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Digital Marketing, Facebook, SEO, Social Media

What’s the difference between reach and impressions… and other digital marketing terms worth understanding.

What’s the difference between reach and impressions… and other digital marketing terms worth understanding.

Digital marketing, like every other industry, comes with its own set of acronyms and terms to navigate, wade through and try to make sense of. While at first glance it might feel overwhelming, understanding the language of digital marketing is important, if you want to succeed at… digital marketing!

Whether you’re a digital marketing consultant, run an e-commerce shop, manage Facebook ads or simply use the internet to market your business, nonprofit, brand or hobby… go ahead and bookmark this blog post and refer back to it whenever you come across a digital marketing term or acronym you aren’t immediately familiar with.

And if you come across any digital marketing terms you think should be on this list but aren’t, let us know and we’ll add it to the list!

What’s the difference between reach and impressions?

The difference between reach and impressions is a big one. At first glance, reach and impressions seem the same. But they are not!

Reach is how many unique people saw an ad. Impressions is how many times the ad was seen in total.

So if five people saw an ad, but one of them saw it three times, the ad would have a reach of five and eight impressions.

You want (need!) people to see your ad more than once. But you don’t want them seeing the same piece of creative 20 times a day, every day for weeks on end.

Which is why it’s so important to understand the difference between reach and impressions.

If your impressions are high, but your reach is low, that could indicate that your budget is too large for your audience, that your audience is too narrow for your budget, or simply that it’s time to add some new creative into the mix.

What is frequency?

To figure out how many times on average someone saw your ad, you want to divide your reach into your impressions. The end result will be your frequency.

So in our example above, we had a reach of 5 and 8 impressions. 8 ÷ 5 = 1.6
So on average, everyone who saw your ad saw it 1.6 times.

Let’s keep going. Here are some more digital marketing paid ad terms you should know

CPC: Cost per click — how much it costs to get each person to click on your ad.

CPM: Cost per thousand (that M is a Roman Numeral 🤷‍♂️) — how much it costs to get 1000 impressions of your ad.

CTA: Call To Action — what do you want people to do after seeing your ad?

Boosted vs Dark Ads: A “boosted post” is one that’s live on your feed that you put money behind. A “dark ad” is an ad that does NOT live on your feed, but you spend money to get it to reach folks.

Let’s say you’re a clothing brand. You might want to share a post announcing a storewide sale. That’s great for a boosted post.

But if you’re running specific ads to women under 25, another to women over 45, a different one to men who like County music, and another to parents… your feed might feel a bit overwhelming. Dark ads solve that issue for you, allowing you to target ads at specific audiences without having all of the ads living on your feed.

Retargeting: Have you ever looked at a pair of shoes online, and then the next day seen an ad for that exact pair of shoes on Instagram or Facebook? That’s not magic — that’s retargeting!

You can retarget based on general Facebook or Instagram engagement, video views on Facebook or Instagram, visitors to your website, visitors to a specific page on your website… all that fun stuff.

Want to learn how to take advantage of retargeting on Facebook and Instagram? Learn more about my private Facebook Ads Manager training!

Facebook Pixel: But how can Facebook retarget a visitor to your website you might be asking? Simple: through the Facebook Pixel!

The pixel is a small piece of code you add to your header that enables Facebook to track visitors to your site.

Other platforms also have such pixels, including Twitter and LinkedIn.

Lookalike Audiences: Facebook Advertising allows for 3 different types of audiences, Custom, Saved and Lookalike. Custom Audiences are unique to you (your mailing list, your website traffic, your engaged community). Saved Audiences use Facebook’s “saved” data to target people in an area, of a specific age group or those interested in a certain topic. Lookalike Audiences are where you take a Custom Audience of yours that is performing well, let Facebook determine what those folks have in common and then find other people with the same things in common. Big caveat: if your Custom Audience isn’t working, your Lookalike Audience will also not work. If your Custom Audience is working, then your Lookalike Audience MIGHT work.

Want to learn more about Custom, Saved and Lookalike Audiences in Facebook? Let’s chat!

Master The Facebook Ads Manager

 

CTR: Click Through Rate — what percentage of people clicked on your content after seeing it?

ROI: Return On Investment — If you’re running e-commerce or fundraising ads, you probably want to know how much money you are bringing in compared to how much you are spending. That’s your ROI.

ROAS: Return On Ad Spend — similarly, Return On Ad Spend tells you exactly how much each sale cost you in ads. Due to changes in online tracking, it has gotten hard to track ROAS directly in the Facebook Ads Manager. But you can still track your own ROAS by dividing how much you spent into how much you have brought in.

CPA: Cost Per Acquisition — if you’re running lead ads, the cost to get a single lead is your CPA.

Engagement: Anytime anyone does something with your ad, that’s engagement. This is also true for organic content (which we’ll get into that next!).

So likes, comments, shares, video views… all that fun stuff is engagement.

Okay, so what is the difference between paid and organic social media content?

Paid simply means that you put money behind it. Organic, on the other hand, means that you did not. So a Facebook post or tweet — those are organic content, unless you whipped out your credit card to promote them.

Likewise, when it comes to SEO (more on that below), paid traffic is when you spend money to get folks to visit your site. Organic traffic is when they find you on their own through Google or another search platform.

Let’s look at some more digital marketing terms you should know in the SEO space

First of all, what’s SEO?

SEO is Search Engine Optimization. It’s the ability of someone to find you on Google (or another search platform). If someone searches a very general keyword in your industry, and you’re the first thing to come up on Google, you have phenomenal SEO. If someone searches your exact name on Google and you don’t come up, you have very bad SEO. Most brands live somewhere in between.

SERP: Search Engine Results Page — what you see when you run a search on Google. You want your brand showing up. The way to show up towards the top? Having great SEO!

SEM: Search Engine Marketing — when you are putting money into driving traffic to your site via Google Ads (or Bing).

PPC: Pay Per Click — When you run Google Ads, you are literally paying per click. How much will be determined by the quality of your ads and the difficulty of the keywords you are targeting.

