It's not about social media...it's about brand and relationship
management
By Neil D. Wernick
Try having an
uninterrupted, five minute conversation with anyone under the age of 30 and you
may, if you can get over your anger, frustration and disappointment begin to
understand that you are witness to the fundamental shift that is taking place
in the way that people interact with one another. Make no mistake, this is not a phase, not a
fad and not a craze. It is a true and
certain paradigm shift...an irreversible change in the nature, scope and depth
of our relationships.
In our professional
lives, the impact is huge. We've built
our most valuable relationships the old-fashioned way: face-to-face across conference room and kitchen
tables, in private offices, in coffee shops, on the golf course or the tennis
court. We've maintained those
relationships through periodic, personal touch-points, many face-to-face. Most
of us and many of our clients still prefer to do business this way. But that is evolving quickly whether due to
aging demographics, increasing time demands or simply, personal
preferences. And to grow or even
maintain the success of our practices, we must evolve as well.
What social media has not changed are our mission and our
core values: To focus first and foremost
on our clients, their needs, priorities and preferences. Trust, confidence and integrity based on
experience and reputation are still, ultimately, what clients are buying when
they engage and retain you and your company.
You, in turn, earn their business every day by showing that: 1) you understand their goals and their risk
tolerance; 2) you maintain your leadership as a subject matter expert; 3) you
know how to navigate bureaucracy to get results; and 4) you are both proactive
and highly responsive to their needs. What
clients continue to demand is that you help deliver these outcomes with
accuracy, responsiveness and no surprises.
Our current research
indicates that financial services executives and street-level professionals are
pursuing social media primarily for brand-building and attracting new
clients. Most socially active
professionals gauge success at least in part by the volume of responses they
receive from their posts. However, these
same professionals generally believe that they have achieved only a moderate
level of social success. Therefore, the
state of social behavior today begs some critical questions including, how
to:
· Set
and achieve viable social media goals
· Demonstrate
value to others in your firm
· Gain
clarity about who to follow and who to pursue as followers
· Assure
that all social media activity contributes positively to your brand
· Deliver
a continuous flow of timely, value-added and compelling messages to carefully
targeted audiences
· Achieve
a time-effective balance between social media reading and posting
· Address
the challenges/obstacles posed by Compliance and/or Legal
The seemingly-vague and
random activities of social media may, at first, seem daunting to the
technologically-challenged among us. However,
the critical question is not, “How do
we, as successful financial services professionals, learn and master this new
set of relationship management skills?” but rather, “When?” To which the
unequivocal answer must be, “Now!”
Neil D. Wernick
is the president of Rifkin-Wernick Associates, a business consulting practice
engaged with some extraordinary people to achieve strategic, sustainable and
positive impact through communications, brand evolution and relationship
management.
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