Have you ever ventured on to social media only to look up and see an entire hour has passed with very little to show for it? While the same thing can happen in a chamber executive’s day, the key to avoiding the time-sucking side of social media is to be more deliberate in your actions. To do so, follow these easy tips.
Avoid the Time-Sucking Side of Social Media
- Set a timer. Don’t allow minutes to tick by without you knowing it.
- Schedule your posts so you don’t spend time on social media doing that. Your time should be spent interacting.
- Select 3-5 people each day to interact with. Anything beyond that is a bonus.
- Treat it like a scheduled task. If you’re dedicating 15 minutes to it in the morning and in the afternoon, do just that.
- Ask a question and then come back later to respond to the answers.
- Turn off notifications from social media when it’s not social media time.
- Check your lists of people you follow (on Twitter you should have a list of important people to you and the chamber) to see what they are up to.
- Create an editorial calendar and use a swipe file so you always have content to post and schedule.
- Schedule evergreen content but pull out individual things about the article that are different. Don’t post with the exact same intro each time. Use pull quotes and other valuable phrases to lure new eyes.
- Ask yourself if what you’re doing is bringing you closer to your business goals or distracting you. Every action on social media will be one or the other.
- Post consistently throughout the day. Don’t set aside 15 minutes and post 5 times in three minutes. Spread your content out for the best effect.
- Have a task each time you log on. I’ve often written in this blog that it’s important to use your “stolen moments” for social media. However, that does not mean watching kitten videos. Always have a task in mind. For instance, if you know you’ll have downtime before or after the meeting, plan on using it to search for people talking about your area or use it to connect with potential member “B.”
Social media can be a lot of fun and extremely distracting. If you’re using it for the chamber, you need to be disciplined about the limited time you have.
Want more chamber social media tips and strategies? Check out 11+ Ways to Make Your Chamber Social Media Work Harder (So You Don’t Have To)