Keywords: What people search on Google to find you. It could be a short keyword (or phrase) – “digital marketing consultant” or a long-tail keyword – “find a digital marketing consultant in Madison, WI who works for progressive political campaigns.”

Landing Page: Where you send traffic, from Google searches, social media or anything else. I have several verticals that I serve. I don’t send them all to my homepage (not by a long shot!). I have a landing page for my general digital marketing consulting. And another for my social media keynote speaking. And then one for my social media and digital marketing trainings. I have another for my political work. Want to work with me to learn more about how to navigate Facebook, Twitter, Instagram or the Facebook Ads Manager? I teach private classes for all of them and each course has its own landing page! Likewise I have landing pages for my two podcasts — Step Up Your Social and Hello Merge Tag — as well as my newsletter Free Digital Tools. I do this because I don’t want to put the job of finding the right place on my website on a potential client or partner. I want to be able to send them directly to the place on my website that will be most useful for them. It’s called the landing page, because it’s literally the page I first want them to land on.

What Are The Three Types of Links In SEO?

Want to get more traffic to your landing pages? Links are your friend! There are three types:

Backlinks (also called Inbound Links): this is when another website links to yours. Google LOVES backlinks. Especially from websites that are highly trusted by Google (do not buy backlinks, that can do more harm than good), but always be on the lookout for ways to earn legitimate backlinks from reputable sources.

External Links (also called Outbound Links): These are links from your website to other websites. Google likes these… IF you are sending people to reputable sites. If you are sending people to places Google knows are legit, it helps show that you are also legit. Conversely, if you’re sending folks to spammy spots, Google will not like that.

Internal Links: There are links from one landing page on your website to another. Above, when I listed out a bunch of my landing pages — each of those links directly to the landing page in question. This might not help your overall SEO but it can help Google understand which pages on your site they should prioritize when people are running searches.

What Are Some Other SEO Terms I Should Know?

DA: Domain Authority — how much Google likes a given site. Domain Authority works on a scale of 0-100. A website with a DA of 5 is not reputable (yet). One with a DA of 95 is extremely reputable! Backlinks from sites with high DA are MUCH more desirable for SEO than backlinks from sites with low DAs.

Alt Text: This is text that describes an image for folks who can’t see. It’s good for SEO, but also super important for accessibility. You can add alt text to images on your website, as well as on many social media platforms.

Bounce Rate: The percentage of folks who visit your website or landing page without proceeding on or taking action. So if 100 people visit your landing page, and 98 of them leave without doing anything else (smash that CTA button, order a product, click on to another page on your site), you have a bounce rate of 98%.

H1 and H2: The H1 on a landing page is the largest text, and it should be right at the top. It should be very SEO-friendly (use your keywords in there!). You are telling both Google and your audience what to expect from your site. Each page gets only one H1 tag. H2s are the next level down from H1s and you can have numerous on your site. H in this case literally stands for header, so feel free to break your site down regularly with H2s. Having numerous headers on a landing page can be good for the reader (as well as for Google if you use keywords strategically throughout).

UTM: Urchin Tracking Module — I’m going to be honest. I had to look up what UTM actually stood for to write this blog post. I use, and talk about, UTMs all the time. But I never actually knew what it stood for. It’s just a UTM. These are unique and trackable codes that go at the end of URLs for the purpose of knowing which sources are sending you which traffic. Anything after a ? in a url is part of a UTM or tracking code. You can use unique UTMs for ads, for links you share with influencers, on QR codes or anywhere else you want to track to know which link is actually bringing in traffic… and leading to conversions. Google Analytics will break down those UTM codes for you, to make it very easy to see which channels are working for you and which are not. Want to build your own UTM tracking codes with ease? Google has you covered!

Now Let’s Look At Some General Digital Marketing Terms

KPI: Key Performance Indicator — the metric (or metrics) you truly care about that enable you to track your ongoing success.

Evergreen Content: This is content that’s relevant all the time, as opposed to content that will no longer be relevant after a certain date/holiday/season. Holiday content can be great to share annually, but not all the time. But some content is good to have out there on an ongoing basis. Like a fir or a pine tree, that content is evergreen.

UGC: User Generated Content — This is content made by fans of your brand. Sell a product or offer a service? Telling people how great it is can be nice. But far better to encourage UGC from people who love your brand talking about how great you are!

Lead Magnet or Lead Gen Tool: Lead gen is short for lead generation. This is a free thing you give away in exchange for an email address. It has to be valuable enough that someone would want it, and it has to be relevant to your brand. Want a free checklist for going Live on Facebook? I have a free one on my site (download it here). Over the years, I’ve had many people trade me their email addresses for that free checklist. I love lead gen tools — in fact, I recently did a full episode on my podcast Step Up Your Social about them. You can find that episode here. (That episode, like other eps of Step Up Your Social is short — ~10 mins or less — and provides quick, actionable tips to take your digital marketing to the next level.)

Favicon — Look up at the tab in your browser where you are currently reading this blog post. See that little orange echo sign? That’s my favicon. Most websites have them. Those that don’t… should! If your site doesn’t have one, Google “add a favicon + ___” and fill in whichever platform your site was built in (WordPress, Wix, Squarespace…). You should find plenty of resources quickly walking you through how to add one to your site.

What Is The Marketing Funnel?

The Marketing Funnel is a concept to help understand your current and potential audiences’ relationship with your brand.

Most folks aren’t familiar with you and what you do. As you put content into the world and grow your brand, you’re bringing folks into the top of your funnel. As you continue to add value for them, you move them into the middle of your funnel. Ultimately, you show them that you are extremely valuable and they shouldn’t go another day without you and your brand and whatever product or service you provide. Now they’re at the bottom of your funnel.

And there are acronyms for all three:

TOFU: Top of Funnel
MOFU: Middle of Funnel
BOFU: Bottom of Funnel

While these are funny terms, they’re actually quite important. You should be thinking about what kind of content and offerings you are creating for all three of those levels. For TOFU, you might have a TikTok account sharing basic tips and tricks about your industry. But you have a goal to get folks onto your email list. As you move folks from TikTok to your email marketing program, they have entered your MOFU, and now you need new kinds of content to keep them engaged and excited. Then maybe you sell a course or provide digital marketing consulting or want to sell them a vacuum cleaner (whatever!) — your BOFU content should be moving them from seeing the value to taking the plunge and becoming a customer!

