Top image: Community management tips

Social media manager tips: 8 pointers for better social community management

As a social media community manager, what can you do to help drive business success?

One of the best ways is to help cultivate strong customer relationships, build brand loyalty, and help your business retain more customers in the long-term. A strong community becomes a place where customers interact not just with your brand, but with each other – working as free word-of-mouth advertising and a great source of positive reviews.

But a social media community doesn’t just spring up overnight. It takes time and hard work to build one. As a social media manager or community manager, you’ll have to set up a plan, track the right metrics, and prompt comments to get the ball rolling.

Luckily, we’re here to help with these tips and tricks for social media community management best practices.

1. Plan, plan, plan

Consistency is key in your social media community management strategy. Plan ahead so you can have content coming out reliably at all times, and you can clearly see what needs to be accomplished.

Consistency will help keep your posts relevant in terms of your audience’s news feeds and maintain a healthy online presence to keep their attention.

Planning ahead is crucial to your success as a social media community manager. All your content, whether it’s the posts you schedule, ongoing campaigns, contests, etc., should be arranged in a detailed content calendar so you can take a clear, overall view of your work.

You’ll also want to do everything you can to avoid publishing errors, so set up roles and approval flows for your team as well. The content you have going out should be checked and double-checked, with only key team members being able to publish.

2. Work on your communication skills

As a social media community manager, you’ll be in a customer-facing role, and that comes with a lot of pressure. There are a lot of ways that things can go wrong, and many of them won’t be your fault. Whatever the case, it’s important that you’re able to stay calm under pressure and keep it professional.

It’s important to remember that every time you publish a post, retweet, or reply to a comment, you represent not just yourself, but your company in a public space.

Therefore, you will need to be able to take on that pressure to stay diplomatic and customer-oriented in your communications.

A great way to prevent crises ahead of time is to monitor conversations around your brand and topics related to it. This social media listening will give you the heads up that there might be a problem and will help you monitor the sentiment around your brand so that nothing catches you by surprise.

3. Cultivate a brand personality

You may need to stay professional and not insult your audience, but it’s equally important that your brand has a coherent and recognizable identity in its community interaction.

This helps your audience feel like they’re talking to a person and will go a long way in helping to nurture engagement and brand loyalty.

Some of the best social media community management examples are brands that have put a real effort into developing an interesting and unique personality.

Chipotle's TikTok channel serves as a prime example of a brand that has excelled on the platform. They've achieved this success by crafting authentic and genuine content that deeply resonates with TikTok users. Through their engaging videos, Chipotle offers a behind-the-scenes glimpse, featuring real employees and providing transparent insights into their food preparation process. For example, this video takes viewers behind the scenes of the first day of training as an employee at Chipotle. This strategy has managed to bring in over 2 million TikTok followers and 52 million likes.

4. Define success and set metrics to track it

Tracking success for social media community management can be tricky. Traditionally, ROI is often tracked through clicks and conversions, but your results from social media won’t be as clear. It can be difficult to determine how your efforts have contributed to sales and leads directly.

Instead, it’s better to determine how you define your own success, depending on your goals. Track what kind of content your audience engages with, what gets them talking or falls flat, and what brings in more followers.

As much of the work of community management will be as a point of contact for customer queries and product problems, another good set of metrics to keep track of is response time, resolution time, and customer satisfaction.

Tracking these will help you determine how well your team is performing. Calculating social media ROI helps measure the effectiveness of your efforts in building and engaging with your brand's online community, ensuring your strategies align with the overall business objectives.

5. Include your audience in the conversation

Social media is all about interaction. So while you want to be creating and publishing the best content you can, sometimes even better content will come from another source: your audience.

This is user-generated content, or UGC.

It’s powerful because it’s authentic, and reflects what your audiences think about your brand. It allows your audience to share their experiences, positive or negative, and drives the conversation forward in ways that you won’t be able to do by just churning out content into the ether.

It is also an excellent way for you to engage with and get closer to your audiences, making your brand feel more personal and approachable.

UGC can be small things, like posts or tweets mentioning your brand, user reviews, all the way up to campaigns and contributor blogs.

One example of this is Kim Kardashian’s SKIMS brand on TikTok. SKIMS' TikTok content predominantly comprises UGC contributed by creators and consumers from diverse backgrounds and body sizes, beautifully showcasing the brand's commitment to inclusivity. They also make sure to credit the creator in the videos featured on their page; here’s influencer Alexa Jay in their Outdoor Rhinestone Mid Thigh Onesie.

Leveraging UGC in your marketing strategy has become increasingly vital for brands in today's digital landscape. When customers share their personal experiences about your brand, it holds immense value as it serves as authentic, relatable, and trustworthy content.

6. Collect and use data

As a social media community manager, you’re in closer contact with your audiences than anyone else.

You see on a daily basis how they respond to your content, what drives engagement, what does not, and what issues and queries they have — all in real-time.

This skill set makes you an invaluable source of information for your company about customers and prospects.

A good community manager stays on top of the challenges and opportunities facing their brand to constantly improve their performance, but your value goes far beyond improving your own performance.

Through your close contact with your audience, you’ll have insights that others won’t have access to. Don't let all that data go to waste — collect actionable feedback and share it with other departments.

A great way to do this is to label incoming queries and group them by the topics or issues customers are bringing to your attention. This will help you pinpoint their difficulties and pain points, and allow you to work to improve the way your brand responds to their needs.

The value of this data cannot be understated - you’ll end up with happier, more loyal customers, as well as more easily converted leads.

7. Be flexible with your time

Fortunately or unfortunately, the job of a social media manager is not limited to strict 9-to-5 office hours.

This can be a double-edged sword.

On the one hand, it gives you a certain level of flexibility in your work hours. But on the other hand, it means that it’s very easy to feel like you’re constantly on call.

Social media never stops, and you may feel like you should always be watching to catch a problem immediately. After all, there have been times in the past where social media crises spiraled out of control because the offending party wasn’t online to mitigate disaster.

On the bright side, this also means that if you follow tip #1 and keep organized with plenty of content scheduled and ready to go out, you can structure more of your time the way you want it.

But there’s another way to buy more free time, even while maintaining a consistent online presence.

8. Be tech-savvy

How are you supposed to keep an eye on your social media every day of the week without staring at your computer at all hours? The answer is two parts, but simple: Go mobile, and provide yourself and your team with the tools you need to save time.

A social media community manager’s job isn’t your average desk job. Instead of a routine 9-to-5 schedule, you’ll need to be on hand to post in-the-moment Instagram Stories, write newsflashes at a moment's notice, whether you’re in the office or on the move.

Keep up with this pace by embracing mobile: You’ll be able to handle interactions on the fly and avoid building up a backlog of work that would distract you from your other responsibilities.

But handling your social media community management on a platform-by-platform basis can end up being overwhelming, even on mobile. Being tech-savvy doesn’t mean juggling multiple applications; in fact, it should be the opposite: Simplify! Go beyond native tools.

Get your team a tool that allows you to consolidate all your disparate social media data into one platform.

The takeaway

The role of a social media community manager can seem daunting, but the key takeaways here are:

  • Get organized with the tools you and your team really need with defined metrics and a robust content calendar.

  • Cultivate a brand personality to nurture your community. Get them involved with UGC.

  • Collect the vast and granular data right at your fingertips as a social media community manager and put it to use. Your team and community will thank you for your insights!

Editor's Note: This article was originally published on November 12, 2018, and has since been updated with recent examples and research.

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