Behind The Madness

We are flooded with tips, tricks and hacks about how to "succeed" on social media, so today we thought we'd review the 20 most common tips in 2022. This quick-fire and fun episode sifts through the bullshit to not only reveal the tips that matter but also why they're so important to implement into your social media strategy

Show Notes

Bored of "tips for social media success" appearing everywhere you look whilst never really knowing which tips, tricks or hacks will actually work, well us too!! 

James and Jamie sit down to go through 20 of the common tips when it comes to succeeding on social media - there are some interesting truths and some reaffirming thoughts but most of all there's no bullshit here just transparency around how you can make your brand better using social media.

It's honest and quick-fire, with some giggles along the way. So, pop your feet up, headphones in and enjoy episode 24 🎧

What is Behind The Madness?

A podcast helping companies grow with marketing strategies, automation and time-saving tips and creative solutions.

James: Welcome back, I'm James Roberts,
this is Behind the Madness where we

talk about business growth, ways to
work smarter and the fundamentals

of business all geared to unlocking
your brands peak performance.

So let's dive into this episode all around
the 20 social media mistakes to avoid.

So I am joined with, by, with, how.

Jamie: Put another preposition
in there, let's get some more,

to, at, together, before.

James: I'm here with Jamie
and I am going to put him.

Under the microscope?

No, I'm not.

Jamie: Mate, just going
to have a discussion with me.

Uh, there's no need to examine.

What's going on.

I'm not a science project.

Let's just have a nice little chit chat.

James: I have been reading a blog,
which has been put out from HubSpot

and it is all around the 20 social
media mistakes to avoid in 2022.

Jamie's here with me to go over
these 20 points and kind of dive

into each point and, um, see what
we make of them, but, before we do.

Obviously with our podcast, we
are trying to be more, more human,

which we're learning over time.

We're trying to be more like us.

So with that in mind.

I am going to start with another joke.

Jamie: Hold on to your hats kids.

James: How do you tell the gender,
Paul's already got his head in his hands.

How do you tell the gender of an ant?

So you get a glass of water and you
put the ant in the glass of water.

If it sinks, it's a girl ant If it floats.

It's a buoyant.

Jamie: That's so awful.

You can tell your father.

He's just he's just taking out His little
black book of dad jokes and just gone.

Oh.

That one's in there.

James: So now that we've lubricated the
wheels, let's dive in, so 20 points,

Jamie, let's get straight into them.

Jamie: It sounds like I win
a toaster at the end of this,

James: So these are all mistakes that
people are doing on social media.

Number one - they are not using reels.

Jamie: Agreed,

Short form, especially short
form video has become massive.

It's an easier way to grab
attention and hold attention,

because it is more engaging.

It allows you to get more fun, more
entertainment, more information across.

But in shorter attention spans,
which like if you haven't been

on TikTok and Instagram Reels
today then that's very unlikely.

James: Number two - not live streaming.

Jamie: This can be hit and miss.

Uh, it is a good way
to grow your audience.

because there's an authentic element which
obviously, as James says with our podcast,

we're trying it, but also being more
authentic and showing up more as a person

online is very, very, very enticing for
audiences because it seems less scripted.

So going live yeah can be a good winner.

James: So even with companies you'd
still try and get that personal approach.

Jamie: Yeah, a hundred percent.

Like if you could go live, even say your
a product based business, and you're

doing a walk around the manufacturing
plant, or if you're in the stock room and

you're looking through stock, you can go
live and talk people through products.

You can go live and talk about systems.

You can do interviews with people.

We could go live right now and
talk about the podcast kind

of almost behind the scenes.

There are some nice bits to it.

But it does take a little bit of
added time making sure people are

comfortable, There is your team
you've got to think about and making

sure they are comfortable with that.

James: Number three - uploading
videos with TikTok watermarks.

Jamie: Um, yeah.

So this is, this is an interesting
mistake, it was done very, very

often in the beginning because
people were repurposing content,

when reels was launched by Instagram.