What’s The AIDA Model?

Another helpful way to think about this is through the AIDA Model.
They start at Awareness, move to Interest, proceed to Desire before ultimately taking Action.

Want to make a sale? First you have to walk them through a process. No one is going to buy from you, or hire you, until they are aware you exist, interested in what you do and found a desire to learn more or proceed in some way.

You can read more about the AIDA Model here.

Let’s Look At A Few More General Digital Marketing Acronyms And Terms You Should Probably Know

If you made it this far, hell yeah! You’re pretty much a pro.

I have a few more digital marketing terms and acronyms for you.

DAUs: Daily Average Users — this is how many people use a website or platform every day.

MAUs: Monthly Average Users — this is how many people use a website or platform every month.

TAM: Total Addressable Market (or Total Available Market) — this is how many people in the world might actually care about your product or service and could eventually become a customer. The TAM for Uber is anyone with a credit card. The TAM for someone selling business insurance is anyone who owns a business. The TAM for a company selling licorice dispensers inspired by Wayne’s World? Probably not huge, but almost certainly a very cool group!

B2B: Business to Business — Businesses, services or products marketed to other businesses. This might be accounting software, office lighting, digital marketing consulting specifically for law firms… anything that is intended specifically for other businesses.

B2C: Business to Consumer —Business, services or products marketed to consumers. Most products and services are B2C. If you’re selling to homeowners, or retail, or promoting your restaurant or anything related to individuals as opposed to businesses, you’re in the B2C space.

What’s The Difference Between Inbound, Outboard and Content Marketing?

Okay, final section of digital marketing acronyms and terms worth knowing. What’s the difference between Inbound Marketing, Outbound Marketing and Content Marketing?

Outbound Marketing: This is when you go out and try and get your brand, product or service in front of people directly. This can include hiring sales people, cold calling, DMing and emailing prospects, sending messages to folks you don’t already know on LinkedIn… all that fun stuff.

Content Marketing: When you create content with the goal of bringing people to you. So if you create valuable content on social media, if you blog, if you have a podcast, if you release white papers or ebooks, if you give away lead magnets… you are focused on Content Marketing.

Inbound Marketing: Inbound Marketing is focused on bringing leads to you through a combination of Content Marketing and other experiences. This can induce tools, interactive media and the like.

That Was A Lot of Digital Marketing Terms and Acronyms… Wasn’t It?!

Digital Marketing is a constantly evolving field. New concepts emerge all the time.

But if you understand these core digital marketing terms and acronyms, you should be in pretty great shape!

Bookmark this post to refer back to. And maybe share it with a friend or two who you think might appreciate it.

Come across a digital marketing term or acronym I didn’t include? Ping me and let me know. I’m always looking to keep my content as evergreen as possible!

Have any questions about your digital marketing program? Let’s chat! I love helping progressive campaigns, organizations and brands of all shapes and sizes find, hone and tell their stories online.

 

October 3, 2023/0 Comments/by Josh Klemons
https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/digital-marketing-terms-and-acronyms-to-know.png 1500 1500 Josh Klemons https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Reverbal-Communications-Josh-Klemons.svg Josh Klemons2023-10-03 09:46:512023-10-04 09:37:10What’s the difference between reach and impressions… and other digital marketing terms worth understanding.
Politics, TikTok

I’ve gotten nearly 5 million views on TikTok in a year and I’ve done it without following trends, dancing or using any video editing software. Here’s what I’ve learned.

I use TikTok as a progressive organizing and mobilization tool.

I wrote this blog post after my first year of active posting on TikTok. After my second year of active posting on TikTok, I shared some additional thoughts on one of my podcasts. You can find that episode here.

 

I’ve been on TikTok since before it was a household name. But for years I just used it to scroll… and to occasionally post silly videos of things that amused me.

In late September 2022, I was feeling particularly angry about Wisconsin’s undemocratic maps. I was waiting outside a restaurant for a curbside pickup and I pulled out my phone and did a short explainer about just how rigged Wisconsin’s maps truly were.

The whole video was 20 seconds long.

A screenshot of a tiktok I did talking about wisconsin's undemocratic maps

You can see it here.

It blew up.

I mean, it didn’t go viral by some standards. But I had double-digit followers on the platform and had barely ever posted any content. And this post reached around 11k views within a few days (now north of 12k fwiw).

And it didn’t just get a lot of views. It also got a ton of engagement. At the time I’m writing this, it has over 1200 likes and nearly 100 comments.

Which, in and of itself, was mind-blowing. But what really knocked me out was how many of the folks commenting were right here in Wisconsin.

At that time, I kind of assumed that TikTok’s algorithm wasn’t breaking things down like that. It seemed more general — dances and trends were going viral nationally (or even globally!)… not locally.

This video helped me see —quite clearly — that TikTok can, without a doubt, do local.

A few days later, I was livetweeting a debate between Mandela Barnes and Ron “mouthwash cures COVID” Johnson. I tweeted that it was pretty clear that while Mandela Barnes was from Wisconsin, Ron Johnson was from the 1950s.

It did pretty well on Twitter. So I repeated the line on TikTok.

And guess what? It really blew up!

Screenshot of a Tiktok about Mandela Barnes and Wisconsin Senator Ron Johnson

The video was 9 seconds long and it reached over 42k people! It has (at the time of this writing) over 6600 likes and 200 comments.

You can see it here.

And it was, again, engaging actual Wisconsin voters.

With that, I was hooked. I’ve been sharing about a video a day on average ever since.

Initially, this was all an organizing effort to try to get out the vote for Mandela Barnes, Governor Tony Evers and Wisconsin Democrats up and down the ballot during the November 2022 Midterm elections.

Mandela got closer to unseating any incumbent Senator nationwide, Tony won re-election and Wisconsin Assembly Democrats held off a supermajority (something that was far from guaranteed – it was actually the subject of that first video, if you want to check it out).

