Google+ Business Page for Your Small Business Marketing

Merit Solutions HR consultants

Merit Solutions HR consultants

Since November 2011, Google has offered small businesses the opportunity to create their own Google+ Business Page.  This is a direct challenge to the supremacy of Facebook Fan/Business Pages.  It is a wise addition for anyone engaged in small business marketing.   The Business Page is really valuable if you actively build your circles on Google+ and update your stream regularly.

When you join Google Plus, you will see an image in the right hand column of your Home page which enables you to create a Google+ Business Page (or Brand Page):

 create a Google+ page

When you click on this button, you will see a range of options for categorising your business page as illustrated in the image below:

google+ business page categoriesThe category you choose determines the initial information your provide to develop your Google+ business page

Google gives examples of the types of businesses that fall within the various categories (pass your mouse over the relevant button to see these).  Here are the examples given for the first three categories:

  • Local business or place – hotels, restaurants, places, shops, services … basically places that you go to (if you select this option, Google can automatically pick up your Google Places and Google map details via the business phone number that you enter)
  • Product or brand – clothing, cars, electronics, financial services…(where recognition is via an established brand or where you are developing a brand)
  • Company, institution or organisation – includes not-for profits … (might also apply where you are offering a range of brands in different niches).

Once you have completed the basic set-up of your Google+ business page, you can then add photos and videos and begin to add content to your stream.  When you enter a URL as part of your stream content, Google+ picks up the relevant thumbnail and image and some intro information.

Sharing your Google+ business page

Google provides a special URL for your business page which enables you to guide other people to your page and/or to share with your business page circles.  With your Google+ business page, you can create circles that you name, while the default circles for business pages are:

  • Customers
  • VIPs
  • Team members
  • Following

Google offers you the option of sharing your new page with your circles.  However, I would set up some content in your stream before sharing, so people have a reason to use the Google+1 button to recommend your Google+ business page (and/or share your content with their own circles).  Their +1’s will show up as recommendations on Google’s search results and in Google ads.

When you post to your stream on your Google+ business page, it also updates your Google Plus stream on your personal home page.  This means that the content from your Google+ business page is shared with your circles. 

How do you delete a Google+ business page?

Many people enquire about this issue but there is a lack of information around, and what is available is often out of date (as this advice will be if Google+ changes again).

To begin the process to delete a Google+ business page, click on the arrow below your name on your Google+ home page (see image below): 

google+ drop-down menu 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then follow these three steps:

  1. Choose “Manage your pages’ from the drop-down menu
  2. Select the Google+ business page you want to delete
  3. Click on “Delete’ at the bottom of the relevant business page (see image below):Google + delete business page

A Google+ business page gives a boost to your small business marketing by enabling you to get closer to your customers (current and potental) through sharing your business message with the right people.

Share Content with your Circles Via the Google Plus Stream

Google Plus stream

 

Google Plus stream

The Google Plus Stream is the lifeblood of Google+.  It enables sharing of information to Circles and has a lot of the characteristics of Facebook’s status updates.   You can share ideas, status updates, photos, videos, links and your location (if you really want to!).

The Share box is accessible via the Google Plus homepage.   You have a few icons you can click on to share specific types of information or you can just enter text in the Share box:

Google Plus share box

In line with Google+ Privacy Policy, you can specify who you share each post with.  You can identify specific Circles or all Circles (public).   Icons for suggested circles are shown (e.g. Acquaintances and Friends in the image above) and you can add more Circles by clicking on ‘+add more people’.  You can delete a suggested Circle from your distribution by clicking on the delete button (X) in the respective Circle icon.

You can see that yet again Google Plus is deadly serious about giving you control over your privacy by allowing you to determine the desired distribution for each post.

What should you share in your Google Plus Stream?

I have discussed what types of content you can share in your Google Plus Stream, but what exactly should you share?  The fundamental rule to remember is that your Stream on your personal Google Plus page should be about CONVERSATION NOT CONVERSION!   If you indulge in a constant sales pitch, you will be very quickly dumped from multiple circles (…and defeat the whole purpose of using the Google+ network, which is to expand your contacts).

