5 Tips to Get Employees Involved in Social Media Marketing


5 Tips for Encouraging Employee Social Media Advocacy

In today’s digital age, employee social media advocacy is crucial for small to mid-sized businesses using social media not just as a marketing channel, but as an essential tool for business growth and customer engagement.

A survey by Time Warner revealed that 30% of SMB customers are likely to avoid businesses not present on social media. Moreover, consistent posting on platforms like Facebook is deemed ‘very effective’ by 47% of women and 32% of men in acquiring and retaining customers.

If your company is active on social media, chances are you have a dedicated person or team handling everything from content promotion to brand monitoring, customer interactions, and curating industry news.

While having a dedicated team is beneficial, your social media marketing can reach new heights when every employee contributes, amplifying your presence and engagement through their advocacy.

Why You Should Get Your Employees Involved

Why should you get everyone involved? First, consider the personable factor. Whether you’re looking at community management, lead nurture, sales, customer service, retention or anything in between, your customers want to do business with people rather than corporations.

Therefore, companies that put their people front and center are more enjoyable to do business with.

Another reason you want all your employees contributing is that your social media efforts could greatly benefit from the subject matter expertise available at your business.

When you create a piece of content – a blog post, video or any other format – your business’s in-house subject matter experts can help you make sure the asset truly speaks to the issues that matter to your buyers.

They can also help you to turn that piece into several additional items of content. The information in a blog post might turn into an infographic, a webinar, a podcast episode or a slide deck, with even clearer explanations of a hard-to-understand concept.

Or a how-to section of a newsletter might be expanded into a video series that hashes out further details.

The multi-faceted nature of social media, and the many disparate skills and disciplines at play, is another reason to get everyone in your company involved.

A good social presence relies on people for content writing, audio and video recording, photography and design, data and analytics, competitive analysis, community building, influencer outreach, advertising and more. The more help you can garner, the better!

If your small to mid-size business is active on social media, and you’d like to include your entire team, there are some especially effective ways to make it happen. Here are five of them.

Tips for Encouraging Employee Social Media Advocacy

1. Incentivize Social Sharing

One excellent way for your employees to get involved in your social media efforts is to encourage them to share company-related content. This could mean sharing content that’s created directly by your marketing team, or it could mean sharing industry news and trends.

Encouraging your people to share content that’s relevant to your brand is beneficial for both your business and your employees as individuals. Not only does it help your business reach new audiences, but it also helps build your employees’ personal brands, as it positions them as experts in the niche.

If you’re not sure how to begin with this social-sharing tactic, consider using an employee advocacy tool like Smarp. This platform gives you the gamification tools you need to incentivize your people.

To get the ball rolling, give your employees incentives to share your content. This can be done by creating competitions around their sharing activities. Games and weekly challenges can be created, and employees who share the most could be rewarded with gifts, discounts or donations to the charity of their choice.

Apply These 5 Tips to Get All Your Employees Involved in Social Media Marketing

2. Encourage Open Communication

When everyone on your team participates in your social media activities, it’s important to knock down the walls between them. In other words, get them communicating!

Sometimes, it’s hard enough to get members within the same department to communicate openly with one another. Communication across all departments can seem next to impossible. Dedicated social media meetings can help.

Consider setting up weekly or bi-weekly meetings for social-media participants to attend. Get everyone talking about new trends they’re spotting, competitor activities on social media and any recurring customer comments or complaints. Ask questions like, “What types of things have been working? What hasn’t been working as well as you hoped? What kinds of new ideas do you think we should try, and why?”

When each meeting is finished, your employees should walk away inspired to try new tactics and make a positive difference for your business and their own personal brands.

Also, communication shouldn’t cease after the meeting ends. A collaboration tool like Trello, for example, will help keep everyone on the same page. With file sharing capabilities, messaging, tagging and project management features, the momentum gained in a meeting can be kept alive long term.

Apply These 5 Tips to Get All Your Employees Involved in Social Media Marketing

3. Document Social Media Workflows

Workflows – or the steps and processes undertaken by a team to complete a task – are at the heart of every business. Regardless of whether your team defines and identifies their workflows, your business has them.

