. If a CEO puts their name on something, they rarely put out bad content so as not to be associated with it. Elon Musk’s account is a pretty good illustration of my point.

Put simply, organizations need to have the guts to cut all the BS from their working and communication strategy. Every time a company wants to say something, they should ask themselves whether this content has real value for the readers. Businesses have to remember that at the end of the day it’s not about them, but about people. Focus on the quality of the product, do not lie, do not have hidden fees, reply to your clients on your website, blog or mobile app to show that you care.  Focus on what you do and how you do it; not where.

The way most companies run SM is a total waste of time and money. They post content that has zero value to the readers, produced by the teams who do not care about hitting the right MBOs. But, it can be a very productive activity for business when done right; creativity is not scalable. Great SM managers and leaders are a rare breed, unfortunately many of them become exhausted over time and stop being quite so great. The SM ecosystem is actually a very complex thing to set up and maintain, and there is literally only a handful of people who can lead global SM teams effectively. That’s why most SM activities are compensated with paid ads. Content quality is mostly irrelevant in this case.  When you pay Facebook, you’ll get your views, but are those views good for business? In most cases the value is close to zero.

Is Instagram popular by being active in Instagram itself?  Is Tesla’s $50 billion valuation the result of having an amazing Facebook page? Are people eating McDonald’s food because they do an amazing job promoting themselves via YouTube? The answer is no. Even without SM channels, or limited activity on SM channels, every business can be popular. All it needs is the right digital strategy based on true values, not tools of execution.


Evgeny Chereshnev is CEO and founder of Biolink.Tech