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Estimated reading time: 5 minutes, 39 seconds

Social Media's Importance to Accountants

Today, social media is playing a bigger role in how consumers make decisions about whether to buy a product or service. Social media provides a platform for everything from their initial research to asking for a referral from a trusted source to reading reviews about your product.

 

The reality is that these consumers are choosing the time and place to start a conversation with your firm, many times after researching you using social media. In light of this, you need to be communicating, sharing relevant information, educating and building a relationship with that person to increase business.

For many years, communication has been a one-way street, with businesses pushing information onto customers and prospects without any regard for what they wanted or needed, with the customers having little to no voice in affecting the process. With social media, customers now have a voice through a two-way dialog for businesses to communicate more directly with their customers and prospects.

By participating in social media networks, you have a better chance to connect with others and share ideas, keep up with changes in your industry, talk directly with your customers, stay informed, and increase the number of leads you generate for your firm.

Benefits of Participating
Social media, unlike Internet marketing, is not totally turnkey. However, if you put forth the effort, the benefits to your practice can be significant. These benefits include the following:

Trust marketing. Social media helps you capitalize on the trust you have established with clients, friends and past colleagues over many years. In turn, you slowly attract more clients to your firm because your client's network will believe in you.

Controlling your "personal brand." Social media for professional services is about generating more awareness to you (and your practice) in your local market and making more connections with small business owners. This social media program will seek to enhance your "personal" brand.

Lower your marketing costs. Social media, executed properly, can gradually lower your marketing costs for each new client. After starting slow, it will gradually pick up speed.

Drive traffic to your website. In social media, your sacrifices are often rewarded. Posting questions or responding to them with helpful advice helps you build trust with people. As a result, the recipient will often check out your site to find out more about you.

Improved search engine rankings. Google is changing the game on search engine marketing by placing a much heavier emphasis on real-time, user-generated search results. With the popularity of social media, your information is far more likely to appear if you are actively participating.

No longer can practices trying to attract small business accounts rely on search engine results as a source of lead generation and website traffic. The real-time results are getting preferred positioning - and, as a result, more search traffic.

Which Social Media Platform is Right for my Practice?
Before starting any social media strategy, you need to determine which social networks are right for your firm. A basic rule is to consider what each network offers and how you can benefit from their resources.

For most accounting firms, getting the most bang for your buck comes from three networks. We recommend you focus on LinkedIn (www.LinkedIn.com), Twitter (www.twitter.com) and Facebook (www.Facebook.com).

Blogs
While a blog can certainly be useful, not putting in the time and energy required to be successful will make it meaningless. You must make it interesting and relatable to the reader. Here are some guidelines:

• A blog must have a strong, personal voice. If your voice is boring, no one will read it.
• A blog needs to start and end with original content that is significantly better than anything else in your industry.
• Blogging takes lots of time. We're talking  two to four hours a post to research, write, edit and post, and that's if you are a good writer.
• Blogs are not cheap. They require technical support to get them set up, a graphic designer to make it stand out and match your firm's identity and a dedicated writer to keep it up to date.
• To have a productive blog, you need to drive traffic to it. This takes time, effort and money.

You Tube
Despite competing with a sea of videos featuring the latest craze, YouTube is a powerful, effective business tool. However, if you do not have time to write a script, video yourself and edit the video, it can be an overwhelming process.

There are three primary ways to use YouTube for your business:

1. Expertise and thought leadership
• Upload recordings of presentations you've given to demonstrate authority, position yourself as an expert and build trust.
• Share slides from presentations that weren't recorded.
• Create short videos of valuable tips of interest to your prospects and clients to show off your expertise.

2. Marketing and advertising
• Post customer video testimonials.
• Create a video explaining your services.
• Add your YouTube channel URL to your marketing and social media profiles.
• Show the results of someone using your services.
• Use a video to introduce your staff or show a tour of your office.
• Post links to your videos on various social networks.
• Add overlays to your videos to drive traffic to your web site.
• Display company information in your videos including name, URL, phone number and email address.

3. Customer service
• Create how-to videos to help your clients and prospects with common issues related to tax planning, accounting, QuickBooks and incorporations.
• Answer frequently asked customer questions using videos.
• Embed videos on your web site on appropriate pages.
• Go the extra mile by adding closed-captions or subtitles to your videos. Remember that not everyone can watch or hear videos in the same way.

Hugh Duffy MBA

Hugh Duffy is co-founder and chief marketing officer for Build Your Firm, a leading practice development firm dedicated to the accounting industry.  Based in Madison, Conn., Build Your Firm works with small accounting firms providing accounting marketing, practice management and Web site development services

Prior to co-founding Build Your Firm in 2003, Hugh was a Vice President of Internet Marketing for Business & Legal Reports (BLR), a business-to-business publisher for small and medium sized businesses.  Prior to BLR, Hugh was a Director with a publicly traded global internet media company, 24/7 Real Media responsible for Business Development and Strategic Partnerships.  The foundation of Hugh’s marketing background is fourteen years of consumer packaged goods marketing with Schick, Nabisco, Clorox and Coca-Cola. 

Hugh has 25 years of marketing experience, an MBA degree in marketing from the University of Rochester and a B.S. in finance from the University of Maryland.  While at Maryland, Hugh was on a golf scholarship and his coach was Fred Funk, PGA Tour player.  Today, Hugh’s golf game suffers and he is content watching his two kids play college lacrosse.


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