Social media marketing is like home renovation: everyone thinks that he is an expert until he passes a thorny path.
Even companies that work with social networks all day are wrong. Many influential marketing agencies, which should be strategists in the field of main content, are fixated on self-interested and boring content. Yes, boring content makes users stop using it. However, poorly thoughtful content that attracts attention presents a great danger.
Here are three examples from which SMM experts can learn useful lessons:
1. Ryanair and British Airways
In March of this year, a British Airways plane landed by chance in Edinburgh instead of Düsseldorf. Ryanair, feeling an opportunity to have some fun, tweeted a picture of Geography for Dummies and noted British Airways. A friendly banter was supposed to make the public have fun with Ryanair, but instead the Twitter community laughed at Ryanair. How did this happen?
Users began to mock Ryanair with their posts. One user suggested Ryanair read the book Customer Service for Dummies. Another noted in his tweet that he would prefer to fly with BA from the wrong city than with Ryanair to the right one.
What is the root of the Ryanair error? Short-sightedness SMM experts could not foresee the fact that the budget airline audience may have accumulated their claims, which it threw out, taking advantage of the occasion. Being a younger, less well-established carrier, Ryanair simply had no influence like British Airways.
2. Elon Musk
Personal brand Ilona Mask is so closely connected with Tesla and SpaceX that his random tweets are a reason to touch on these companies in new articles. Brand managers Tesla and SpaceX should live in a state of constant anxiety, wondering what Musk will say next.
Frankly, their fears are justified. So in March, the US Securities and Exchange Commission said it was “amazingly” that Elon Musk did not request prior approval of any of his tweets about Tesla Inc. for several months, while a federal court ordered him to do so. Musk instead, he defended his use of social networks, calling the SEC request a "radical reinterpretation" of the judge's orders.