So think about the things that you find engaging and share something similar.  Here’s a list of the kinds of posts that catch my attention and tend to encourage me to share with others:

  • informative
  • visually appealing
  • peaceful
  • intriguing
  • humorous
  • enlightening
  • challenging
  • insightful
  • reflective 

So your purpose in posting to the Google Plus Stream is to share something of yourself, enhance your personal branding and provide content that others find useful or appealing and are inspired to share in their own Circles.   In this way, your posts will have a viral effect.

The central Stream on your Google Plus Homepage is the accumulation of all the posts from people in your Circles (who included you in their distribution when sharing). 

What to do with posts in your Google Plus Stream that you don’t want

You have a range of options in relation to each post that arrives in your Google Plus Stream if you don’t want to retain them or make them visible to others:

  1. Report abuse
  2. Mute this post (no longer visible)
  3. Block this person

The options button is somewhat faint but you will see it beside each post as illustrated below and highlighted by the red arrow I’ve included in the screenshot:

Google Plus post options

How to ‘like’ posts in your Google Plus Stream

If you want to ‘like’ a post there are a number of ways to do this.  Included in the options mentioned in the previous section of this post is an option “Link to this post” which enables you to copy the link for the post and share it with others (it is mystifying why this option is inlcuded with the other “dislike” options).

However, there are a number of other options which are more clearly displayed immediately below each post as indicated in this screenshot:

how to like Google Plus posts

These options are explained briefly below:

  1. +1 –  indicates you really  like the post and want to save it to your ‘favorites’ (this is an expansive topic and will be the subject of a separate post).
  2. Comment – see below for further elaboration.
  3. Share – with Circles that you specify when you click on this option.
  4. Hang Out  – Chat with the originator and others you choose to include (more on this in another post).

How to comment effectively on Posts in your Google Plus Stream

I have previously discussed at length how to comment on social media content in such a way as to build a positive online profile and brand image.  The same principles apply when commenting on posts in your Google Plus stream.

You can see from the following example how a simple comment can generate a reciprocal response.  Chris Brogan shared a video and a personal comment about the originator of the video, Tom Terwilliger.  I watched the video and left a comment on Chris Brogan’s post.  Tom responded and so we have the beginnings of a conversation:

Google Plus conversation

So to reiterate, the primary principle behind your sharing through the Google Plus stream must be to focus on conversation not conversion. 

 

Grow Your Google Plus Circles to Build Your Profile Online

Google Plus - overlapping circles

 Google Plus - overlapping circles

 

Circles are a core element of Google Plus.   They enable you to place people in different groupings depending on your level of association with them, e.g. friends, acquaintances, family.   Circles enable the unique privacy approach of Google Plus to operate.   You can specify which circles will have access to what information.  As I explained in my previous post, one simple example of this is the ability to specify who has access to the links that you include in your Google Plus profile.  [Image Credit:  mrnilspeters]

You can access your circles by clicking on the ‘circles’ button at the top of your Google Plus page as illustrated below:

Google Plus circles button

Adding “friends” into your Google Plus Circles

The first thing to be aware of  is that you can add as many circles as you want and specify their names, e.g. work colleagues, Squidoo contacts, customers.   If you add too many circles, your circles and privacy settings will become unmanageable.   However, the circle facility enables you to effectively categorise your contacts and manage your communications with them – you don’t have to lump them all into one large group of ‘friends’.

You can add people to your circles by using the drag-and-drop facility provided when you click on the Circles button.  The avatars of people will be displayed depending on the choices you make from the menu provided (illustrated below):

Google Plus circles avatars

For example , if you click on “people who have added you”, you will see the avatars of all the people who have added you to a circle on their Google Plus account.   However, you will not be able to see what specific circle you have been placed in by these people.  If you hover over the avatars you will see whether they are already in one of your circles or how many people you have in common in your respective circles.   The following image shows an example of the avatars as they will be displayed.   The ones with the symbol in the top right hand corner are those who you have also added to your circles.  You can work your way through the others and add people to your different circles as desired.