People were already on TikTok
creating so they would just

download it and post it again.

But Instagram kind of went,
wait a minute, we don't want

to be promoting our big rivals.

And so did start putting algorithms in
place that went not a big fan of seeing

these and also they don't look as good.

They look tainted, like if you download
an image off Google and it had a

watermark on it, it doesn't look as good.

James: Yeah, I was going to say that, a
few people that I follow do exactly that.

And it makes me feel slightly devalued
because I'm looking at them, watching

them, following them on Instagram.

It's almost like they haven't
cared as much for me as they

would have done for TikTok

Jamie: Yeah, you've got to remember
each room you're in on social

media is a different audience.

You talk to people differently
on LinkedIn as you would from

TikTok and it's important to
remember and value that audience.

James: Number four - sharing
low quality content.

Jamie: There's a big, big thing
that people need to get away

with this is completely right.

Quantity over quality, a hundred percent,
you should always just post because It

gets you into a position of doing it and
then you will get better as you do things.

But don't put out rubbish,
don't put out unvaluable stuff.

Make sure you are putting out stuff
but making sure it's of quality.

James: Number five, not
optimizing your bio.

Jamie: Yeah, this is definitely right,
a lot of good ones on this article.

Definitely right because people want
to know what is all about, the way

people normally go through in social
media is they'll see something in a

feed if they like it, they'll like it.

If they really like it they'll
probably visit the page, see if they've

got other content they may like.

And when they're there, they will look at
your page, see what you're about and then

decide whether then I could click follow.

Part of that is the bio.

So your bio should say who you are,
what you do, who you help and ideally

why you do it and then a call to
action a website any other links

or Linktree, something like that.

James: Number six, having a personal
account instead of a business one.

Jamie: Yeah, a personal account is
good but a business account is exactly

that it gives you the tools, stuff
like more data, more insights, more

opportunities to learn about your
audience, which then allows you to

connect things like Meta Business Suite.

Then you can dig deeper, you
can run advertisements, all of

these kinds of elements which
allow you to grow as a business.

So definitely if you're on a
personal account get that switched

over to a business account.

James: Number seven - buying followers.

Jamie: Don't do it.

That's it.

Yeah.

Just don't do that.

James: I know this comes back to
everything within marketing is

not only the social media life.

If you are buying followers,
you don't know who they are, you

don't know what they are, you've
got no connection with them.

There is absolutely no point in doing it.

Jamie: Well, the people who buy
followers, James, are people

who love the vanity metrics.

They love seeing that they've
got a hundred thousand views, but

unfortunately when they post, they
don't get a hundred thousand likes.

So focus on engagement, don't
focus on the vanity metrics

like how many followers you get.

Build a good audience not a big one.

James: Number eight - skipping captions.

Jamie: It's a no brainer a caption.

It is part of your content and if
you are as a business, as a marketing

manager or a team you're wanting to
put out quality content, why would

you leave out 40% of what's there?

If you write a tweet without
caption, you'd write nothing.

So why would you do on Instagram
or LinkedIn or anything like that?

You have so much opportunity to add value.

The photo element of something
like Instagram is to grab the

attention, stop the scroll.

The caption section is to really,
really drill home your information and

help someone with their goal and then
also put call to action in direct them

to where you want them to go next.

James: Number nine using
viral sounds in ads.

Jamie: Oh, trending audios.

Like the amount of times either
I'm spending or I know managers

are spending, looking for
trending audios is is outrageous.

It's really helpful, it kind of
allows you to grab free attention.

The attention is already there on trending
audios, so make the most of it don't worry

about having to drive home attention.

Utilize it for yourself and your brand.

James: Number 10 - using sounds too late.

Jamie: Using sounds too late.

Okay, so you're going on
the backend of a trend.

Um, yeah, It depends, sometimes
you are just late to the party

that's the name of the game.

There are so many trends.

There are so much
movement on social media.

It changes daily as in I'm saying
hair as a social media manager and

if I told you I knew exactly what
was going on with social media I'd be

lying because it changes all the time.

