This is Marketing   /     How Your Business Can Avoid Social Media Exhaust

Description

The hardest thing about social media for a business is keeping up. Having a strategy that keeps up with the demands of your social media audience, and the platform itself, can be tiring on your creative team. In this podcast, I discuss some ideas behind social media channels, including Snapchat, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, that can help you keep up with the demand of posting. Also I give insight as to how to decide when to walk away from a... Read More Read More

Summary

The hardest thing about social media for a business is keeping up. Having a strategy that keeps up with the demands of your social media audience, and the platform itself, can be tiring on your creative team. In this podcast, I discuss some ideas behind social media channels, including Snapchat, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, that can help you keep up with the demand of posting. Also I give insight as to how to decide when to walk away from a channel to focus on another.

Subtitle
The hardest thing about social media for a business is keeping up. Having a strategy that keeps up with the demands of your social media audience, and the platform itself, can be tiring on your creative team. In this podcast, I discuss some ideas behind
Duration
19:31
Publishing date
2017-07-12 12:22
Link
http://www.rossmorrone.com/podcast/how-your-business-can-avoid-social-media-exhaust/
Contributors
  Ross Morrone
author  
Enclosures
http://www.rossmorrone.com/podcast-download/452/how-your-business-can-avoid-social-media-exhaust.mp3
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

The hardest thing about social media for a business is keeping up. Having a strategy that keeps up with the demands of your social media audience, and the platform itself, can be tiring on your creative team. In this podcast, I discuss some ideas behind social media channels, including Snapchat, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, that can help you keep up with the demand of posting. Also I give insight as to how to decide when to walk away from a channel to focus on another.