Top Banner
Social Media for Startups Wendy Felton Social Media Manager, Lubin School of Business
42

Social Media for Startups

Nov 17, 2014

Download

Business

The basics of social media for entrepreneurs and startups. Prepared for the Lubin School of Business Entrepreneurship Lab at Pace University.
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Social Media for Startups

Social Media for StartupsWendy FeltonSocial Media Manager,Lubin School of Business

Page 2: Social Media for Startups

Let's get social.

● What social media sites are you already using?

● Social media for startups = mostly social media you're already using

● Key sites: Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook

Page 3: Social Media for Startups

But before social media...

Page 4: Social Media for Startups

...there was the garage.

Who started in a garage? Among others:

● Steve Jobs● Bill Gates● Jeff Bezos of Amazon.com● Google● HP

Page 5: Social Media for Startups

Do you still need the garage?

Yes! Inventors and entrepreneurs still need space to create. But what comes after that?

● Finding investors● Hiring employees● Marketing their products

They all managed to do it. You'll have to do it, too.

Page 6: Social Media for Startups

But what's your advantage?

You may not be a genius...

...but you have the advantage of social media.

Page 7: Social Media for Startups

What's the key advantage of social?

Page 8: Social Media for Startups

Do the math.

On any given day, 66% of adult internet users visit a social media site.

● 12% of online adults say they use Pinterest● 12% use Instagram● 5% use Tumblr● 66% use Facebook● 20% use LinkedIn● 16% use Twitter

Page 9: Social Media for Startups

Social media gives you REACH.

Here's an example from LinkedIn:

133 people = 3.5 million potential contacts =

3.5 million+ potential customers

Page 10: Social Media for Startups

Also, it provides ACCOUNTABILITY.

What do you do before you visit a new restaurant or buy from a new website?

Page 11: Social Media for Startups

Social accounts build TRUST.

Which person would you trust more?

Page 12: Social Media for Startups

So why does this matter?

Because you'll need to rely on your existing network and build a larger, stronger one in order to launch your startup.

Page 13: Social Media for Startups

Let's talk ideas.

A large, trustworthy network is a big help with:

● Testing business ideas

● Finding beta testers

● Offering suggestions

Page 14: Social Media for Startups

Even big companies do this.

Page 15: Social Media for Startups

You can do it, too.

Page 16: Social Media for Startups

You have an idea. You need cash.

Social media can help you find funding, whether you're looking for cash to build a prototype or full funding to launch your startup as a company.

Page 17: Social Media for Startups

Is crowdfunding right for you?

● Is this project interesting to anyone else?

● Do you have a large enough network to fund the project?

● Are you willing or able to execute a social media campaign?

● Is your fundraising goal realistic?

Page 18: Social Media for Startups

Yes! Let's crowdfund!

Page 19: Social Media for Startups

How crowdfunding works.

1. Create a page explaining your project. Video is a good way to go here.

2. Set a fundraising goal and a time limit.

3. ??????

4. Profit!

Page 20: Social Media for Startups

How crowdfunding actually works.

1. Create a page explaining your project. Include video and photos. (The more high-tech the project, the more people expect.)

2. Set a fundraising goal and a time limit.

3. Campaign among your friends and network to meet your funding goal.

4. Profit!

Page 21: Social Media for Startups

A great Kickstarter video.

Page 22: Social Media for Startups

And how did Ouya do?

Very, very well.

Page 23: Social Media for Startups

How do creators get funding?

● Use Twitter and Facebook to contact friends and family

● Use social media to talk to reporters and bloggers

● Become featured projects on either site

● Create blogs and videos to promote their work

Page 24: Social Media for Startups

What do donors get?

They don't get stake in the company. Instead, they get rewards set by the project creator. These can include:

● The project itself (DVD, book, etc.)● Promotional items● Public thanks● Other services/goods from project creators● A handwritten thank you note (true story!)

Page 25: Social Media for Startups

What's the difference?

● Indiegogo has no approval process; Kickstarter does.

● Indiegogo allows you to receive funding even if you don’t meet your goal; Kickstarter only funds projects that meet their full goals.

● Kickstarter uses Amazon's payment system; Indiegogo uses Paypal.

Page 26: Social Media for Startups

A few cautions

● Both sites will take a small percentage of the funds you raise.

● Are you willing to kick in the rest of the funds if you don't meet your goal?

● Are you prepared to complete your project and fulfill the perks you offered to donors?

Page 27: Social Media for Startups

Then what?

Page 28: Social Media for Startups

Or...

The inventor of the Super Rope Cinch convinced Walmart to carry his product once they saw his social media campaigns and press releases.

Page 29: Social Media for Startups

What about a startup?

There's a site for that, too!

Page 30: Social Media for Startups

Another option for funding

Person-to-person lending generally offers better rates than banks.

Page 31: Social Media for Startups

Now you need staff.

Page 32: Social Media for Startups

Find your people.

● LinkedIn:○ Search by skill, company

● PartnerUp:○ Search by keyword

● AngelList:○ Search by role, market, location

Page 33: Social Media for Startups

Also, NYC offers a great resource.

mappedinny.com

Page 34: Social Media for Startups

Next? Customer service.

Build social media into your customer service model.

55% of customers expect a same-day response to a social media complaint.

Only 29% receive one.

Page 35: Social Media for Startups

A customer service case study:

Uber is accessible.

Page 36: Social Media for Startups

Continued...

Uber is accountable.

Page 37: Social Media for Startups

Still more Uber...

Uber is fun.

Page 38: Social Media for Startups

Why social media service matters.

Page 39: Social Media for Startups

Two closing caveats:

1. Build your network before you need your network.

Page 40: Social Media for Startups

Two closing caveats, continued:

2. Once you have a company name, grab your domain name and social media handles.

Page 41: Social Media for Startups

Questions?

Page 42: Social Media for Startups

Thanks!

Wendy [email protected]/in/wendyfeltonslideshare.net/LubinSchoolofBusiness

@lubinbschool

/lubinschool