So if you are a bit late to the
party don't worry about it, you

still going to enjoy the party.

So I would disagree with that
one a little bit the earlier the

better, but if you're still getting
some of the attention brilliant.

James: So I think this comes
down to, and obviously I'm just

reading through the blog quickly.

The average sound has a
shelf life of a week or two.

So it's great to use in your
posts, however, it's not

a great strategy for ads.

So don't age your ad by including
trends that are sure to die off

instead stick with evergreen
content that will work every time.

So I guess it is really around those ads
that you are placing out there through

social media that obviously is going to
have a shelf life of a very short period.

Especially with, you know, with ads that
you're putting out on social media anyway,

with it, certain campaigns you might
want them to run for certainly a longer

period than, than two weeks or a week.

Jamie: Evergreen content, always a winner
because as it sounds it's evergreen.

James: Number 11 - not
using filters and effects.

Jamie: Sometimes.

Yes.

Sometimes.

No.

Part of this is platforms love you to
utilize their tools, so whether that is

the filters, the effects, the caption,
the link buttons, the different tools.

People like Facebook, Instagram,
TikTok they'd like you to use their

tools and if you use them you're more
likely to be promoted by that platform.

James: And I suppose as you say yes,
and I know that you can over use.

Jamie: You see some and there like
if I turned around and put a picture

of you on Instagram with some of
the like hundreds of filters people

will go, well, it's not authentic.

It's not who James is, it's
just not what Method or the

personal brand, whoever is about.

If you saw Apple putting out a
really, really cool new iPhone but

it was coated with flares and things,
you go, a bit tacky for Apple.

So it's got to be fitting, remember brand.

It's all about your brand, be authentic.

James: Number 12 - being too
promotional and not authentic enough.

Jamie: So.

there's an 80/ 20 kind
of rule in the marketing.

Well, you should be helping,
80% of the time and then plug

your stuff 20% of the time.

But it's important in that 20% of the
time that it is still leading with help.

Always lead with help at the end
kind of say, did you know we've

got this new product available?

Did you know, we've got an ebook
you can kind of go and get.

You've got to go and help people
and care about helping people.

People will see straight through
if your just, a bullshit merchant.

Yeah, exactly.

Got to give.

James: Which ties quite nicely into it.

Ignoring mentions.

Jamie: Yeah, gotta listen.

social media is social and obviously
with social, we've all got friends

who could talk at us for hours, but
then aren't great with the listening.

It's important, you feel valued when
you get listened to so hear what

people are having say about your brand.

Look at them, use tools like HubSpot
or Later to make sure that you are

looking at brand mentions, see what
people are saying, see where your

reputation is, listen to what they've
got to say, and then act on it.

James: Number 14 - retweeting too often.

Jamie: Um, hit and miss
again, a yes and a no.

If you're doing it every 20 minutes,
then your audience will go, right,

one, they've got no thoughts of their
own and two your clogging up my feed

But at the same time, if you're
getting retweeted and you're

retweeting that then great because
you're just sharing the love.

Um, same if you are seeing something
that you think will bring value to your

audience again, you are sharing the love.

James: I suppose this, this is
obviously very much Twitter terminology,

but retweeting, or resharing posts
obviously comes into exactly the

same way, and I think as you said,
being social and sharing the love

when you are reposting or retweeting
definitely kind of comes into it.

Jamie: Love to see other people's
success and when you can put that

out into the world, uh, and to your
audience if you think they will find it

valuable comes back to your audience.

James: Number 15 - tweeting
the same thing.

Jamie: Yeah, I don't think you
should tweet the same thing.

I agree that you shouldn't do that
because people get bored, people

get bored very, very easily.

There's a reason as a character limit
on Twitter and if you're tweeting

the same thing, then even if it's the
same topic, rephrase it put it in a

different light see how it does, it's
a great opportunity to test and see

what language your audience respond to.

What length they respond to, you
could talk about a podcast and you

could talk about it in six words, or
you could talk about it in 160 and

then you could see what's different.

