As a small business CEO, you manage hundreds of projects and details,
and your marathon meeting schedule would probably kill a horse. Under
those circumstances, it’s all too easy to lose touch with the people who
matter the most: your employees and customers. Are you an accessible
CEO? If not, have you considered what being hard to get costs you?
As Janine Popick, CEO of VeritcalResponse, wrote on Small Business Computing,
when CEOs wall themselves off all day long, they miss out on
opportunities to improve both the company’s products and its overall
reputation. Let’s take a closer look at some of the tactics she uses—and
recommends to small business owners—to replace those back-to-back
meetings and to build stronger connections with customers and employees.
Social Media for CEOs
You know by now that social media is a highly effective tool for
driving business. It’s also an effective way for a leader to better
understand how customers use and react to company products and services.
It can also improve your reputation as a leader. According to one marketing study,
“CEOs who participated on social media networks were more likely to be
defined as good communicators, open and accessible, and were considered
good listeners.”
Tip: Create a presence on the social media platforms
most-frequented by your customers. Show up and participate regularly and
consistently, and when people comment to you directly, be sure to
respond personally.
Executive All-Access Pass
There’s a big difference between saying you want to be accessible and
actually being more accessible. Can your customers find and communicate
with you readily, either by email or through social media? Can they
email you and other company executives? Will they get a personal
response, or do you foist that task onto a junior employee?
If you really want to be accessible to your customers, you need to remove any barriers and have your executive team do the same.
For further help on your business contact business coach Kenneth Matthew on 08062179543
Tip: Make it easy for customers and prospects to reach you.
Post your email address and your Twitter handle or other social media
info on your website, along with contact information for each member of
your leadership team. And be sure that you all answer your own email
personally.
Doors Wide Open
What message do you send your team by keeping your office door
closed? An open door signals welcome, interest, accessibility, concern
and availability. A closed door says the exact opposite.
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