5 Days to Turn Your Blog Into a Social Media Hub – Day 2: Decluttering

Social media profilesYesterday we looked at why you need a social media hub, and why your blog is the ideal platform.

Today, we’ll look at how you declutter your social outposts so you can start using the strong ones as building blocks to fill the holes in your social media hub.

Analyzing. Prioritizing. Socializing.

We’ve all done it. A new social network comes along and we create a profile to check it out, just in case we’re missing something valuable. We like to think we’re getting in on the ground floor, and becoming an early adopter that can help define a platform and its use.

The truth is, there are more platforms that are stuttering along than there are platforms with really substantial numbers. Time spent on these networks is simply a time suck that you can’t afford. And the more time you spend on the wrong platform, the less time you spend on the right ones.

The ones where your customers / readers are.

It’s the equivalent of having your best product ready to sell, then taking it to a garage sale across town and offloading it for less than the cost of the gas you used to drive there. So you need to do three things, and each will dovetail into the next:

  1. Analyze. Look at each network you’re on. Look at how often you’re on it; how you use it; why you use it. Most importantly, analyze why you need to be there. Ask yourself what value you’re getting from it, or have had from it. Ask what results you want to see from your outposts in the next 6 months, 12 months, 18 months and more. This will help you…
  2. Prioritize. Your social outpost needs and wants will define how you prioritize which ones to focus on and which ones to spend less time on (or even ditch altogether). For instance, my priorities currently are my blog (home-base), Twitter (connections, conversations and research) and Facebook (sound-bites to test ideas and thoughts). These three priorities help guide my blog posts, as well as my strategies and ideas for my business, and where I need to spend further time exploring. Which leads nicely to…
  3. Socializing. Look at the words “social media” – 50% relates to media, and the other half is social. It’s this social aspect that’s changing the way we do business with brands and with each other. The conversations; the instant feedback; the thought processes on where we operate and where we’re found by operators. Basically, it’s a key part of social media success, so having less clutter will allow more effective participation in social media. Which, once you have the hub in place, again is the relation to the sale.

The Danger of Over-Subscribed Fatigue

Look at many conversations around social media, and one of the key discussion points is the time factor involved. Hours spent online when you have an offline business to take care of. The response times needed; the nuances of the individual platforms; the confusion of non-filtered conversations.

Confusion leads to disillusion; disillusion leads to apathy; apathy leads to fatigue. As a business person (and even using social media from a personal point of view), you know that fatigue leads to less concentration and mistakes being made. Mistakes being made personally can often be overcome; mistakes made in business maybe not so much.

By decluttering your social outposts prior to setting up your social media hub, you’re paving the way to a clearer path on social without all the side distractions of too many networks and noise. This allows you to set your hub to its most effective; both as an incoming and outposting resource.

Be mean; be vicious; take only what you need to go to the next step. It’ll only benefit you in the long run.

Takeaway: Cull your networks. Focus on three or four where you’re really strong. Make a bucket list of what you want to achieve on these networks (customer service, sales, marketing, thought leadership, etc). Demote the rest to secondary. Tomorrow we’ll look at maximizing these choices and connecting them to your hub, and back out to your connections. To make sure you receive the latest from 5 Days to Turn Your Blog Into a Social Media Hub, feel free to either subscribe by RSS feed or email subscription.


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About Danny Brown

Danny Brown is an award-winning marketer and blogger. His blog is recognized as the #1 marketing blog in the world by HubSpot. Danny is also the author of The Parables of Business and the upcoming book Influence Marketing: How to Create, Manage and Measure Brand Influencers in Social Media Marketing.

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  • beautifullyprac

    Thank you so much for this excellent series! I’m relatively new to social media for businesses purposes. Your media hub info is truly helping me to see the role and value of social media. Thanks again! – Sue

    • http://dannybrown.me/ DannyBrown

      @beautifullyprac Thanks, Sue, great to hear, and hopefully the rest of the series (and other posts on here) help you as you move forward. :)

  • glenn_ferrell

    “Cull your networks” – amen to that. With the emergence of Google + culling became more important than ever. When it starts seeming like Social Media is an end in itself we need to slap ourselves in the face a few times, or go out and meet with a live customer … or something …:)

    • http://dannybrown.me/ DannyBrown

      @glenn_ferrell Cheers, Glenn, and completely agree – so many are looking at being on as many places where they can be, and all it’s doing is weakening them. Be interesting to see the lay of the land in 12 months or so. ;-)

  • http://ww.rsacourseonline.com.au/rsa-certificate RSA Course

    Social marketing is really important especially the way google is heading. The important part to me is automation how can I get my blog and information diseminated to the masses as quickly as possible that improves my image for my blogs. Twitter is must, facebook is a must, social bookmarketing is a must. I have beenn playing with google +1 and I have increased the amount of video that I upload to about 15 video sites – this is were hidden traffic and targeted traffic is coming from for me and google loves it – make a video sitemap it will raise the profile of your blog in googles eyes and many times your video will show up in google giving you a double or tripple listing.

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  • Traci Hayner Vanover

    Really enjoying this series, Danny! You rock.

  • Danny Brown

    Thanks, Tracy, glad you’re finding it useful. :)

  • kimberlyroberts007

    we definitely need to be limited to a few social networks if we want to create the right kind of impact on the people. any person can’t handle too many things. so this might make the things very complicated for us. for me twitter,facebook and stumble upon along with digg are personal favorites.
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