After November, I pivoted to Wisconsin’s April election, with the goal of helping flip the Wisconsin State Supreme Court (which we did!).

Then, it was just on to general organizing and progressive educational content.

Throughout I’ve focused on Wisconsin, but never limited myself to it. I’d say about 60% of my posts are Wisconsin-specific, while the rest are national stories.

Since that first video talking about Wisconsin gerrymandering, I’ve wracked up nearly 5 million views.

And hundreds of thousands of likes.

And tens of thousands of comments.

And also – very interestingly – countless shares (both to other users as well as to other platforms).

So here’s what I’ve learned since I started posting daily to TikTok a year ago

 

Niche Matters

This isn’t novel advice, but it holds up: having a niche matters. If your content is all over the place, the algorithm just isn’t gonna know what to do with you.

I actually have three TikTok accounts (sigh). I don’t post to either of the other two with the same kind of frequency that I post to my primary account, but I’m a guy with a lot of interests. Rather than cramming them all into one account, I spun them out into three.

My second account is for my music. I’m an Americana/folk/bluegrass singer/songwriter – it’s called Flannel and Rust – you can find that account here.

My third is in the digital marketing space. It’s called Free Digital Tools and I share digital marketing tips, tricks, hacks and strategies – you can find that account here.

Engagement Matters… If You Want To Build A Community

Some days it’s practically a full-time job, but I respond or engage with every single comment. The only exception to this is on posts that really blow up, I sometimes just have to give up.

I had one post reach over 500k people. I tried to keep up with the comments, but they were coming in faster than I could respond.

I try to give meaningful responses to real questions and comments. If it’s a simple comment (“boost” or “thank you”), I often respond just with simple statements such as hell yeah, or yes! I also regularly use emojis to respond.

But those responses matter. For the algorithm for sure, but also for the community building component.

TikTok isn’t really a social platform. It’s a video platform with a wonky comments section.

But I’ve had numerous folks reach out (in comments and in my DMs) to let me know they appreciate that I’m responding and engaging with them.

And the more I make these videos and engage with my community, the more folks are starting to tag me into other people’s videos. I’ve also started having requests from folks to do videos on certain topics!

It’s a big world out there — but over the last year, I have managed to build up not viewers, but a community. And that’s not something to ignore!

My content is very partisan. Most folks commenting love that. Some hate it. If someone has a ridiculous comment, I might not respond. But often I do. And unless they’re a serious jerk, I always try to engage with them in a respectful and decent way.

It’s easy to call someone a jerk and move on. I don’t do that. I engage.

I have had people in my comments tell me they are Republicans, but that if I ran for office, they’d vote for me. (Needless to say, I’m as opposite of a Republican as they come!)

I’ve had people say nasty things in my comments, and I’ve responded with decency and seen them get taken aback. One person literally thanked me for not being a jerk back to him, and let me know that while he doesn’t agree with me, he understands that we can all do better.

Not sure what better outcome I could ask for from someone who supports Donald Trump for President. While I want Democrats to win at the ballot box, getting everyone to be a bit more decent sure seems like a small victory to me!

Sound and Lighting Matter (As Well As Content Of Course) — But Not Much Else!

In the title of this post, I said I had almost 5 million views without ever dancing, following trends or using editing software.

That’s not quite true. I did one video using editing software — it was an excerpt from my podcast. I thought the video was great. It bombed.

I’ll likely try again — but honestly, this is not a problem. It’s a gift!

If every video had to be highly produced to succeed, there’s no way in hell I could drop a video a day (often more!).

It would take a week to pull something together.

Lighting matters. Sound matters. Content matters.

But in my experience, that’s about it.

I often use the greenscreen tool to show screenshots behind me in a shot. But more often, I literally just flip my camera around and hold it up in front of my computer to show a website or a tweet, while I talk over it.

The first time I did that, I was almost too embarrassed to hit post.

But it did great and now I do it all the time.

In my experience, folks don’t care how “good” the content looks, they care about how helpful or interesting it is.

That is a gift for you and your brand. There is nothing standing between you and posting “good content” save for the will to get started.

You don’t need to be an Adobe Premiere expert or to know how to create amazing digital graphics — you just need to pull out your phone and start talking.

Hooks Matter

I’m a storyteller. It’s literally my job title (Digital Storyteller/Strategist). I love to spin out a tale, working patiently toward the lesson, the punchline or the takeaway.

But not on TikTok!

On TikTok, I start with the hook and then I build back to it.

You have moments to get folks to stop scrolling and hang with you for the length of your video. You either nail them with your intro… or you can wave goodbye.

A good intro needs to do two things: it needs to be captivating enough to get them to stop scrolling, and it needs to connect directly to your video.

You can shout “sex” or something stupid, to get their attention. And you will probably get it — but if it doesn’t connect, the audience is going to know and they are not going to treat you kindly.

Follow those two simple rules above, and remember that your intro is your hook. Then find a way to build back to it.

You Never Know What Will Work… So Just Keep On Posting

I’ve done posts that have reached a few hundred people. And posts that have reached hundreds of thousands of people.

What was the difference in them? No freaking idea!

Honestly, my posts that “blow” up are rarely the ones I think will.

I drop a post and watch it hit a few hundred. Sometimes it stops there. Sometimes, it gets up to 1500. Sometimes it keeps climbing into the tens of thousands. And occasionally it just keeps going, reaching hundreds of thousands of people.

I have no idea why one post flies while another one doesn’t. I could stress out about it — but instead, I just keep going.

By posting around once a day, I am confident that some posts will do fine, and others will do great.

Don’t stress about how well today’s posts are doing — just keep on going.

TikTok Analytics Are Just Okay

TikTok analytics are pretty powerful. BUT you can’t look back beyond 60 days.

There are some holes in their analytics in general — but they’re better than Twitter’s (never-working these days) analytics. And much better than LinkedIn’s analytics. I’d say they’re about on par with Instagram.
Except after 60 days… poof. They are gone completely.

So if you care about such things, either hook your account up to a third-party tool that will keep tracking and reporting on that data for you, or export it yourself on a regular basis.