To use a short and simple example, consider the process of promoting a new blog post on social media. It starts when the article goes live on your site. Then someone needs to build out image assets to attach to social posts. After some hashtag research, and the posts need to be drafted and approved for each social channel. Next, the posts need to be scheduled. Other promotion channels like email newsletters, community forums, paid distribution platforms, co-marketing partners’ presences and influencer posts need to be tackled as well.

While the above process is relatively straightforward, you’re probably already thinking of several complex workflows your employees engage with to succeed in your social media marketing. For smart workflow management, and to make sure all processes are efficient, it makes a lot of sense to map out the workflows that your team most commonly repeats in the form of a diagram or list.

When workflows are listed out, everyone can keep track of a project’s progress. And during scheduled social-media meetings, efficiencies and improvements can be discussed.

If you’ve never documented your workflows before, consider using Process Street. This innovative platform enables you to easily create interactive workflow checklists for everyone on your team to use as ground zero for process replication and even automating steps.

Apply These 5 Tips to Get All Your Employees Involved in Social Media Marketing

4. Keep Everyone in the Posting Schedule Loop

When all (or most) of your employees are involved in your social sharing, things can get tricky. Although the advantages are huge, it does require extra coordination. The right hand needs to know what the left hand is doing, to use the old but true cliché.

It’s important to keep a social media calendar that spells out everything scheduled to be posted each week, along with the links that have already been curated recently. While it’s okay if some of your branded presences and team members’ profiles share the same link within a couple days of each other, if anyone notices 50 profiles sharing out the same thing every day consistently, you’re likely to come off as spammy.

Conversely, you don’t want to let a valuable piece of industry news go completely unshared by your employees. If important links like these are included on your shared content calendar, it will ensure that they won’t be forgotten or ignored.

One excellent marketing calendar tool to consider is CoSchedule. Not only does it organize your entire marketing plan in one place, but it also provides analytics and insights into the progress made by your people.

5. Suggest Great Third-Party Content for Your Employees to Curate

We’ve discussed incentivizing your employees to share your company’s content, but sharing original content is only the tip of the iceberg. To bring even more value to your branding and social media efforts, and to reduce the customer perception of spam, much of your employee’s social media time should be spent curating content. That is, sharing content published by others that’s related to your industry.

When your employees share valuable content related to your business and your industry, your company will be viewed as an industry leader. Your employees also gain advantages, because content curation helps them gain strong reputations within the industry as well.

Discuss the kinds of content you’d like your employees to curate and share. Better yet, give them access to a dynamic library of curated links they can share.

Further, consider using a content curation platform that helps you find content that matters to your industry. Anders Pink is one such platform. It gives you and your employees daily briefings with content on any topic or industry, from any source — including websites, RSS and Twitter. It then makes it easy to share this content on multiple social platforms.

6. Establish a Social Media Content Calendar

Creating a social media content calendar can be an effective way to organize and streamline your employees’ contributions. This tool helps in planning posts in advance, ensuring a consistent and cohesive social media presence.

Encourage your team to add their ideas and content suggestions to the calendar. This collaborative approach not only fosters a sense of ownership but also ensures a diverse range of content from different perspectives within the company.

7. Regular Training and Workshops

Organize regular training sessions and workshops to keep your employees up-to-date on the latest social media trends and best practices. These sessions can cover topics such as creating engaging content, understanding different social media platforms, and using analytics tools.

By empowering your employees with knowledge and skills, you encourage them to contribute more effectively to your social media marketing efforts.

8. Leverage Employee Achievements and Milestones

Showcase your employees’ professional achievements and personal milestones on your social media channels. Celebrating team successes, work anniversaries, or personal accomplishments like completing a marathon or volunteer work, can humanize your brand and create relatable content.

Encourage employees to share their stories or milestones, which can then be featured on the company’s social media platforms. This approach not only boosts employee morale but also helps in building a stronger connection with your audience.

