A Death Note for social media practices

By Nathan Donaldson

Tags:

deathnote

If you’re a manga lover you’ll know Death Note. If you haven’t watched it yet, I encourage you to do so, I’m sure most of you would like it:

“Death Note is a Japanese manga series created by writer Tsugumi Ohba and manga artist Takeshi Obata. The main character is Light Yagami, a high school student who discovers a supernatural notebook, the “Death Note”, dropped on Earth by a shinigami (a god of death) named Ryuk. The Death Note grants its user the ability to kill anyone whose name and face they know, by writing the name in the notebook while picturing their face.” – Wikipedia

After Light Yagami discovers the Death Note, he starts using it to kill criminals in order to create a better place to live.

If I had a Death Note of my own, which social media practices would I like to write down in order to create a better social media experience?

Here’s my Death Note top 5 list of social media practices:

1. “Monologue-ing”

Social media is a space to drive, create and/or be a part of conversations. Content without conversation is only broadcasting, or advertising. This approach offers no lasting value to others and it’s also offers no value to the organisation itself (other than purely informational sharing).

If you’re familiar with this practice then it’s about time you killed this approach and concentrate on dialogue instead.

2. Misleading

“Nearly six in 10 internet users said they had seen Facebook Sponsored Stories that they thought appeared misleadingly as content, and 45% said the same of Twitter’s Promoted Tweets.” – eMarketer

We’ve all came across interesting social media links or a blog post titles that we would like to know more about… followed by disappointment as soon as we click it to find it linking to else entirely.

Misleading is nothing but a pathetic effort to get more clicks/visits to a website or an online channel. This approach serves only to create a bad reputation with lots of visitors.

3. Perception of “only marketing”

Social media is not just about marketing.

It’s great for collaboration, conversation, humanising the content, brands, organisations and wisdom. Social media is not only good for your marketing and sales, but your overall business strategy, for example: staff education, online help desk, complaint and crisis management, networking, crowdsourcing and much more…

If you are focused on social media marketing only, you may surprised by the benefits you gain when you look further and implement social media in other business strategies.

4. Selling on LinkedIn groups

LinkedIn groups are brilliant places for sharing insights and building a network in specific areas and locations. However, spreading sales messages on every related discussion without curation is not social selling but spamming.

Instead of think about how you can add value to discussions. The more you engage with people and share your wisdom, the more they will know about you and your solutions/products. In time you will become a reliable source of information and thus be more valuable in the eyes of potential customers. You’ll gain more than just sales, you will be building a good reputation in that community.

5. Blasts of Tweets

Blasting out 5 or 10 Tweets within a minute is the fastest way to get people to unfollow you. People think either you’re a machine and/or a spammer.

Recently, Dan Zarrella did some Twitter research with BufferApp team for his book project. One of his findings is about the pace of link tweeting and click through rate (CTR):

“I did find one pattern that held true across all of the accounts I looked at. When one of them tweeted a link and didn’t tweet another link for an hour, they had a certain CTR. When they tweeted two links in an hour, the CTR dropped. When it was three links in an hour, the CTR was even lower. As the pace of link-tweeting increased, the CTR for each link decreased.” Dan Zarella

Understanding the method of “less is more” is both valuable and very zen, particularly on Twitter.

Social media would be a better place without these practices, so metaphorically killing them is a good place to start to creating positive experiences of social media for organisations and individuals.

If you had a Death Note, which social media practices you would like to add on the list? We’d love to hear about it via the comments.

Learn more

12 tips for writing a business blog even busy people will read

Best practice use of personal information — GDPR in New Zealand

Make a bigger impact tomorrow

Talk to us today