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It had been done.

The application form had been filled in. The schools attended, the relationships and the interest fields had been mulled over. The final submit button was pushed.  I was live.

Then something happened.

People I hadn’t seen in 30 years started popping up on my screen. A bit older, greyer and more seasoned than I remembered. This was global and virtual connections1 at scale.

That was 8 years ago and I was hooked.

Connecting with friends, college pals and past colleagues was now tech enabled. Sharing life’s moments and experiences was instant and also visual.

It was one to many.

Promise revealed

The web was starting to reveal its promise. It was coming to life. It felt human.

The hardware, software and communication networks were becoming an extension of our creative and tribal humanity enabled by bits and bytes. The neurons were not alone but now had an amplifier.

Twitter was also part of this puzzle and offered a different experience. Instant, simple and a tad confounding.

The new social networks also provided public validation of our creations. That simple tweet, like or share showed acceptance and popularity.

The other thing to love about these shiny new social toys was that they were free and devoid of ads. So we all played. It was like the Wild West. Land claims, some unsavoury characters and a sense of adventure were all part of the landscape.

But then it dawned.

These platforms were more than friend networks….it was much, much more. We were all about to discover what this was.

The pivot

Marketers, publishers and bloggers started to discover the power of a tweet and a Facebook update. The broad global adoption of these online communities reached critical mass. Hundreds of millions started to pile on.

Then it was billions.

This mass community made content move, drove traffic and brand awareness. It gave the invisible attention. Made videos go viral. No permission was needed to publish except the access to a computer and the Internet.

Small creative endeavours were discovered and businesses started to flourish online. The social networks didn’t make us creative they just allowed us all to be noticed. You just had to learn how to use it.

Then Facebook decided to pivot.

The Facebook profile had a new sibling. The Facebook page. The gold rush of the Wild West started in earnest. Social media was now touted as the marketing nirvana for business and brands. Message to the CEO from the marketing department and external social media consultants. “Don’t worry about the ROI…. that will happen“.

Advertising banners appeared and the masses got a bit annoyed but the marketers were chuffed. Google Adwords had a serious competitor.

But then something happened.

The hard truth

A clever data scientist (with way too many IQ points) was having a cocktail at a smart bar in Silicon Valley. An idea was born. Let’s jumble the newsfeed on Facebook. We will tell you what is important to view and……we will serve up ads on your timeline.

They have retired to the Bahamas and are now sipping Pina Coladas on the bonuses from that one idea!

Reaching your fans and friends was now dictated by the network’s computer algorithm. Organic traffic from fans almost disappeared overnight.

But the advertising revenue soared. It had to. It was past time to make payroll and keep the lights on without begging for more money from the venture capitalists.

With old social you had built a tribe, they had found your visible content and shared it with passion. Now it was buried and often never to be seen again.

Twitter has followed and Instagram is on the verge.

So the social media I knew had died. It is now just becoming another media channel that is pay to play. The financial reality is turning social into a freemium business model.

The hard truth is that the free and organic social media marketing doesn’t work like it used to. And that’s a bit annoying.

What to do

The good news. All’s not lost.  Things change and marketers and businesses will need to evolve. So what can we do?

First you need to  be aware of the changes and trends. Then you need to get cracking on the following:

  • Concentrate more on owning your traffic. Convert social and search traffic into a loyal email subscribers. Guess what happens when a millennial joins the workforce. They get an email address. Email marketing is not going away anytime soon. Use this to reach your audience when you want without a Facebook algorithm getting in the way
  • Invest in a digital marketing automation platform to do more with less. Scaling your marketing in a splintered media world needs proper grown up tools.
  • Re-purpose content onto other networks. Take your best posts and publish on Linkedin, Medium, Flipboard and even Slideshare.
  • Measure more and concentrate on what works best. The Pareto principle is a truism. Concentrate your efforts on 20% of the effort that produces 80% of the results. So start looking for a data scientist to add to your team.
  • Pay for social media traffic. But don’t do this unless you can measure the cost of leads and sales.
  • Don’t aim for the quick fix. The digital marketing game is not a sprint…..it is a marathon. Create pillar content around your key phrases you want to be found for on a Google search. Digital marketing is an asset build.
  • Work with influencers and collaborate with joint venture partners. The old art of networking is alive and kicking. But it is now global, web based and niche focused.

Digital marketing is a multi-discipline ecosystem that requires an understanding of how it all fits together. Search, social, email, content and automation technology all need to be in the mix.

The old social media we all knew was exciting. But it has evolved. It had to.

You just need to adapt.

About the author: Jeff Bullas

jeff - profile picJeff is an entrepreneur, blogger, author, marketer and speaker and works with personal brands and business to optimize online personal and company brands with emerging technologies, content, social media technologies and digital marketing. He has spent most of his career involved with information technologies, telecommunications and the web.

This article was first published by Jeff Bullas