The Small Business Toolkit for the Social Customer

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I originally published this for App Bistro but since I know that I have several small business readers here I thought it would be a good idea to re-publish it.

I run a small business myself at Chess Media Group, and we work on developing social customer strategies for much bigger companies, so I can identify with the challenges that small businesses (and larger companies) are faced with. I decided to put together this little social customer toolkit to help small businesses get started with engaging the social customer.

Customer Relationship Management system (CRM)

You need something that stores all of your customer (and other) data, and e-mail is not going to cut it. A CRM system will allow you to set up tasks, find all of your account information, follow up with prospects, build a pipeline, and much more. You can even run your e-mail marketing campaigns from a CRM platform. I’d recommend starting with something like Salesforce; packages range from $5-$125/person/month (for the enterprise version). You can also check out Infusionsoft which is a bit of a marketing automation suite at around $200-$500/month.

Social Channels

This is the mix of the social channels you are going to be using. I can’t speak to exactly what those channels are going to be since I don’t know your business, but more often than not it’s going to involve a combination of Facebook, Twitter, Blogs and Linkedin (and hopefully a third party community solution like Lithium or perhaps Jive). The information you get from these social channels should all feed into your CRM system. No cost here except for your time unless you decide to go with a fancy community platform, but if you decide to do that then things must be really going well, so no point worrying about it (yet). I’m also assuming of course that you have a website which you will want to integrate the social channels into.

E-mail Marketing

Again, you can run this directly from your CRM system with some basic integration, but you’re most likely going to have to use something like Vertical Response, Mail Chimp or Exact Target. The cost here will be around $0-$100/month (Mailchimp for example has a freemium version for anything under 500 people in your list).

Monitoring Solution

You’re going to need something that monitors the web for you with relevant conversations and discussions that are taking place online. You can try some of the basic free tools such as Google Alerts, but eventually you want to move to something more advanced (and again something that integrates with your CRM system) such as an Attensity or Radian 6. Costs here can vary quite a bit, but you’re likely looking at around $200-$1k/month.

Technology Integration

Finally, you need someone to connect all of the pieces together for you. The vendors mentioned above should be able to help you out with pretty much everything, but it may be worth hiring a technology person just to help you sync everything up if you’re having trouble. This should really only take a few hours so it just depends on the person’s rate and the complexity of the integration. You can start to do some really creative things on the technology, but you need to understand what you want.

Overall, the total cost annually for a small business should be around $5k-$15k, which isn’t too bad to get started. I’m also assuming that you have thought of some strategy here, otherwise this all falls apart. Of course there are other things you can add to your toolset, but in my opinion these are the essentials for getting started. Most people focus only on the “social media channels” and forget about everything else (along with the integration into a CRM system that lets you track everything!).

If I were you, I’d start planning and researching various vendors and start making the investment. You might have a better mix of things you are using so please feel free to share below!

Republished with author's permission from original post.

Jacob Morgan
I'm a best-selling author, keynote speaker, and futurist who explores what the future of work is going to look like and how to create great experiences so that employees actually want to show up to work. I've written three best-selling books which are: The Employee Experience Advantage (2017), The Future of Work (2014), and The Collaborative Organization (2012).

2 COMMENTS

  1. Thanks for the mention, Jacob! Our platform is definitely geared toward successful small businesses who intend to grow their marketing and sales efforts through marketing automation. This is an excellent toolkit you’ve listed for the social customer.

    Infusionsoft has a ton of features that could very well eliminate redundant, complex systems together — saving both time, money and hassle.

    Thanks again for the mention! 🙂

    ~Joseph Manna
    Community Manager, Infusionsoft
    http://www.infusionsoft.com

  2. Great article. MailChimp recently boosted the list size to 1000 making it a solid resource for small businesses building their lists. I also like the ability to track clicks in the emails.

    I have found their customer support to be very responsive also, which is amazing for a free service. If they ever work out their ability to link to PayPal they’ll be serious competition to AWeber.

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