I do both. I have my TikTok account hooked up to my Publer account solely for analytic tracking. But I waited too long to get started there and it’s not a full picture. So along with that, once a month, I export data for the previous month and add it to a spreadsheet where I can see reach, comments, likes and shares.

I do this because I’m a huge analytics nerd. But I’m a huge analytics nerd because I think if you aren’t tracking your analytics, you don’t really have any idea what’s working.

Do with that what you will 🤓

Keywords Matter

Like I said above, I have no idea why one post works well and the next doesn’t. But I do know, that for the content I want to be shown to folks in Wisconsin, I use every tool in my digital toolkit to ensure that happens.

When my videos are intended for a local audience I use the word Wisconsin in the video, as well as in the accompanying text. I also use a few Wisconsin-specific hashtags. And I tag myself as being in Wisconsin.

I do all of the above about other locations as well (say I’m doing a story about Ohio), save for tagging myself there. It’s possible TikTok won’t mind — but I feel weird essentially lying to my community.

The text accompanying TikTok posts used to be limited to 150 characters (shorter than a tweet!). Then they bumped them up to 2200. You do not need to use them all, but it’s nice to have the option to go a bit longer to really get those keywords in there.

Take advantage of it.

When I’m doing a story about a local area (city/municipality/State Assembly district…), I’ll use hashtags for all the largest communities in the area.

If I was a local nonprofit or business, I’d be tagging myself in my city, as opposed to my state. But for me, I’m talking to a statewide (if not a national) audiences more than to local ones.

Do what makes sense for you.

I’ve already spoken about this above, but it’s so important, I’d be remiss not to reiterate: TikTok can get local! You just have to help it get there.

There Are No Links, But You Can Definitely Still Move and Mobilize People

You can add a link to your bio IF you have at least 1000 followers OR you register as a business.

I registered as a business right off the bat in order to add that link, but they kept taking down my videos. Once I switched off the business setting, my videos got taken down waaaay less often. They clearly hold business accounts to different standards than individual accounts. It was infuriating, because none of my videos were against TikTok’s terms of service, but it is what it is. I switched it off and the problem mostly went away.

That link in your bio is the only link you get on the platform.

And despite having tens of thousands of people visit my profile, I get virtually no traffic to my website from that link.

But TikTok can mobilize people without a doubt.

Early on, I ran a test. Ron Johnson was being ridiculous (what else is new!). He had set up a website asking for public input on something absurd. I did a video encouraging folks to go ahead and let him know what was on their minds. 😏

I built a Bitly link and mentioned it in my video. (If you aren’t familiar with Bitly links, check out episode 20 of my podcast Step Up Your Social — I discuss what they are and when to use them.)

Why did I use a Bitly link? Two reasons:

1) Expecting people to retype the full website would have been ridiculous (remember, you can’t click the link, or even copy and paste it, so folks have to type it out).
2) Bitly links come with built-in analytics.

I knew folks would like and comment on my post. I wanted to see if they would also take action.

Guess what: they did!

This was VERY early into my year of TikTok and dozens of people followed the Bitly link to go talk directly to Ron “never saw a conspiracy theory I wasn’t willing to promote” Johnson.

More recently, I’ve been very active in the fight against the Wisconsin Republican’s bullshit, undemocratic, what-the-hell-are-they-even-thinking impeachment of Justice Janet Protasiewicz. Wisconsin Democrats built out a website called defendjustice.com and have asked folks to go there, get contact info for their elected officials and reach out against impeachment.

I did a few videos and scores of people reported in the comments that they had done just that.

One of the videos alone was also shared 550 times!

And it’s not just digital engagement.

I’ve posted about special elections and had people report in the comments that they didn’t know there was an election but that it was their district and they were going to vote because I had alerted them to it.

I’ve never had a tweet directly lead someone to go vote (not that I know about anyway). But I’ve had dozens of people TELL ME they voted directly because of my content. Who knows how many more people were indirectly affected by it? The shares on some of my videos are wild!

TikTok doesn’t let you send traffic like Facebook or Twitter — but it can sure as hell mobilize people if used well.

There’s a Massive Opportunity In Going Live

I haven’t used TikTok Live much, but there is a massive opportunity should you choose to build out a live strategy.

(Quick caveat: you need 1000 followers in order to go live. So if you can’t figure out how to go live, that’s probably why. Keep posting — you’ll get there!)

I generally do short news roundup-type posts. They don’t lend themselves easily to live content.

At some point, I hope to partner up with other creators and do live conversations — but while it’s just me, it’s been hard to find an easy way to make live make sense.
That said, I went live once this past year and I was legit blown away by the experience.

Remember when the House of Representatives REALLY didn’t want Kevin McCarthy to be Speaker of the House, and they just kept voting and voting on who should be in charge?

I went live for a round of voting — it actually wound up being the final round (!!!) but I had no way to know it would be at the time.

It was late. I was watching C-SPAN by myself on the couch (because — hello, I’m a huge nerd if that’s not already clear!). I wanted to watch one more round before bed, my wife was already upstairs sleeping and I was just messing around. I pulled out my phone, hit live and just held my phone up to the TV and started talking.

Within minutes, I had 1500 people watching me talk. It was jarring.

But very quickly, the vast majority of them bounced. And I was left with about 25 people. Folks came and went, but a core group stuck with me the whole time. And I was live for over an hour!

Like I said above, this isn’t about an audience, it’s about a community. I’d much rather have 25 people hang with me for an hour than 1000 people tune in for 30 seconds.

It was an interesting conversation — they could only type in the comments, I could type or speak. Mostly I narrated what was happening and answered their questions.

The folks that stuck with me, LOVED IT. Like, way more than my wife or IRL friends would have 🤣

There were a few Republicans in the chat who were asking me questions and pushing back. But it was cordial and interesting. One young guy in Washington State told me his gummies (plural!) had kicked in and that he had a crush on me. It was unlike anything else I’ve ever done on social to date.

I never even once showed my face. My camera stayed on C-SPAN the whole time and I just spoke to the folks who were watching with me.

If this was my primary business platform, I’d be going live at least once or twice a week.

