Leadership Resolution: Make Social Media Work for You in 2022
Illustration by James Yang

Leadership Resolution: Make Social Media Work for You in 2022

Happy New Year! Welcome back to my newsletter, “Connected Leadership”, where I spotlight how executives from the C-suite to the Board are using social media to communicate and lead on their most important issues, highlight best-in-class examples, and provide practical advice along the way. While I wrote this article last year, the lessons still ring true today.

Many of us are probably hoping to minimize our time online; executives should head in the opposite direction.

Few New Years’ resolutions come as a surprise. Cultivating a meditation practice, exercising more, using our phones less—how many times have we heard some version of these? Yet my advice for 2022 may come as something of a surprise: Every CEO should resolve to establish an effective social media presence.

Our research finds that by a more than 5 to 1 ratio, employees prefer to work for a CEO who uses digital and social media. And, by a margin of 9 to 1, financial readers trust a Connected Leader more than a CEO who does not use social media as part of their work. This isn’t about leaders spending more time communicating—it’s about using that time to lead more effectively.

The most effective resolutions aren’t inspired by facts alone, otherwise our first reading of meditation’s benefits would see us become ardent practitioners. Instead, resolutions that succeed tend to have two ingredients: a spark and a system.

The spark ignites an awareness that the status quo isn’t acceptable: the heart attack that inspires a better diet and exercise, the explosive argument that leads to therapy. Last year certainly offered that jolt for the offline CEO. “The world has gone digital” more closely resembled an operational reality than a vague truism. Digital was how the most effective CEOs engaged their employees and spoke out against racial injustice. And amidst a global pandemic, leadership through a screen became the only option.

A spark awakens us to the need for change, but a system sustains it. “It is so easy to overestimate the importance of one defining moment and underestimate the value of making small improvements on a daily basis,” James Clear writes in his bestselling Atomic Habits. “Too often, we convince ourselves that massive success requires massive action.”

In my experience, successful Connected Leaders can invest as little as 15 minutes of their week to discuss their weekly social media strategy and 5 minutes per day to engage online.

For 5 minutes per day, leaders can:

1.????Review notifications to like or reply to comments and mentions, in accordance with their online engagement protocol.

2.????Scroll through their feeds to find opportunities to engage with influencers and peers.

3.????Share relevant, interesting news of the day.

4.????Look to trending topics for sources of content inspiration.

That’s a worthy resolution to aim for in 2022: 5 minutes a day. Small can sound underwhelming, but it accumulates. Over the course of a year, 5 minutes a day, 5 days a week, totals more than 21 hours.

For the executive totally in the dark about social platforms, step one might be asking your comms team to connect you with a peer who uses social media well, or to simply familiarize yourself with a channel. For the executive who’s online but rarely posts, maybe it’s committing to post once a month. For the leader already posting, it could be engaging with at least two comments on each post.

Clockwork discipline is crucial—consistent rather than piecemeal. Build these mini-sessions into your calendar. Have a comms team create a content calendar and help you keep to it, while working in the background to amplify your posts, analyze reach, and adjust the tactics accordingly.

The social media resolution, at its core, isn’t about being tech savvy; it’s about being a leader. Because surely any definition of corporate leadership entails regularly engaging with employees, connecting with customers, and delivering your message to policymakers and investors. Many of those stakeholders now spend roughly?two and a half hours a day on social media —what does it say about the CEO who is too busy, or too reticent, to meet them there for five minutes?

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Thanks for reading! I want to hear from you –?message me your questions, ideas, and thoughts, ?and I'll work your suggestions into my future?content and research. Let me know your thoughts in the comments below and be sure to?subscribe here ?to receive a notification when the next edition is published.

M. Mike Nassar

Consultant | Entrepreneur | Strategic Business Growth | Transformational Leadership | Mentor | Board Member

2 年

During the age of digital transformation, it is essential for businesses to have a strong online presence if they want to see momentous growth. Thanks for speaking on the importance of digital marketing for business success!

回复
Timothy "Tim" Hughes 提姆·休斯 L.ISP

Should have Played Quidditch for England

2 年

The argument for a CEO to be on social is over, the argument is now why isn't a CEO on social, what have the got to hide?

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Sarah Goodall

CEO @ Tribal Impact | Connecting Business Growth To Employee Influence & Advocacy On Social Media

2 年

Great article Craig - in my experience most leaders still don't truly understand the value they can achieve from becoming active on social media. Too often it's treated as "another activity" but it's so much more than that - it's about celebrating employees, recognising them, being visible to future talent, listening to customer insights first hand. Once leaders understand the wider impact it can have on their role, they are more likely to participate and contribute.

Rosabel Tao

Vision and Positioning Strategist, Solver of Audacious Challenges, Master Narrative Builder, Ambassador of Curiosity

2 年

Great article, Craig! I passed it on to a few people.

Leigh Goldman

Executive Director @ Wells Fargo | Communications Strategist & Leader | Storyteller | Board Member | Author

2 年

Great guidance, Craig. I can't wait for the next Connected Leadership report.

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