I was tweeting with my friend and fellow social media consultant, Dana Nelson, a couple nights ago about a business presentation she was sitting in, when she quoted this piece of advice from the presenter.
“Posting your business on other business sites is lame – tagging business/ cross marketing does not work.”
Wait, what? Who said that, the business professor from Back to School?
Cross-posting doesn’t work? Creating visible partnerships is lame? Creating a referral network is ineffectual?
Look, there are a lot, a lot, a loooooooot of social media consultants out there. And they don’t all know what they’re talking about. It worries me that these people are spreading poor information out there. It’s like a volunteer sheriff’s deputy telling people you can’t be arrested for drunk driving if you’re wearing your seat belt. (Caution: You can be arrested for drunk driving, even if you are wearing your seat belt.)
And this 16-word piece of misinformation is a doozy, and so wrong in so many ways.
- It’s a widely accepted fact in search engine optimization circles that promoting a business site on another site is going to give me some big search engine juice. Anyone who understands basic SEO knows that backlinks are what give your site a high search engine ranking.
- Coke and McDonald’s would disagree with your views on cross-marketing. As would Pizza Hut and Pepsi. Or any movie studio with Happy Meal Toys and Burger King Kids’ Meal Toys. Or BarnesandNoble.com and Amazon. And any sponsors of any NASCAR or Indy Car racing team.
- People buy from people they like, and accept recommendations from people they trust. If Dana recommends a good restaurant to visit, I’m going to believe her. Why? Because I like her and trust her. It’s the same with businesses. If a business I trust recommends the services of another business, I’m going to believe them. The smart thing for small businesses to do is to team up with allied businesses.
- There are more business networking experts than there are social media experts (as hard as that is to believe). Nearly all of them will shout the praises of networking, referral sharing, and cross-promoting. And I’ll believe business networking experts who measure their experience in years and decades, not weeks and months.
This is just one of many reasons why you need to screen your so-called social media “expert” before you hire them. Especially if they blather on with inane bits of advice like this.
He must be a “Social Media Guru”. What an ass.
Doesn’t the popularity of widgets such as commentluv seem to indicate that even the blog hosts themselves are in support of the idea of cross linking?
I wish you would have cross-linked to my “Social Media Lies” blog post! :)
Just a lame post to get a crosslink out there. lol
I don’t understand this post at all.
What was Mr. Bennett talking about?
For example, I would agree that posting your business on some spammy business directory site would be absolutely lame.
It’s also a little sneaky to make comments about business process improvement that are totally irrelevant just for the link juice.
But in general, cross-promotion and marketing are good.
Can you give some more context?
Thank you for saying this. I was floored when this and other bits of “advise” came from this speaker.