I’m not saying you have to — but if you can find a way to make it work for you, and you have at least 1000 followers, I highly recommend giving it a shot. Worst case scenario — it doesn’t go great. Best case scenario — your audience falls for you… hard. ❤️

TikTok Customer Service Sucks… Just Like Every Other Major Social Media Platform

While I was writing this blog post, I took a break to check my notifications and I saw something weird. “Josh Klemons” was responding to dozens of comments with videos trying to get people to follow him to Telegram.

This was obviously not me.

Someone had taken my name, photo and handle (with an added _ ) and was trying to get people to follow him to Telegram in order to sell them crypto (I know because I followed him and got his garbage pitch).

On the one hand — it’s flattering. Weird to think I have enough engagement or clout for someone to bother going through the trouble. I guess. 🙃

But of course, I was horrified. Someone was trying to use my name and photo to run a scam.

I immediately reported the account to TikTok.

Impersonating someone like that is against their terms of service. It’s spelled out clearly.

But they found no violation. They let me know that if I want, I can take up the issue with law enforcement. There is no appeal process.

I went to their customer service Twitter account and asked for help. I got an auto-response telling me to report it on TikTok. I immediately responded that I’d done so and it hadn’t helped. No response despite many messages trying to re-engage them.

I did a video letting folks know what was happening. Sure enough, he was DMing a bunch of my followers trying to scam them. A bunch of them reported the account. Still nothing!

It makes no sense to let this kind of corrupt BS continue — but that is exactly what TikTok is opting to do.

A few weeks ago, I posted a story about Nazis marching in Wisconsin. I was obviously horrified at the fact. TikTok let the video run for a bit and then took it down as being against ToS. I actually think that’s a good thing — they should be overly cautious about Nazi-related content.

But I appealed, hoping they would see that my content was anti-Nazi, not pro.

Didn’t matter. Not only did the video stay banned, they warned me that I had received a strike on my account and that further strikes could cost me access to parts of the platform.

How many more strikes? What might I lose access to? How could I prevent such strikes?

None of those questions have answers anywhere to be found.

It’s quite disappointing that a platform as important as TikTok has opted for such a hands-off moderation approach.

Need help from TikTok customer support? You might as well reach out to Meta to ask for it — you’re equally unlikely to find it there or anywhere else.

I say this not to dissuade, but to ensure you know what you are getting into as a content creator on TikTok.

To Post Or Not To Post

I’m not saying you should be posting on TikTok. I am saying that there is a tremendous opportunity to grow a community on the platform.

If you have ever thought to yourself, I can’t post on TikTok because I don’t want to do silly dances and keep up with trends — let this post serve as an inspiration to the fact that, while those work (well!) for some, I’ve had nearly 5 million impressions and over a third of a million likes in less than a year without ever once dancing or using trends.

Truth be told, I did try one trend one time. It bombed. I deleted it and never looked back.

There are people doing amazing things on TikTok with complicated editing, brilliant comedy, amazing… everything! And I’m so glad those folks exist.

But there is room to grow on TikTok to just pull out your phone and talk — in a helpful way — to your audience.

Don’t believe me?

Come join my community on TikTok and see for yourself.

In the words of one great community member:

screenshot of a tiktok comment that reads: "Thanks for the local news. Your account is so awesome."

I didn’t set out to serve as a source of local news. But once I realized I was helping people keep up with topics I cared about, I felt lucky to get to keep it going!

Want to talk TikTok, or digital marketing of any kind?

When I’m not posting to TikTok, I’m helping progressive brands, campaigns and organizations find, hone and tell their stories online.

Hit me up today and let’s win the internet together!

September 21, 2023/0 Comments/by Josh Klemons
https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/what-ive-learned-from-a-year-on-tiktok.png 1500 1500 Josh Klemons https://joshklemons.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Reverbal-Communications-Josh-Klemons.svg Josh Klemons2023-09-21 12:05:402024-12-05 10:54:38I’ve gotten nearly 5 million views on TikTok in a year and I’ve done it without following trends, dancing or using any video editing software. Here’s what I’ve learned.
Digital Marketing

How to Become a Digital Marketing Consultant

How to Become A Digital Marketing Consultant

Hootsuite recently published an article called “How To Become a Social Media Consultant in 2023.” I was honored to be featured in their roundup.

I shared a lot of tips for the article, and not all of them made their way into the final draft. So I figured I’d take my tips, add a few more, and share them with you now.

Want to become a social media or digital marketing consultant?

Here is my advice:

Respond to Emails… Quickly

good digital marketing consultants respond to email quickly

First things first, respond to emails. (This was my tip that did make it into the article, and it’s an important one!)

When I first got started as a digital marketing consultant, I did not have a large network in my community (or in general). I had a website, but it wasn’t showing up on the first page of Google for digital marketing consultant… or for much else!

But I hustled, I got involved, I created loads of content (more on all of this in a bit) and I did the work of getting myself known.

And leads started coming in.

And when they did, you better believe I replied to them.

In my early days as a digital marketing consultant, I got several gigs simply by being not just the first — but often the only — one to respond!

It was shocking to me how many in the field were hustling so hard for leads… and then ignoring them when they hit their inbox.

It didn’t matter if I was the perfect fit, or totally wrong, I responded to every email. And I responded quickly.

And that simple fact set me apart right at the top of the process.

I’ve now been a digital marketing consultant for many years — but guess what: I still respond to every email. And I still respond quickly.

Get Involved and Say Yes

to be a good digital marketing consultant, you have to say yes

It doesn’t matter how talented you are, or how much experience you have, unless you are walking away from a job with a roster of digital marketing consulting clients in hand (in which case, good for you!), you need to find ways to get yourself known.

I’m a consummate content marketer (more on this below) but the best way to get known is to show up!

When I was first starting out as a digital marketing consultant, I joined a coworking community. And I got involved in a bunch of networking groups. And showed up to events where I knew I would meet other entrepreneurs, freelancers and digital marketers.

I never went anywhere looking for clients. I just wanted to grow my network.

People can spot a salesperson a mile away at a networking event. You can try and sell — but you’ll be disappointed every time. Instead, go to learn, to meet new people, to offer value where you can.