James: They've expanded on this in
the blog quite nicely saying, imagine

stepping into a store and seeing
the same item displayed everywhere.

Once you realize there's
nothing new to explore, you lose

interest and quickly walk out.

And I think that's very valid.

Jamie: Yeah, I love that.

James: Number 16 - posting
too many videos and photos.

Jamie: Posting too many.

Um, yes and no, if you're over whelming,
and clogging up your users feed then

obviously It's going to be a stinker.

Like you want to make sure you are fitting
into your consumer and your user's life.

James: Number 17 - having
a low response rate.

Jamie: What about it?

James: I'm just scrolling through again.

Removing negative comments.

Jamie: No, I love a negative comment.

A negative comment trolls
weather, it can be a troll or it

can be just a negative comment.

Are your greatest feedback.

As a business if someone is negative
towards you, listen to them.

They may just be out there because
they're very unhappy human being

and they're jumping online to try
and make themselves feel bigger.

If that's the case be nice to
them, see if you can make that day.

If they are giving you negative feedback
about your business see how you can

resolve it, see what you can learn.

If you're a restaurant and
someone says, oh, I had an awful

experience take as an opportunity.

Invite them to the next taste
tasting day or tasting menu.

And if you do that interaction in the
comments, not only will you make that

user feel better, but every other
user who reads that feed will go.

Blimey.

They responded how I
want a brand to respond.

And they're more likely to interact
with you because they know how

you've interacted with others.

James: A nice link into
the previous podcast.

If you haven't listened to it
already, where we were discussing

between a collaboration between
teams with sales and marketing.

When we're saying, get that feedback
from your customers which is

going to help your marketing team.

This is exactly that, you know,
this is getting feedback from the

frontline, and understanding how to
improve and make yourself better.

Jamie: And that's where
that swap over comes across.

Like this would be feedback from
the marketing team for the sales.

So it goes both ways.

James: Yep.

Number 18 - not having
a custom photo cover.

Jamie: Hit and miss, I always do because
it's an element of control that you can

then test, it looks more professional.

It doesn't have to be video,
but it can still be video based.

So, whether it's got texts on it, whether
it's photo dominant, whether it's a

snippet from the reel they're about to
watch, whether it's just an explanation.

James: And I think their explanation
is pretty much exactly the same.

A custom photo cover is a great way
to stand out from your competitors

who may use their logo or stock
photos or worse, nothing at all.

Number 19 - neglecting your community.

Jamie: Oh, God, I don't
even know where to start.

Like.

If you neglect your community,
that could be missing DMs, not

responding to needs comments, not
sharing, not looking at the insights.

Why you using social media?

That's a question to ask yourself.

You are there to build a community.

You're not there to get rich and get
famous overnight, you're there reach more

people they are your community, build
them, trust them, ask them, talk to them.

James: The last one I've got to scrolling
down is ignoring your competitors.

Jamie: Yeah, again.

We wouldn't have done it 40 years ago.

You would have always looked
when Lamborghini and Ferrari

started, when newspaper different
newspapers started they looked at

each other what they were doing.

So why would we stop
it in the digital age?

See what they're doing.

Don't copy.

Take inspiration.

Hang out in their comments, see what
their audience is saying to them,

see if you can help their audience.

Be collaborative with competitors.

Like, it's a really important
space, obviously there are

so much edge on competitors.

Look for similar
accounts, not competitors.

James: So there you have it I think 20
really good social media tips that you

can make sure you're doing or not doing,
and really get that kind of sorted out

now really an influence what you are
doing over social media really improve

your marketing gain in that social world.

So, as we say at the end of all of these
podcasts, that madness never stops.

We'll be back soon with the next chat.

So to have your say, let us know what
you want to hear next time you could do

that either by jumping on to iTunes and
dropping in a comment of what you felt.

Give us some feedback.

As we've kind of said, also we are
across pretty much every social platform.

So make sure you jump on to all of those.

Give us some love, talk
to us we're the nice guys.

Thank you so much for listening
and we shall be back soon.