Social Media Productivity:
13 Tips to Maximize Your Time
By
Mike Brown
- Observing / listening in others’ social media outlets
- Participating in others’ outlets through commenting, guest blogging, etc.
- Creating content and being active within your own outlets
Ever since Todd shared that concept in early 2009, his social media productivity strategy has been front and center in my mind (and ensconced in my social media strategy presentations). The truth is that I rarely come close to this balanced approach since creating Brainzooming content definitely represents the majority of my time.
One way of improving your time allocation though is by investing your effort in activities that contribute to more than one of these categories. The following list includes some of the multi-category approaches I have tried.
13 strategies to maximize your social media time efficiency
- Use tweets with your original content as input to create a blog post. For example, this blog post on 5 personal strategies started as a series of individual tweets.
- Comment on another blog and use the comment as the basis for an original post on your blog.
- Do a post comprised of comments (or links) other people have shared on Twitter that you’ve found valuable.
- Incorporate Twitter-based responses you’ve received from others on your content / ideas / tweets into a blog post.
- Write a post inviting guest posts for your blog, then tweet links to your invitation post to solicit guest bloggers.
- When you come across someone interested in topics related to your blog, ask them to do a guest blog post (and refer them back to the post in #5).
- If you write a guest post for another site, do a complementary post on your blog pointing your followers to it.
- Participate in Twitter-based chats on topics of interest (#Ideachat – Monthly, 2nd Saturday at 9 am ET) and use your comments during the chat as the basis for a blog post.
- Create your own Twitter chat linked to your blog topic to benefit your audience.
- Use answers you’ve created for LinkedIn Q&A or other discussion groups as starters for blog posts.
- Write a response article to a blog post you’ve come across via Twitter, RSS feeds, etc.
- Use what people on Facebook, Twitter, or other networks are talking about as the inspiration for a post. Be sure to include links to the original conversation, including letting the people you’re referencing know about it so they can promote it within their networks.
- Answers to reader questions can be reformatted into blog posts. This post was originally an email response to a reader’s question about how to strengthen his social media participation without taking too much time from necessary business development activities.
What are you doing to maximize your social media productivity?
Mike Brown is the founder of the Brainzooming Group. He has been at the forefront of leading Fortune 500 culture change, contributing new approaches in research, developing simplified tools for innovation, strategy planning, and aligning sales, marketing, and communications strategies for maximum business results. Additionally, he’s won multiple awards for his strategic brand-building approach to customer experiences in NASCAR and conference event marketing efforts.