Social Media Etiquette for Doctors – How Using Numbers As A Guide Can Mislead You
What is your primary objective for being on Facebook or Twitter? Are you interested primarily in link-building, solely for “SEO” purposes? Perhaps you are interested in acquiring as many friends and people who will “like” your Facebook Page as possible, because we’ve always been taught that more is better …
A traditional marketing mind-set was to acquire more. Let the numbers show how effective our direct mail piece was. How many patient phone calls we got from our phone book ad. How many hits to our website. However, without quality none of those numbers really matters.
It is our intentions that drive our actions. If we intend to build up a certain number of fans, whether it be 500 or 2,000 fans, we are focused on the numbers. On the other hand, if we focus on winning the interest, praise, and appreciation of our followers, we are bound to win.
Remember that social media marketing is unlike any other marketing tool we’ve ever had access to. Discard your old marketing mind-set. Be thoughtful about your objectives. Consider what is more important to you—a high quantity fan base or a high quality fan base. I’m not saying you can’t have both, but in social media, typically numbers as a primary goal can sabotage quality.
Set your intention to first and foremost build trust and relationships with your followers. Strive to make your social media platforms a place you can talk with your patients and followers. Imagine when patients come into your office. What is the social conversation you have with them? It is that type of exchange that can make your social marketing efforts a success.
It may take more time and energy to consider what your ideal social media community could look like. The easy way out is to set a number as a goal and walk away. A better objective—that will return more positive word of mouth and referrals—is to put interaction, authentic “liking”, and relationship building at the top of the list.
What are your social media goals and objectives?
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Thanks for this!
I've been having many conversations about this very subject and share your post with my network on FaceBook, Twitter, LinkedIn and my Social Media groups there.
Best,
Christine Hueber
Hi Christine – Thank you for reading and taking time to share your thoughts! (and for sharing the article!) I too hear this as a common struggle. Hopefully a new mind-set of marketing with the intent of quality, trust and relationships will prevail…:)