A solid
social media strategy can help small and medium-sized businesses reap
many benefits. But crafting one requires a good understanding of the differences between paid social ads and organic marketing. This post takes an in-depth look at the two and discusses their cons and benefits. By the end, you will know which one to choose for your social efforts and how to bring them together for maximum impact on your target audience.
Key takeaways:
- Organic social media marketing lets brands connect with their followers and drive engagement over a sustained period. But it depends on volatile ranking algorithms for that and may not directly boost ROI.
- Paid marketing involves spending money on social ads and campaigns to reach a highly targeted audience. It’s a great tactic to capture leads and drive conversions but needs considerable resources and efforts to deliver results.
- Organic works for small businesses just entering the field and want to build customer relationships. But paid ads should be a core part of the marketing strategy for any scaling enterprise with the budget and expertise to invest in social ads.
- Business owners can hit their revenue targets by integrating paid social with organic marketing. A well-rounded strategy helps them reach new audiences while maintaining valuable relationships with their existing followers on social.
- Establish a distinct brand personality (more on it in a sec) and voice
- Nurture customer relationships by sharing resonating content
- Directly connect with customers and offer qualitative engagement
- Provide instant customer care support services and manage reputation
- It needs massive effort to churn out quality content and actively interact with users on different social media platforms daily
- It doesn’t let you distribute content outside of your social following
- Its ROI can be difficult to measure as organic is for branding than sales
- Minimizing promotions: Instead, the focus should be on creating informative and helpful social content that positively impacts users. While a local hairdressing business can share pro tips on hairstyling via reels on its Instagram page, a SaaS startup can post thoughtful takes on current problems in the industry and how their product solves them.
- Showcasing brand personality: The content should mark your visual identity distinctly and always conform to branding guidelines. It’s easy to get swayed by viral social media trends, but picking up the wrong ones can do more harm than good to your business image. Stick to niche-specific discussions and create content highlighting your brand values.
- Addressing topic gaps: Produce content that answers users’ urgent needs during micro-moments. These are times when customers surf social networks with a definite purpose.It could be checking out an easy tutorial or a product demo before making the final purchase. Perform competitive research and use social media listening tools like Sprout Social to create in-demand content.
- Target particular demographics that’d be interested in your brand
- Capture leads and drive conversions
- Promote the latest releases, events, and deals easily
- Move people through the various stages of the customer journey
- Track results and refine your marketing strategy
- It may be difficult for small businesses to match a high PPC rate to reach their target audience by consistently creating high-quality content to get returns on paid budget
- It’s a massive waste of money if the efforts don’t yield desired results
- It needs constant monitoring to understand how your ads are performing and pivot if the analytics are not up to the mark
- Select the right audience: Social ads work best when they carry the right message at the right time and for the right audience. Make your paid ads effective by pairing laser-targeted messaging with the intended users to drive results.
- Craft a clear CTA: The value of paid social ads lies in the business objectives they help serve. If the aim is to capture leads by sharing informative content like an in-depth guide, the ads should carry a direct CTA like ‘Download Now.’ Include strong (and relevant!) CTAs in your paid campaign to help people take the next action.
- Be brief: Paid social ads target a large demographic that may or may not have heard about your business. To win attention, keep your ads - be they graphics or videos- catchy and concise. Share resonating content with your target audience and limit your video ads to 15-30 seconds.
- Track performance: As I said before, paid social ads can be expensive and need constant monitoring to ensure you don’t end up wasting resources. Social media management tools help businesses measure analytics and take a data-informed approach to their marketing strategy.Use these tools to measure the impact of your ad campaigns and make necessary changes.
- Decide upon the promotional posts: Reserve the social ads only for content tied to measurable KPIs. While most big businesses use advertising to promote their latest release and announce new events, organic can be a great way for growing companies to do the same through a creative and compelling organic post without spending much.
- Boost organic content: Use social analytics tools to identify the organic posts that got the most traction with your target audience and boost them through paid ads. It’s one of the low-cost methods for small businesses that may not be well-versed with the ins and outs of social ad campaigns and equipped with the resources to run them on scale.
- Use A/B testing: Test paid ads with smaller audiences before allocating a large budget for social spending. See if your messaging, positioning, visuals, copywriting, and ad format hit a chord with modern shoppers and offer them an enjoyable experience. Set up manual split tests for organic content and track its performance using UTM parameters.
- Align target audience: Remember what I said about selecting the right audience for paid ads earlier? It’s mostly the lookalike of your followers or newsletter subscribers (for example), having similar likes, choices, and demographics. The only difference is they haven’t had the chance to interact with your social media content. Use your customer persona and data on the organic following to run social ads with this lookalike audience.
- Use retargeting ads: It’s a highly effective and budget-friendly means to capture leads who already know your business organically but need a reminder about the latest product or offering from your company. Craft a compelling ad with the right messaging to nudge them to come back and check you out.
- Automate: Use a social media tool for not just tracking the performance of your organic and paid campaigns but also for managing the workload that comes with combining the two social media marketing tactics. Streamline your content creation process, schedule the organic posts in advance, and create customized alerts for boosted content.