Apply These 5 Tips to Get All Your Employees Involved in Social Media Marketing

Leveraging Employee Advocacy for Social Media Success

Continuing to encourage employee participation in your small to mid-sized business’s social media marketing can transform your online presence into a powerful force. As your team engages collectively, the impact on brand recognition, customer loyalty, and industry authority can be significant. Here are further strategies to optimize your approach and ensure a successful integration of employee advocacy:

  • Offer Training and Resources
    • Provide training sessions on effective social media practices, etiquette, and the company’s social media guidelines.
    • Equip employees with resources such as templates, content ideas, and best practices to streamline their engagement.
  • Recognize and Celebrate Contributions
    • Celebrate employees who actively contribute to social media efforts through recognition in team meetings or company-wide communications.
    • Acknowledge and reward exceptional efforts, motivating others to participate and excel in their contributions.
  • Foster Creativity and Autonomy
    • Encourage employees to bring their unique perspectives and creativity to social media activities.
    • Give them the autonomy to share personal insights, industry updates, and experiences that resonate with their followers.
  • Showcase Employee Stories
    • Highlight individual employee stories, achievements, and milestones on social media platforms.
    • Humanize the brand by featuring behind-the-scenes moments, personal anecdotes, and employee-driven initiatives.
  • Provide Feedback and Collaboration
    • Offer constructive feedback and collaborate with employees to refine their social media content and strategies.
    • Engage in discussions to brainstorm ideas, address challenges, and continuously improve the collective impact.
  • Empower Employee Advocates
    • Identify enthusiastic employee advocates who excel in social media engagement and content creation.
    • Empower these advocates as social media ambassadors, allowing them to lead and inspire others in their efforts.
  • Measure and Share Success
    • Establish key performance indicators (KPIs) to measure the impact of employee participation on social media metrics.
    • Share success stories, metrics, and insights with the entire team to showcase the positive outcomes of their contributions.
  • Adapt and Evolve Together
    • Stay updated on social media trends and platforms, adapting your strategies collectively to align with changing dynamics.
    • Encourage continuous learning and experimentation, fostering a culture of growth and adaptability.
Strategies for Employee AdvocacyDescription
Offer Training and ResourcesProvide social media training sessions, etiquette guidelines, and resources such as templates and best practices to empower employees to engage effectively.
Recognize and Celebrate ContributionsCelebrate and reward employees who actively contribute to social media efforts, fostering motivation and a sense of achievement.
Foster Creativity and AutonomyEncourage employees to share unique perspectives and creative content on social media, allowing them the autonomy to personalize their engagement.
Showcase Employee StoriesHighlight individual employee stories, accomplishments, and behind-the-scenes moments on social platforms to humanize the brand and connect with the audience.
Provide Feedback and CollaborationOffer constructive feedback and collaborate with employees to refine their social media strategies, enabling continuous improvement.
Empower Employee AdvocatesIdentify enthusiastic advocates and empower them as social media ambassadors to lead and inspire others in their engagement efforts.
Measure and Share SuccessEstablish measurable KPIs to evaluate the impact of employee participation on social media metrics, and share success stories and insights with the team.
Adapt and Evolve TogetherStay informed about social media trends, adapting strategies collectively to align with changing dynamics, and fostering a culture of growth and adaptability.

By implementing these strategies, your business can harness the full potential of employee advocacy in social media marketing. The collaborative effort of your team will create a dynamic and engaging online presence that resonates with your target audience, builds trust, and drives sustainable business growth.

In Conclusion: Employee Social Media Advocacy Works

Getting your entire workforce to play a role in your company’s social-media marketing can certainly be challenging. But this wide-reaching participation will benefit everyone involved, so it’s worth the investment.

Your business will gain new audiences and a “human touch,” and your employees will enjoy stronger personal brands. It takes encouragement, communication and organization. But the payoff is rewarding, and it can earn you a competitive edge that lasts for the long haul.

Social Media Photo via Shutterstock


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Itai Elizur Itai Elizur is the COO at InboundJunction, a content marketing agency specializing in helping B2B and SaaS companies to increase their online visibility. Itai has worked with some of the biggest tech companies in Israel, helping them develop and optimize large-scale user acquisition strategies through content, brand messaging and marketing automation.

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