The Reason Why Your Facebook Strategies Always Blow Up in Your Face
// April 12th, 2008 // No Comments » // Social Media
I’ve been chewing on some strategy work lately for some automotive brands that we work for, and while coming up with specific strategy/tactics I’ve quickly realized the differences between ideation on social engagement strategy vs. site engagement strategy.
I’ll try to break er’ down for y’all. (More after the Jump…)
A traditional strategy works within the following structure:
Goals are your business outcome, they are what you want your communication strategy to achieve.
Strategies are defined once you have identified your goals. They are your general approaches to accomplishing your business outcomes.
Objectives are the measurable tasks that you will undertake to realize your strategy.
Tactics are the tools you will use in order to achieve the objectives that you have laid down.
This model has worked for centuries if not millenniums and has been implemented in countless wars, business models and other fine places. Today’s issue of social engagement turns this model on its ear and flips the order a smidgen into the following structure:
Goals (Same as always)
People - The most important aspect of social engagement is the people you wish to engage with. It is therefore a far higher priority than strategy as with the wrong target audience a strategy can be completely useless, or worse (and more commonly) it can blow up in your face. This aspect of this new methodology is an ever changing one and requires constant research and analysis.
Objectives take on a slightly different role as this methodology maps from target audiences downwards; therefore, objectives must be mapped in order to create strategies to support them. They become mini-goals in a sense.
Strategies become dependent on the objectives that were created as a result of target audiences which were determined by over-arching goals.
Tactics can almost be classified within this realm as Technologies as your tactics will typically be a statement of which platforms you intend to use to carry out your strategies. Therefore, I typically label this part of the methodology Tactics/Technology.
So that, in a nutshell, is the POST methodology (People, Objectives, Strategies, Tactics). If you want to learn more about it, there’s a new book out about it athttp://www.forrester.com/Groundswell. Leveraging this methodology and focusing on your audience in an ever changing light should alleviate you of some of the typical blowback that marketers get when they try to market the wrong product, to the wrong people, on the wrong platform.
