Why Social Media is NOT Free

August 10, 2009 Social Influence 6 comments


Don’t forget that Time (and Effort) IS money (Courtesy of shaphoto)

As the world continues to go gaga over how social media transforms the way we reach customers and do business, we need to bear this in mind:

Social media marketing can never be FREE – not even when you don’t pay a cent in advertising.

Now why would this be so? After all, you don’t have to pay to set up accounts on free blog websites, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest or YouTube. Plus, there is every chance that you can gain online influence without needing to pay for it.

You Need to Be Reasonably Original

For sure, one can always share third party content through networks like Facebook, Twitter’s famous Retweet function, or other aggregators like Delicious and Squidoo. RSS readers also allows one to read and share whatever catches one’s fancy.

However, you will find that it is important to have a position and stand for something. And that means creating authentic and original content.

Being unique doesn’t of course mean that you have to be like Shakespeare. However, it does mean that your digital real estate ought to provide something new that isn’t already served by the market one way or another.

Even compilations can be original if its content has been mashed-up and reinterpreted reasonably enough to take on new significance and meaning.

If you do not put in sufficient resources to create your own content or unique positioning, you may end up being yet another nameless and faceless intermediary of information.

Energy, Effort and Brain Power Needed

Updating a blog requires considerable discipline and effort.

You need to research a particular topic, look for appropriate examples or analogies to strengthen a particular case, upload (or download) photographs, embed a video, or search for links to augment one’s post. Considerable amounts of brain power is also needed in the art and science of generating user content – like how to structure one’s sentences, the tone of voice to use, photographs to select, edits to make to one’s videos, and so on.

It doesn’t stop here though.

Pushing out your own content is great, but you should also participate in a broader community and take an interest in other people’s content by reading the posts of others, offering a Facebook “like” here and a comment there, sharing what others have created through retweets, and responding to direct or indirect messages.

You can’t be a shy wallflower if you want to be known.

It Can Be Pretty Time Intensive

If you don’t believe me, try keeping a blog with daily updates, a twitter account with at least 10 original tweets a day, a YouTube channel with one new video uploaded fortnightly, and a Facebook page with at least three new daily updates.

To build a community and a following in any social media endeavour, one needs to create a regular rhythm, producing fresh content that one’s followers can eagerly (hopefully) devour, digest and disseminate. Add to that is the time needed to participate in other people’s content – commenting, liking, retweeting, responding, replying and so on.

From my personal experience, putting up a blog post takes me on average an hour to two hours each. Creating photograph intensive posts take up even more time as these have to be scaled down, resized and contextualised.

While this gobbles up chunks of my time, it also brings me considerable self gratification in seeing my own work being published online.

Social Media is ALWAYS Temporary

One of the hidden truths about social media is that everything becomes very temporary.

In the blink of an eye, new tweets, blog posts, Youtube videos and Slideshare presentations are created by the hour, each one offering something bigger, better and more boastful than the last. It is like writing on a whiteboard with invisible ink that disappears minutes after you have scribbled on it – or paddling a canoe upstream against the flow of a river.

What this means is that longevity in this new game isn’t just predicated on past successes alone, but on future (and ongoing) efforts, stroke by stroke, post by post.

Finally, Time Equals Money and Effort

This is such a universal truth that you probably feel that I am stating the obvious. Well, I believe that it bears repeating once again.

Look at the amount of time that you have in a day and the “returns” that you can enjoy when invested in various activities. This can either be individual or collective (for organisations with few or many staff).

Given this amount of working (or waking) hours a day, would social media endeavours work for you vis-a-vis other potential uses of that time? While most social media networks and applications are available for free, manpower does cost money.

The next time someone tells you that social media is free or a cheap way to advertise or communicate, think carefully about what its true costs are over the long term.

Launching a new blog, Facebook page, Twitter account, Instagram account or LinkedIn page is easy. However, keeping them alive and healthy is another thing altogether.

What are your thoughts on this? Does social media marketing equate to a cheap way to market your brand?

By Walter
Founder of Cooler Insights, I am a geek marketer with almost 24 years of senior management experience in marketing, public relations and strategic planning. Since becoming an entrepreneur 5 years ago, my team and I have helped 58 companies and over 2,200 trainees in digital marketing, focusing on content, social media and brand storytelling.

6 Comments

  1. Any site requires a certain amount of upkeep, plus keeping content updated. That doesn’t even account for the servers either.

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