If you want to plan out a successful social media campaign but aren't quite sure where to start, don't worry! This blog has you covered. We break down the five steps needed to create a solid social media strategy to help you launch your winning campaign and glean results. Those steps are:
Let's get started!
When preparing a social media campaign, you must start with a broad view of your subject matter on both the platforms you're reviewing and the trends you analyze on those platforms. This comprehensive view provides deep awareness and informs you enough to prevent messaging blunders and place content on the correct platforms. Although you can achieve some of this analysis with social monitoring tools, a social listening tool, like Infegy Atlas or Infegy Starscape, is required for a full scope.
Related: Learn more about the differences between social listening and social monitoring in this blog.
Understanding why you want to engage with an audience on social media is essential. Is your intention to build brand awareness or drive engagement? Or maybe you want to level up a promotional tactic to increase revenue. Each of these has different KPIs to review when measuring the success of your efforts, so isolating exactly what you want out of your campaign helps guide those decisions and efforts.
Luckily for us, there is a tried-and-true method that marketers have already identified to help you identify your goals—the SMART framework.
Goal |
Tool |
KPI |
Increasing brand awareness |
A social listening tool, like Infegy Atlas or Infegy Starscape |
Brand mentions increase by X% |
Engage with audience |
A social monitoring tool or platform analytics tool |
Increase likes or video views by X% |
Drive additional web traffic |
Google Analytics, Heap Analytics, or another web tool |
Overall traffic increases by X%, or traffic from the target platform increases by X% |
Grow followers |
Platform analyzing tool, ex. Facebook Business Tools |
Grow followers by X% |
Generating new leads |
CRM/ Attribution software |
Increase leads by X% |
Boosting sales (e-commerce) |
Point-of-sale or e-commerce site analytics |
Increase sales on specific items or types of items by X% |
Build community |
A social listening platform or platform analytics |
Increase followers by X%, Increase event attendance by X% |
Promote an offer |
Google Analytics, Point-of-sale or CRM data |
Increase sales by X% |
We already know it's important to put content on platforms where your target audience is to ensure proper engagement or success based on your goals. For example, in 2022, the second season of "Emily In Paris" was set to launch, so Duolingo latched on to this release and created a social media campaign offering a free service membership to anyone named Emily. The campaign drew 2 million organic views, and over 7,000 Emilys signed up for the service.
We don't know Duolingo's exact strategy for this campaign, but here are some interesting points we found that Duolingo could have implemented when approaching it.
Figure 1 - Source bio analysis of “Emily in Paris” and related audiences; Dec 2023 - March 2024 (Infegy Atlas Data).
Although all of these steps are important, creating relevant and helpful content is probably the most crucial step in creating an effective social media campaign. Engaging with the right audience in the right ways ensures your content will get the desirable views. Let's return to our "Emily in Paris" example now that we have our audience identified. Below are some tactics to consider when building this content.
Figure 2 - Entity table related to “Emily in Paris” (January 2020 through March 2024); Infegy data.
Additionally, something to keep in mind, you can target the wrong audience or go viral for the wrong reasons. Completing a thorough audience analysis and following the steps above closely and honestly helps avoid those types of issues.
You can analyze how well your campaign strategy is performing in four buckets: brand awareness, engagement, conversion, and audience growth. Below are some illustrations to describe each.
1. Brand awareness: Track metrics such as reach, impressions, and social media mentions to gauge how widely your campaign is seen and talked about.
Figure 3 - Post volume pertaining to Duolingo (October 2020 through March 2024); Infegy data.
2. Engagement: Measure likes, comments, shares, and engagement rates to understand how interactively your audience is responding to your campaign content.
Figure 4 - Engagements pertaining to Duolingo (October 2020 through March 2024); Infegy data.
3. Conversion: For campaigns aiming at sign-ups or website visits, use tracking URLs and monitor click-through rates (CTRs), conversion rates, and the number of new sign-ups or specific actions taken on your website.
4. Audience growth: Keep an eye on the growth rate of your followers or subscribers during the campaign period.
As you’re analyzing your campaign, you’ll glean insights and adapt the campaign based on what you find. Examples of this adaptation include content optimization, audience engagement, and A/B testing.
Harnessing the power of social listening tools is pivotal for deciphering the dynamic social media landscape, providing businesses with invaluable insights into emerging trends and audience behaviors. Employing the SMART framework facilitates the establishment of precise objectives and goals, steering campaign strategies towards quantifiable success metrics. Through thorough analysis of social listening data, businesses can tailor their content strategies to resonate deeply with their target audience, fostering heightened engagement and brand affinity. To learn more about social listening and how it can help guide your social media strategy, schedule a customized demo today!