Not only did I make some long-lasting friends during this period of my life, I also joined nonprofit boards, met awesome and brilliant people… and ultimately got a lot of my early clients through direct connections I made just being out in the community and getting involved.

Which brings me to the second part of getting involved… don’t be afraid to say yes!

I volunteered a lot of my time when I was first starting out as a digital marketing consultant (which is something I still do!!!). And I can directly connect the dots between things I did as a volunteer when I was starting out and all of my initial big clients.

  • I volunteered to run a free training for a cohort of nonprofits to get better at Twitter (RIP to that once great platform). The cohort was sponsored by a large company, and someone from the company attended the training. They wound up hiring me to help them with their digital marketing!
  • I attended networking events at my coworking space where we, as a group, provided free “audits” for local organizations covering digital marketing, branding and all kinds of other things. Someone from the networking group recognized the value I was bringing to the room and connected me with my largest client at the time for what turned out to be a massive project.
  • I was once at a networking event and someone called me over to meet a colleague who was struggling with their Facebook Ads. We chatted for 20 minutes, and I helped him troubleshoot some possible solutions. He was so happy with the results, he wound up bringing me in to help them ramp up their entire digital marketing program.

Bear in mind, I didn’t volunteer to run that Twitter training expecting it to lead to a gig. I didn’t go to those group audits hoping someone would send me a referral. And I didn’t help the guy with his Facebook Ads so he’d hire me. I did all of those things because I am obsessed with digital marketing and a true believer in its power to help companies, organizations and brands do great things in the world!

And let’s not overlook the fact that for every story I can share today about such a result, there were ten more times I helped out without it leading to new clients.

If you’re good at what you do, and you can help folks improve, do it! You’ll add to the good in the world, while growing your personal brand in the process.

And if you want to be a digital marketing consultant, it’s one of the best ways to get started.

Join Digital Communities… and Be Nice!

digital marketing consultants should be nice to everyone

It’s worth clarifying that “getting out there” doesn’t just have to be a local endeavor. I’m active in numerous digital communities with folks who, on paper look like my competitors.

But forget that!

I get leads through my communities. But I also share leads. And most importantly, I learn from my peers.

Not every client is going to be the right fit for you — if you can refer them to a better fit, great! 

I can say, without a doubt, that one of the most valuable tools in my digital marketing consultant toolkit, is the digital communities I’ve joined (or even started!).

If I have a question, someone in there likely has an answer.

And if someone else has a question, and I can answer it, I’m definitely going to.

This field is not zero sum — far from it!

My brother is a jazz musician in New York. You’d think a lot of the big players would be jerks. Not at all. He says there are so many great players in the scene that if you’re not a nice person, no one is going to call you.

What a great twist! Who cares how good you are — if you’re not pleasant to work with, no one’s going to call!

If you have a huge ego, or you treat people badly, don’t expect a lot of referrals.

I get a ton of referrals from my “competitors” who see me as a better fit for particular clients or projects. And I regularly send folks to them if they’re a better fit than me for someone I’m talking to.

Be nice, help when you can. The world’s too small to be a jerk.

Become A Content Marketer

become a content marketer

While I highly encourage you to get out there, and stay out there, doing so has its limitations. And as you get busy with your digital marketing consulting, it gets harder and harder to say yes.

(That said, I still say yes and I’m still out there sitting on boards and staying involved, no matter how busy my business gets.)

You only have so many hours in the day to weigh in and problem-solve for your peers in Facebook Groups.

Along with IRL and digital networking, you should also be focused on content marketing.

Per the Content Marketing Institute, content marketing is:

“a strategic marketing approach focused on creating and distributing valuable, relevant, and consistent content to attract and retain a clearly defined audience — and, ultimately, to drive profitable customer action.”

Put simply, content marketing is adding value to the world, rather than trying to make your pitch.

I have two podcasts, both focused on digital marketing.

  • The first is called Step Up Your Social. All episodes are short (~10 minutes or less) providing quick, actionable tips to take your digital marketing to the next level. Find all episodes at StepUpYourSocial.com or wherever you stream podcasts.
  • The second is called Hello Merge Tag. It looks at social media, politics and where they intersect. Listen to all episodes at HelloMergeTag.com or wherever you stream podcasts.

Along with my traditional newsletter, I also have a second freestanding newsletter called Free Digital Tools. I share 2 free digital tools every 2 weeks. Learn more and subscribe at freetools.digital.

I create content on social media constantly. I share tips, tricks and hacks, updates in the field, case studies of organizations doing good digital marketing… whatever I can to add value to my community. You can connect with me on Twitter, LinkedIn, TikTok, Instagram and/or Facebook if you’d like to learn with me over there.

I blog… often. While Search Engine Optimization (SEO) can be a slow build, blogging is one of the best tools in your digital marketing tool kit to rank better on Google. I have blog posts I wrote years ago that still send loads of traffic to my website.

I also do a ton of public speaking, presenting and training groups on social media, blogging, general digital marketing best practices, email marketing, digital advertising and much more.

I am always looking for ways to build my audience. But notice that every single thing I mentioned above is about giving away value with no expectation of… well anything!

I don’t charge for my newsletters. I don’t worry about people stealing my ideas. The whole point is that I’m constantly working to show my understanding and expertise in the field of digital marketing. What better way is there to share that than… to just share it!

And while I expect nothing in return for anything I put into the world, I regularly get digital marketing consulting leads from my network.

Don’t Try To Be An Expert At Everything (You’ll Fail!)

digital marketing consultants aren't experts at everything

When I first started out as a digital marketing consultant, I’d been running digital programs on political campaigns. I had moved cross country three times in a year and realized I had to find a different path.

So I decided I’d start a firm and test my hand as a digital marketing consultant, using the skills I had learned on political campaigns to help brands of all shapes and sizes grow and scale their digital marketing programs.

I was really good at a few specific things. But I was lacking a ton!

I didn’t know anything about Pinterest. I couldn’t build a website from scratch. I had no experience running Google Ads.

I thought I had to learn… well everything!… before I could start.

