Have You Been Social Selling All Along? | Convince and Convert
Have You Been Social Selling All Along?
Chances are you’ve read a blog post, joined a webinar, or attended a conference that celebrated the “social selling” revolution. Supporters of the social selling movement claimed that LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, and other social sites signaled an end to the stereotype of pushy, disconnected, quota-hungry salespeople, giving rise to a new breed of relationship-first sellers who use social media to seek connections instead of transactions; who share valuable resources instead of pushing products; who listen instead of talk.
Let’s be clear that social selling and social media marketing are opposites. Social selling, usually owned by sales teams and people, is designed to identify and nurture leads through a complete sales cycle. Conversely, social media marketing is best used when not a trigger for action, but for Marketing to help build a B2B pipeline and support sales enablement with broader messages and content.
And we know social selling, when done correctly, works. Full stop. In fact, 78 percent of social salespeople strongly outperform their traditional selling peers. The problem is that the concept of social selling is woefully misunderstood.
Many salespeople tend to think of social selling as an entirely new discipline: “I know how to sell in the real world, but now I need to learn how to sell on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter.” But the simple truth is that social selling isn’t new. The same traits that determine if you’re a good salesperson offline—being honest, helpful, and informative—are what make salespeople successful in the social sphere. Social media are tools. Being a good salesperson is a mindset.
You may be intimidated at first by the concept of social selling. Understanding the similarities between selling online and traditional selling will help to put you at ease. Chances are, you’ve been social selling all along and you didn’t even know it.
LinkedIn: Like Trade Shows Without the Travel
Trade shows are a massive investment in time and money. Post-pandemic, trade shows are slowly returning, though many have restrictions on number of attendees and social distancing protocol. Even when you get there, after an average of over 400 miles, attendees spend six to eight hours each day meandering through a maze of exhibits in search of leads. Sellers put up with the grueling days and hefty travel expenses as long as each trade show visit results in new relationships forged on the exhibit hall floor.
It’s that same ability to build meaningful, long-lasting relationships that makes LinkedIn so valuable for social selling..
Contrary to popular belief, LinkedIn is more than a job-hunting destination. It’s an incredibly deep research tool that can be used to unearth new prospects and identify key points of entry into the businesses you’re targeting.
Consider how you select which trade shows to attend before buying a badge. You visit the trade show website, do some research on who’s slated to speak and which companies are signed on to exhibit, and then make a judgement call on if you think it’ll draw the type of prospects you’re looking for.
Finding and connecting with prospects on LinkedIn is even easier. With a variety of search options and detailed profiles, LinkedIn enables you to quickly find the people you want to connect with and simplifies how to ask mutual connections to make introductions to broaden your network.
When you think of LinkedIn as a trade show, then LinkedIn Groups are the invite-only after parties. Just like at real parties, nobody likes a pushy salesman crashing a LinkedIn Group. Groups aren’t a place to hawk your products and services. Rather, they’re a place where you can answer questions, share relevant and informative resources, and engage in conversations. When you participate in these real—albeit digital—conversations, you’ll earn a reputation as an expert whose products or services are worth paying attention to.
Twitter: A Warmer Alternative to Cold Calls
Think those cold calls are working? Think again. According to sales research group Huthwaite, 91 percent of people never respond to cold calls and, even worse, 71 percent find them annoying. Even salespeople hate cold calling: 63 percent of reps say it’s what they hate most about their jobs.
Even if cold calling is a necessary evil to fill your funnel, wouldn’t it be nice to know just a little bit about a prospect before reaching out to them? Well, think of Twitter as a tool for making cold calls warmer.
The best thing about Twitter is that you don’t need to tweet a single thing to start seeing its value—all you need to do is start “listening.” Twitter is the perfect tool for conducting some basic pre-sales research, because you can search for specific keywords and phrases to identify prospects. Plugging in a competitor’s name might turn up a Twitter rant from an unhappy customer looking to make a switch. Or, you might find that a prospect is narrowing down their shortlist and looking for suggestions from the Twittersphere. You may even stumble upon some of your own customers requesting (or, in more severe cases, demanding) help.
Keep in mind younger Americans, ages 12-34, make up a sizable chunk of the American Twitter user base, while senior Americans over the age of 55 rarely use Twitter.
Twitter enables you to find and engage with prospects at every stage of the sales cycle, and can even help you intervene if a current customer is having a hard time.
Now, isn’t that better than taking a shot in the dark on a cold call?
Facebook: A Friendlier Way to Nurture Leads
Potential buyers don’t become customers overnight. In fact, according to MarketingSherpa, 79 percent of marketing leads never convert into sales due to lack of lead nurturing. Conversely, leads that are effectively nurtured make 47 percent larger purchases than non-nurtured leads, according to The Annuitas Group.
Relationships are critical in today’s sales cycles, and the only way to build those relationships is by communicating with buyers throughout every stage. Phone calls and email have been the two biggest lead nurturing mainstays among sales reps, but Facebook presents a unique opportunity for salespeople to connect with prospects and maintain relationships over time.
While Facebook started as a way for college kids and, eventually, friends and family to keep in touch, it has evolved to become an important source of news and information for the majority of adults. One-third of Americans regularly get their news from Facebook. In other words, it’s no longer taboo to share information (provided it’s relevant and useful) with your Facebook friends.
Nurturing leads on Facebook is no different than nurturing them on a phone call to check in or an email that includes a relevant case study. Nurturing—using any communication channel—is less about closing the sale, and more about answering and asking questions, providing valuable content, and engaging in real conversations. And because Facebook is a place where people are more inclined to share what’s happening in their personal lives, it can lead to even deeper, more meaningful connections.
You’re Already a Social Selling Pro
Social Selling isn’t a new concept; it’s simply taking the same traits that make people good at selling at trade shows, on phone calls, and throughout the nurturing process and applying them across social channels. If your goal is to provide useful information and forge a meaningful relationship, then you will see your sales spike regardless of if you’re meeting in-person on the trade show floor or on LinkedIn, making contact through a cold call or on Twitter, or nurturing through follow-up emails or Facebook. Simply put: social selling is selling.
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This blog was update by Lauren Teague, Content and Analytics at Convince and Convert.