It’s summer, one of those rare points when even the most ardent worker hits the road for a vacation, sits in the coolness of a shade tree, or tans by a pool.
But what to read during that elusive time off? If you can scrap the latest thriller, now’s a great opportunity to relax from the daily pressures of business and focus on bigger-picture issues for your company. Among the most exciting and evolving topics is how to incorporate social media into your enterprise.
Below is a list of books that provide a good understanding of how social media can be used for public relations and marketing, as well as how you can encourage resistant employees to grab on and not treat it like “shiny object syndrome.”
There’s no special order to the list. All are good and highly recommended. I asked the authors to share their recommendations for business books, which they gladly did.
Now Revolution by Jay Baer and Amber Naslund (Wiley, $24.95): The Internet and social media have allowed for unprecedented real-time interaction and feedback between customers and businesses. Simply put, they have changed how companies do business.
Baer and Naslund provide a seven-step plan to assist businesses in shifting to this real-time culture. Their book covers how to create cross-functional teams, make business practices more nimble, hire and then empower social media-literate employees, and respond in a human way to customer inquiries.
Baer, a renowned social media strategy consultant who shares his knowledge at ConvinceandConvert Blog, suggests Content Rules by Ann Handley and C.C. Chapman (Wiley, $24.95). He says it’s a very handy book because of its combination of big-picture thinking about the role of content with step-by-step advice and helpful tips about precisely how to create content that matters. How can you create stories, videos and blog posts that people will love? How can you cultivate fans and spark devotion? How can your ideas ignite your business? These are posed and answered in Content Rules.
PR 2.0 by Deirdre Breakenridge (FT Press, $26.99): We live in a Web 2.0 world in which the traditional channels of communication are not necessarily the best way to reach your audience. Breakenridge introduces readers to how public relations and the Internet have converged to create an opportunity of two-way conversation. She outlines a vast array of the best new PR practices such as how to use blogs, social networking and podcasts though real-world examples.
Breakenridge just finished reading Social Marketing to the Business Customer by Paul Gillin and Eric Schwartzman (Wiley, $27.95). She says it’s a well-organized book that provides really good insight for how businesses can communicate with other businesses through social media. It addresses how businesses can blend the online conversations into their culture, plan marketing campaigns that use social media channels, and find niche communities then integrate into them to grow sales.
Social Media ROI by Olivier Blanchard (Que, $24.99): Blanchard brings business discipline to social media programs in this book that analyzing best practices for strategy, planning, execution and measurement.
He tackles a tough topic facing many businesses and makes it easily understandable with specific case studies and examples. Blanchard covers how to align social communications with business goals, plan for effective performance, use social media to customize customer care, and measure FRY, or frequency, reach and yield.
Blanchard suggests Killing Giants by Stephen Denny (Portfolio, $25.95). Denny profiles 30 companies that have taken on the giants in their industries and won. He outlines strategies on how you can topple your giant. Blanchard also suggests Histories of Social Media by Jonathan Salem Basken (Society for New Communications Research, $22.95). The technologies such as Facebook and Twitter may be new, but people have always been social since the dawn of civilization. Salem Basken strips away the technology piece of social to open up a rich trove of case studies that better explain the complexity of social media.
Welcome to the Fifth Estate by Geoff Livingston (Bartleby Press, $18.95): Welcome to the Fifth Estate is a follow-up to Livingston’s first book, Now is Gone (Bartleby Press, $14.95). That was one of the first books to articulate the revolution of social media. Livingston explains the concept of the citizen journalist and how it relates to marketing. The new book provides needed guidance to build a successful and sustainable social media program including solid strategies, tactics and measurement tips for businesses and nonprofits.
Livingston often recommends The Art of War by Sun Tzu because he feels it is the quintessential book on strategy. It applies to everything, and is benevolent in that it always seeks the least conflict possible. The book is a basis for all of his marketing strategies. The Art of War was compiled in the sixth century and is considered the world’s oldest surviving military treatise covering strategy and tactics.
All of these are available in print and e-book formats, so you can also read them on your Kindle or iPad. Happy reading.
This column was originally published in the Lexington Herald-Leader on Monday, July 25, 2011.
I want to put all these books in my Amazon basket NOW. But I’m forcing myself to do only 2 books a week. 🙂
There are a lot of really smart folks out there writing some super stuff. My reading list is huge as well. We should start book club…
i f you want a very nice reading list for this summer I can share my favorite: the Top 10 Marketing Books by Yuri Mintskovsky a very powerful businessmen. Reading such books will always have a positive impact on a person ans especially on that person’s business. It is recommended to learn from the best because only this way we can become as good as them or even the best.
Avril,
Thanks for sharing and for stopping by. Cheers!