But that was absolutely incorrect!

 I realized I would never be as good at building websites as so many others in the field. So instead of trying to compete, I decided to lean in on what I was already great at.

I doubled (and tripled!) down on my core skills. And I found others to refer to or partner with for projects beyond my skillset.

But I also never stopped learning.

Digital marketing is constantly changing. You can’t be an expert in anything these days without doing the work to keep up (more on this below).

So keep up with the things you’re great at. But also recognize that they could literally disappear overnight.

I used to get hired to bring conferences to life on Twitter. Needless to say, no one is hiring me to do that anymore!

If I wasn’t constantly keeping up, I would have had to switch professions.

But I never stop learning.

I keep adding new skills to the list of things in which I would consider myself an “expert.”

AND I make sure I have a solid passing understanding of the things in which I’m not an expert.

You don’t have to be a WordPress developer to have a basic understanding of how WordPress works.

You don’t have to be a digital ads manager to know the difference between reach and impressions or to know what CPR, CPC and CPM mean. (I have a blog post with digital marketing terms worth understanding. You can find that here.)

Be good at a few things and work to have a basic understanding of everything else.

You’ll do just fine!

You Have To Enjoy The Work Of Keeping Up — And You’re Going To Need A Process

process for digital marketing consultants

I’m regularly asked what the most important thing is for being a successful social media marketing consultant. My answer is always the same: you have to enjoy spending time on social media.

You have to enjoy learning about the changes… which are constant and often massive.

This isn’t a field where you can learn everything once and then continue to call yourself an expert. There are dominant platforms in the field today that literally didn’t exist when I first started working as a digital marketing consultant. (Ever heard of TikTok?!)

Does this mean you need a massive following on social media to be successful? It does not!

 If you want to grow a following, it can’t hurt you to get clients.

But there’s a big difference between growing your own channels and growing those of your clients.

You have to have some ways to get noticed in the field — as we discussed above. But being a viral influencer on Instagram is NOT a requirement for being a successful digital marketing consultant.

Ignore anyone who tells you otherwise.

But while you don’t need a million followers to make this work, you do need to be active.

I regularly read news and blogs about digital marketing. I subscribe to a ton of digital marketing newsletters. I listen to a bunch of digital marketing podcasts. I’m in a lot digital communities with fellow digital marketing consultants to keep learning alongside my peers. (Here’s a list of SOME of the many digital marketing newsletters I read.)

And I spend a ton of time on social media.

And if I see a button I’ve never seen before, I click it!

If I see a new functionality being rolled out, I test it!

I don’t have to use every tool in my digital marketing toolkit every day (there are so many it literally wouldn’t be possible!). But I do strive to know what they all are and in what situations they might be useful.

Here’s a blog post I wrote about Instagram Guides when they first rolled out. I didn’t have to create 20 of these. I created one, wrote up the process and now have this tool in my digital toolkit to lean on when I think it might help one of my clients.

This is where “process” comes in. Scrolling social media is integral to being able to train and consult on it. It helps keep you informed and inspired, seeing what others are doing to get to the top of the feed.

But you can’t JUST scroll social media and expect to keep up.

You have to find more reliable paths to ensure you aren’t missing anything big and important.

There are loads of websites, blogs, Facebook Groups, newsletters, podcasts, YouTube channels, etc that provide such roundups. Find one (or ten!) you like and subscribe.

Digital marketing is far too fast-paced a field for you to ever stop learning.

Which is a good thing when it comes to consulting — our digital marketing clients constantly need our help! But it’s also an endless process. So be sure that constantly learning new things gives you energy before getting into the field. Because if you find the work of keeping up to be depleting, you’re not going to want to do this for very long.

Some Pros And Cons Of Being A Digital Marketing Consultant

Some obvious pros:

  • Lots of freedom — I often joke that I don’t have a boss… but I have a lot of bosses. That said, being a consultant means not having a 9-5. You set your own hours (within reason — you have to overlap with your clients to a degree).
  • Flexibility — Want to travel or take time off? You can build your consultancy in a way that allows that. Want to go to a conference or take a class? You don’t need anyone’s permission.
  • Potential to make good money — I know digital marketing consultants who are crushing it financially. And I’ve known one’s who barely scraped by. 

There are so many factors in place. But if you can get things going and you’re good at what you do, there’s no ceiling to what you can potentially earn.

Some cons to be aware of:

  • It doesn’t matter how good you are at consulting, you’re doing to spend a decent part of your time trying to find new clients. That’s not a bad thing, but it is something to be aware of. You’re going to need to keep on building those flywheels, and getting involved in the community and writing proposals… all the stuff you have to do in order to get to the fun part of actually working with clients.
  • There is no paid time off — you can take off as much time as you want, but when you’re not working, you’re not earning.
  • There are no benefits (in the traditional sense of the word) — being self-employed means paying for your own health insurance, retirement and all that fun stuff. You can go to as many conferences and take as many classes as you want without anyone’s permission. But you are also paying for it without anyone’s help.
  • While you can potentially make a lot of money, you can also make literally no money. If you are currently struggling to make ends meet, you might consider building your digital marketing consultancy as a side hustle while working a job, until you feel you are in a position to be able to skip a paycheck here and there.
  • I said above that “I don’t have a boss, but I have a lot of bosses.” In some ways, that’s freeing. I can lose one job without it destroying my business. But depending on how you set up your business, it does mean answering to a lot of different folks. That’s not a bad thing (not at all!), but it is something to consider if your primary reason for becoming a digital marketing consultant is to stop answering to other people.

That’s My List — Anything To Add?

If you are a digital marketing consultant and you have anything to add to this list, please share it with me in the comments or on social.

If you are thinking about getting started as a digital marketing consultant, I hope this list was helpful.

Good luck and keep in touch!

 And if you haven’t already, connect with me on social media. You can find me on Twitter, LinkedIn, TikTok, Instagram and/or Facebook.

And as you can probably imagine, I spend a lot of time there!

 

My work as a digital marketing consultant

Learn more about me and my work as a digital marketing consultant here.

June 26, 2023/2 Comments/by Josh Klemons
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