Google Plus - people who have added you

As I mentioned in my introductory post about Google Plus, you will also receive notifications of people who have added you to their circles.   If you click on the notifications button on the Google Plus toolbar (right-hand side), you will see thumbnail images of people who have added you to a Google Plus circle and you will have the facility to easily add any of these to one of your circles (click the ‘arrow’ beside the thumbnails and you will have access to a drop-down menu).

Google Plus makes it very easy to add people to your circles.  As indicated in one of the above images, when you click on the circles button, one of the options displayed is “Find People’.   Google Plus explains how the resultant list of avatars is generated for you:

Find People – Our best guess for people who you may want to add to a circle.  Get more suggestions by importing your contacts from your email account.

As indicated, you can actually import contacts from your email accounts – Yahoo, Hotmail or by uploading your email address book (see image below):

Google Plus - find friends

So Google gives you multiple options for adding people to your Google Plus circles, encourages you to expand your social network and to effectively manage your communications with your circles.  You can even tailor your perosnal profile information for different circles (e.g. making personal information only available to your “family” circle).  On top of this, you can specify which of your circles you want to hear from.  The following YouTube video from Google Plus gives you more information on how to create and use circles:

Google Plus circles gives you a very effective way to manage your contacts, increase your online exposure and develop new sets of relationships, including those with existing and potential customers.

Creating Your Profile on Google Plus

Giant Squid100

Google Plus Profile

Your Profile Page on Google Plus is very significant, as it is on other social networks.  Here is your opportunity to brand yourself and your small business.   Profiles on social networks are a core element of small business marketing but are often rushed and rarely updated.

Google will automatically import your Google Profile if you have created one before, so all you will need to do is to edit it to bring it up to date.

As I mentioned in my previous blog post, you can create or edit your profile via the Google Plus toolbar or via the icon at the top of your Google Plus page (identified in the illustration below):

Google Plus - edit profile

 

Creating your Google Plus Profile

Here is an opportunity to provide a comprehensive profile that adds credibility to yourself and your small business.  It is really critical that you add a photo of yourself to reinforce that you and your business are real.

The Google Plus Profile offers you the opportunity to provide a comprehensive picture of yourself in line with your focus at the time.  Here are the key details you can record in your Profile:

  • Tagline – a brief description of yourself (related to your small business focus?) – you can see my tagline, ‘Creative entrepreneur who loves to write and help people be the best they can be’, in the above image.
  • Introduction – an overview of yourself
  • Employment – opportunity to mention your small business
  • Education – can reinforce your credibility and small business focus
  • Bragging Rights – something personal or small business related (Small Business Award?)
  • Occupation – relate to your small business
  • Places Lived – this is shown by “pegs” in a map
  • Relationship – share your relationship status
  • Looking for – disclose what you are comfortable with (use “Networking’ if you want to keep Google Plus for professional purposes)
  • Gender
  • Profile Discovery – can set this to ‘Help others find me in search’ (shown as ‘Profile visible in search’)

The right hand column provides a great opportunity to display important links.  You can add URL’s and descriptions under the following three (3) headings:

  1. Other profiles – other sites that give insight into who you are and what your interests are
  2. Contributor to – what sites feature your work
  3. Recommended link – add the URL and description of pages that interest you (include your small business blog or website).

These links are really important to enable you to direct people to your personal branding elsewhere and to connect them to your small business.  By way of example, I have included information about my Google+ Profile links below.

 Under ‘other profiles’, I have linked people to the following sites:

Under  ‘Contributor to’, I have created the following links:

Under ‘Recommended links’, I have listed the following:

The list of links above highlight the fact that the more you create online content, the more you have to share through your small business marketing online.  Google Plus gives you the option of deciding who will have access to these links as part of its privacy options.  These options are displayed as a drop-down menu under each of the categories of links mentioned above.

