Tools
like Hootsuite, Hearsay Social and TweetDeck help adviser deliver a coordinated
message across various platforms
Aug 9, 2018 @ 5:08 pm
By Ryan W. Neal
If financial advisers agree social media is no longer an optional part of
their business, it's time to start checking out some of the tools employed by
the internet's "power users."
A good place to start is something that can help organize
the social media landscape and create a consistent strategy across platforms.
One example is Hootsuite, a dashboard that supports
Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube and others all in a single
location. Hootsuite first came on the scene in 2008 and has since grown into
one of the most popular tools (it boasts 16 million customers around the world)
for both professional and amateur social media users.
It also has a dedicated product for financial advisers.
Amy McIlwain , director of Hootsuite's financial services business, said the
company has enterprise partnerships with 450 financial services firms in the
world, including broker-dealers, wealth management firms and insurance
companies.
Hootsuite lets users organize their social media feeds
into various streams based on keyword searches, hashtags, individual accounts
or curated lists. This helps make sense of the continual fire hose of
information (especially on Twitter), and allows for a continual feed of
information without having to refresh like on the native Twitter apps.
Advisers can use this feature to listen for clients or
prospects talking about things that could be a business opportunity. Ms.
McIlwain calls this "strategic listening [for] money-in-motion-type
signals.
"Advisers are listening for things like graduation,
retirement, buying houses and buying cars," she said.
Or advisers can use streams to follow the social
conversation at industry events, like InvestmentNews'
upcoming Women Adviser Summit.
Creating a stream dedicated to event hashtags will ensure you don't miss a
beat, even if you can't attend.
By connecting across all social channels, an adviser can
deliver a coordinated message tailored to each platform. Adviser can be more
personal on platforms like Facebook and Instagram, focus on professional
networking on LinkedIn, and use Twitter for news and sharing insight content.
Hootsuite also has a library of compliance-approved
articles to share, a scheduling tool to automatically post content at optimal
times, and analytics to track which posts are most and least successful.
Integrations with a number of third-party CRM and
compliance archiving tools help it fit into the rest of the adviser's
technology toolkit.
Hootsuite certainly isn't the only option on the block.
It's biggest competitor in the advisory space is Hearsay Social,
which has additional functionality to help advisers text message with clients.
There is also Buffer and TweetDeck (which is owned by
Twitter), which George Papadopoulos, a financial planner followed by 10,600
people on Twitter, uses daily to execute his social media strategy.
Mr. Papadopoulos begins his day looking for articles
relevant to his high-net-worth clients, then uses Buffer to schedule them to
post throughout the day while he's busy with other things. He then uses
TweetDeck to monitor feeds of financial professionals, members of the press,
select keywords and certain VIPs Mr. Papadopoulos wants to be sure he doesn't
miss anything from.
"It really consolidates and helps you focus on the
most important things you want to be following," Mr. Papadopoulos said.
"Twitter has become an indispensable tool, and I think whoever is not on
it is missing a lot of what is going on."
One advantage to Hootsuite is that it brings several of
these functions together in one dashboard, Ms. McIlwain said.
"We really connect the dots between publishing,
governance and data all on one platform," she said. The company also
offers training and education designed specifically for advisers to help them
learn social media, which can sometimes look like a foreign language.
"Until you take the time to learn the language and
become fluent, you're never going to be able to truly communicate," Ms.
McIlwain said.
Just like it's not enough to buy a baseball glove to
become a pro player, simply creating a social media account isn't going to lead
to tangible results. Without a coordinated and thoughtful strategy, you'll just
be tweeting into the void.
But if you do want to use social media professionally to
help drive business, you're going to have to get the tools the pros use.
https://www.investmentnews.com/article/20180809/FREE/180809915/find-success-with-an-organized-social-media-strategy
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