From the Nov. 2009 Issue
Once upon a time, there once lived an accountant who, by his very nature,
preferred the solitude of crunching numbers and calculating tax returns to the
boisterous roar of his firm’s social events, area networking functions,
and even business lunches with prospects and clients.
Is this a fairy tale or something much more real? Do accountants really have
this kind of reputation or are they secretly social beasts waiting to stampede
run out of the starting gate?
The best attribute about social media is that it forces us to become “social”
and share information. The worst thing about social media is that it allows
us to become “social” and share information.
A contradiction? Yes! So far, social media, which experts agree is still in
its infancy, explodes with possibilities for an accounting firm because it enables
the firm to project itself in ways that were never this easy or more fun. Yet,
many firms remain skeptical as to the advantages of participating in social
media.
Based on the current environment, and visits with a firm and an accounting
information provider, here are several areas of discussion a firm wants to explore
before deciding whether it should stick its toe in the water.
The Big 3: LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter
Most everyone uses social media without really knowing it — while these
tasks may seem basic, sending and receiving e-mails and visiting websites are
examples of social media. However, what we now think of as today’s social
media really didn’t exist until LinkedIn came into the picture in 2003.
Many firms still consider LinkedIn their sole source of social media because
the site helps form relationships that often result in more business and turn
into referral sources.
“We can’t point to dollars brought in the door yet, but we feel
our profile has been raised due to our participation in all of these social
media,” says Steve Hake, CPA, president and chief operating officer of
Stambaugh Ness, PC (http://stambaugh-ness.com),
a regional firm with offices in York and Hanover, Penn.
“Our staff benefits by getting involved and learning to understand the
mechanics of social networking. It’s important to be there if someone
is searching for us and the services we provide. We’re a very tech-savvy
organization, but if we don’t carry that through in the public’s
perception of us, it’s a pretty big omission.”
If accounting has the Big 4, then social media has the Big 3: LinkedIn, Facebook
and Twitter. Stambuagh Ness uses all three to publicize its software, tax and
payroll seminars. Will anyone attend because of the firm’s presence on
all three? Hake says that’s one of the firm’s goals; but on a more
specific level, LinkedIn helps the firm understand the relationships among its
own people and those in other organizations.
“It (LinkedIn) also keeps us (and them) updated on what issues everyone
is dealing with and working on. That’s pretty important given all of the
fast changes we are going through in our business environment. The strategies
for the next phase of leveraging LinkedIn are currently being studied and developed.”
The firm first used Facebook as part of its recruitment strategy, asking interns
some two years ago to set up a Facebook Group to appeal to college students.
To date, the firm hasn’t recruited anyone specifically because of Facebook,
but Hake feels the page gives the firm a presence and proof that it is in sync
with the new ways of staying in touch.
“Since then, we expanded our reach to join other groups, including a
group for Deltek Vision software, which we resell to architectural and engineering
clients,” says Hake. “When a partnership prospect searched on the
term Deltek and extended a plea for someone to get in touch with him, we immediately
answered his post and were on the phone right away. That illustrates the immediacy
of these networks. There is urgency to these communications, and we’d
better be willing to step up if we want to be competitive.”
The firm opened an account on Twitter mostly to explore and find out what
all the fuss was about. In addition to “being there” when people
search for the firm, the way the firm “follows” other Tweets leads
to education, information and direct communication with industry thought leaders.
“We use some of that information internally to educate our staff with
our internal newsletter, and some of the information generates ideas for articles
for our weekly external enewsletter. Information overload is a great possibility,
so we make use of it in small chunks.”
Hake says the firm also learned that an organization can be judged not only
by whom it follows, but also by who is following the organization. “If
you’re serious about business, it’s best to encourage participation
by those businesses in your service area, and it’s good to have the media
tuned into your tweets, as well. It’s easy to block followers who are
not business-minded, and we do that without any hesitation.
“Twitter is like Brussels sprouts; it’s better to just taste it
than try to understand why people either love it or hate it — and it’s
probably going to be good for you.”
Establish Measureable Goals
Accounting firms exist to provide clients assurance on a variety of levels –
and any firm will tell its prospects and clients that it goes into all engagements
with a very defined set of measurable objectives and goals to complete the engagement
with the highest quality.
Defining goals and making them measurable is another component of using social
media wisely, but many firms neither take the time to do this in a logical,
thought-out manner nor link them to marketing initiatives.