The discussion in this blog post highlights how your Google Plus Profile can build your personal brand on line and increase the penetration of your small business marketing.

Google+: Why Small Business Must Get Involved with Google Plus

Google Plus Functions

Google Plus Functions

Google Plus is Google’s new social network launched in June 2011.  Google+ will be an integral element in small business marketing into the future.  It will not only enable you to build your personal profile but also build your business brand online.   Google Plus membership has already reached 62 Million and is growing at the rate of 625, 000 new users per day.

Why bother with Google Plus?

Google views Google Plus as extending its capability (and value) beyond its traditional search engine focus to social networking.  However, these two major arenas of Google’s activity should not be seen as separate.  Google has already made it clear by its own words and actions that the Google + social network will feed search engine results.  It has also shown the intention to rapidly integrate other Google applications into Google Plus, its new social network.

Google has already integrated Google+ into its toolbar as shown in the images below:

Google+ in toolbar

 

This icon. ‘+Ron’ , provides a direct link to my Google+ account.  In the following toolbar image, you can see how Google integrates ‘notifications’, ‘sharing’,  ‘profile” (thumbnail photo) and ‘settings/help’  icons for ease of access:

Google Plus in toolbar

As we progress through my blog posts about Google Plus, you will see that Google is deadly serious about this new social network – it is not just a new ‘plaything’.  Wherever you go on Google, including the search results, you will see increasing integration of Google+.   Google played around with its early social network, Google Buzz, but has since canned it to build Google Plus – all the time using Buzz as a learning laboratory.   If you have any doubts about Google’s long-term commitment to Google Plus, just check out Google’s own announcements re its ongoing Google + updates.

Integrating Google Plus into your small business marketing will no longer be a nice option (initially, Google+ was invitation-only), it will be an essential element.  Otherwise, you will see your online marketing progressively vanish into the background as Google takes over the foreground with its Google Plus social network.

As mentioned in my earlier post on the major changes for small business marketing in 2011, Google+ is one of Google’s strategies designed to wrest back the Number One web traffic position from Facebook.  The similarities between Facebook and Google Plus will hit you immediately, so this new social network represents head-on competition with Facebook.   As a small business owner, you can stand on the sidelines and watch the battle or you can engage with both these giant networks and ensure that you have a sound footing online – this is where the action is and where the people (your customers) are.

What is significant about Google Plus?

Google Plus has already been lauded for its ease of use and flexible privacy settings (addressing one of the key problem areas of Facebook).  As Google+ is in its early stages, it is also possible to get access to people you would not normally be able to link to.

So here is a list of key things you can do (explained in detail in later posts):

  • create a comprehensive personal profile
  • build ‘circles’ (add people to different circles/groupings and control the access and distribution of your information via your circles)
  • share photos and videos
  • develop your ‘stream’ (similar to Facebook’s ‘News Feed’ – integrating ‘status updates’ and content such as photos or videos)
  • private message other people in your circles
  • create a hangout (an evolving facility to engage others in live conversation via video and text chat – considered by many to be the real technological breakthrough for Google Plus)
  • create ‘sparks’ – recommendations
  • build business pages (sound familiar?).

Some commentators are suggesting that with these features and the growing integration with Google’s own applications, Google Plus represents a combination of Facebook, Twitter and Flickr rolled up into one state-of-the art social network.

How to Join Google Plus

You can join Google+ via a link on the blog/website of a Google+ member.  You will see the image displayed at the top of this post and the sign-up box as shown in the following screenshot:

how to create a Google Plus account

 

Alternatively, you can go directly to Google Plus and click on the following image and this will take you to the signup page indicated in the above image:

Google Plus sign up box

 

Note: You will need a Google account to join Google Plus (with either sign-up option).

With each advancing day as we move into 2012, Google Plus will become more critical to small business marketing and this will be progressively explained in succeeding blog posts (which symbolically will take us into the New Year).