“Like anything else that needs to be managed, setting goals for social
media efforts helps get things done,” says Barry Friedman, CPA, CEO of
BizActions, a B2B executive e-mail newsletter service. “This is even more
important within a tax and accounting firm because social media is a new effort
and a new strategy that is not part of traditional practice development efforts.”
According to Freidman, only recently have businesses started to figure out
a strategy to effectively implement these social media sites into their marketing
programs. He recommends that firms create a committee to work on a plan and
a strategy, and then publish the strategy on their website.
“A partner of mine once commented that if you want to change behaviors,
you must measure them. This is very true, especially with social media goals.
I recommend establishing quarterly goals and publishing them to various groups
within the firm. Annual goals are too far out to be managed effectively, and
monthly goals may be too frequent. Send actual results compared to the plan
to all groups. Peer pressure becomes the ultimate goal manager instead of a
marketing department that usually has no direct responsibility of staff or partners.”
SEO Through Social Media
Social media is very useful for SEO (search engine optimization), because LinkedIn,
Facebook group sites, firm blogs and other applications, including YouTube,
can be found through search engines. There are many tasks associated with ensuring
SEO is optimized on a site or application, all with the end goal of getting
noticed. Friedman, for example, optimizes BizActions.com for SEO.
“Google has complex algorithms that determine the placement of your
firm in a search request; for your firm to get noticed, it must be on page one
of the Google results page,” he says. “That’s not so easy
because there are generally millions of potential sites to be considered.”
One factor Google uses to determine a firm’s importance is the number
of links other sites have to your site, says Friedman. Another important factor
is whether a site is mentioned in any social media sites. If the firm is mentioned
or linked when a keyword or phrase is searched and that site is part of a social
media program, then the perception is that the firm must be worth checking out.
“Blogs are a form of social media; people can leave messages and communicate
around a particular site,” he says. “BizActions started an aggressive
program of blogging around keywords that make a difference to our firm. We have
all departments blogging at least once a week, and in the last three months,
we’ve created more than 60 blog entries.” On certain keywords, BizActions
occupies three to four positions in the top 10.
“That’s very significant to our business because we get more clicks
from searches, and multiple positions on page one effectively blocks competitors,”
says Freidman. “Do a search of ‘CPA e-mail newsletters,’ and
count the number of entries for BizActions in the top 10.” (Also see our
recent article, “SEO Optimization: Why is SEO Important?” at www.CPATechAdvisor.com/go/2607.)
Develop a Social Media Policy
Following on the heels of defined and measurable goals is a “social media
policy,” and if firms have not defined their goals, then they are a long
way from writing a policy to govern social media.
Social media policies help employees understand how to use social media, how
long to spend using social media during the workday, and the sensitivity associated
with posting personal and/or proprietary information. While this might sound
like Big Brother intervening, the policy is usually written in an employee manual
the same way a dress code would be included.
The problem with this approach (and the reason firms hesitate to write a policy)
stems from the wants and needs of younger employees.
“Some organizational policies are more crucial than others, and setting
a social media policy has not been an urgent need at this point,” says
Hake. “We have set overall guidelines about Internet use, and we occasionally
include reminders to exercise professionalism and good taste when representing
Stambaugh Ness, but we expect our staff to live up to our expectations.”
Prepare for surprises. When questioned, Hake says the firm’s newest
and youngest group of employees expressed reluctance to get involved in Twitter,
and there was a degree of misunderstanding about it. For example, employees
did not know if it was possible to effectively use Twitter only on a computer
versus their cell phone.
“They felt it invaded their personal lives,” he says. “If
anything, our challenge has been to educate our staff about social media instead
of setting detailed limitations. Our president introduced social media via his
internal blog by using the simple, well-done YouTube presentations by Commoncraft.
Taking the time and effort to develop an official policy would detract from
other, more urgent endeavors we have in front of us. If we need a policy to
do that in the future, we will.”
Still, some sort of orderly pursuit prevails. Hake encourages firms to designate
an exploratory person on staff to research the basics and open accounts.
“Don’t set too many limits or micromanage the effort,” he
says. “This is something you may need to work in before you can understand
how it can work for you. This is not the time in our history to be faint-hearted
when it comes to using new technology and cultivating a firm culture that embraces
change. There is no other viable choice.”
——————————————————-
For more than 20 years, Scott H. Cytron, ABC, has worked with CPAs and
accountants, providing public relations, marketing and communications services,
and teaches firms how to use social media more effectively. Author of The CPA
Technology Advisor’s MarketingWorks column, he tweets, and is on Facebook
and LinkedIn. Contact him at scottcytron@cpata.com.
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Tags: Technology