OEM Suppliers Need a Social Media Strategy. Here’s Why.

North America's top automotive OEM suppliers can significantly boost the engagement and effectiveness of their social media efforts by focusing on five key fixes.

North America’s top automotive OEM suppliers can significantly boost the engagement and effectiveness of their social media efforts by focusing on five key fixes, according to a proprietary study conducted by Bianchi Public Relations, Inc., a PR firm specializing in the automotive supplier and business-to-business sectors.

The study, “Social Media and Automotive Supplier Habits” (SMaASH), analyzed social media usage by the top 25 North American automotive OEM suppliers during the first six months of 2014 – with the four most popular platforms for this sector: Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and YouTube.

Given the limited number of OEM customers, it is reasonable to ask why Tier 1 or Tier 2 suppliers need to develop the kind of brand awareness that a social media program offers. The answer is in your parking lot. Increasingly, automakers are promoting supplier brands in their vehicles. Bremebo, a racing brake manufacturer, brands their brake calipers prominently, and visibly. As a result Brembo has become a preferred brand for performance enthusiasts. Audio manufacturers are similarly branding car audio in visible ways to drive sales. 

For supplier products that are optional, extra cost equipment such as high-end car audio, tires, brakes and suspension components, there are profits to be had with a relatively simple social media strategy. It’s already working in the aftermarket, and with a wide variety of optional accessories available in the still strong SUV segment, a social media presence makes sense for even small chassis and under hood part manufacturers. It is all about creating consumer demand for your parts, rather than the OEM’s vehicle as a whole.
“Auto suppliers – like many other business-to-business sectors – overall are having some mixed results with social media. Some are doing it really well, others not so much,” said James A. Bianchi, firm president. “In analyzing six months’ worth of posts across four popular supplier channels for the top 25 North American auto suppliers, we found five areas that offer the greatest opportunities for improved engagement.”

Bianchi PR’s top five fixes for auto supplier social media for 2015 are:

1.  Incorporate more visuals in company posts. Although video and images boost audience engagement significantly because the human brain remembers visuals betters and processes them faster than text, only 53 percent of supplier Facebook posts and less than 15 percent of Tweets, for example, included visuals.

Bianchi PR’s advice: Strive to have a visual in the form of a photo, chart, infographic or video for every social media post.

2.  Share more of the company’s earned media coverage on social media. Although coverage in trusted media outlets is viewed as the most credible of all content, less than 10 percent of all supplier posts shared such coverage. Reporters are increasingly being evaluated on the viewership and engagement of their online stories, so sharing their stories helps the reporter and media outlet build their audience.

Bianchi PR’s advice: Target sharing the positive news coverage the company receives at least once a week.

3.  Focus more of the posts on the audience and less on the company. The rule of thumb is that a company should post one update about the company for every three that are about the audience and its interests. Suppliers are doing almost the opposite – with 50 to 75 percent of social media posts being self-focused. Bianchi said: “Social media is supposed to promote a conversation. If one side is doing all the talking, it’s not a conversation, it’s a lecture and it will drive followers away.”

Bianchi PR’s advice: Curate and create content that shares bigger picture industry data, trends and perspective on issues that will help your followers do a better job.

4.  Leverage the company’s LinkedIn Page. Among the four platforms reviewed, LinkedIn typically gives suppliers their largest audience (average 30,000+), yet the top suppliers average only three LinkedIn updates per month. As the largest social network for business with 300+ million members, LinkedIn is all about business – reaching customers, prospects, employees, potential recruits, reporters and industry influentials.

Bianchi PR’s advice: Strive to post or share interesting content on LinkedIn at least once a day to capitalize on the company’s largest following.

5.  Make more of the company’s posts interactive posts. The SMaASH study showed that less than 6 percent of supplier posts were interactive. To boost engagement – and perhaps understand their customers and followers better – companies can increase the frequency of posts which allow the audience to express themselves and participate – such as contests, polls, surveys, trivia or opinion questions.

Bianchi PR’s advice: It’s not a conversation if you’re dominating the “dialogue” 94 percent of the time. Target at least three posts a week that seek your followers’ opinions, ideas and stories with surveys, contests, polls and trivia questions.

“The PR and communications people who typically oversee a supplier’s social media generally know what to do, it’s just that they may not have the time or resources needed so they end up being more reactive than proactive,” Bianchi said. “By starting the new year with a more strategic approach, in which they enlist help, set up a mechanism to curate content, map out their content schedule and develop some of the key messaging, they can move from reactive to proactive and better utilize the social media channels to build the desired relationships.”

Other findings of Bianchi PR’s study of auto supplier social media use by the top 25 North American automotive suppliers included:

  • LinkedIn is the most popular platform, with 92 percent of suppliers having a LinkedIn page; followed by Twitter (80 percent), Facebook (72 percent) and YouTube (56 percent);
  • Suppliers post most on Twitter (48 percent of total posts); followed by Facebook (27 percent), LinkedIn (19 percent), and YouTube (6 percent); and
  • The top 25 auto suppliers average a total of 38,448 followers across all four platforms and post an average of 26.9 updates per month on those platforms.

“Having a presence on social media is not enough,” Bianchi said. “To boost engagement and build those close relationships that are so important in the OEM automotive community, suppliers should think strategically about social media, how to integrate it into their overall communications effort and how to create the mechanism and process that will help them sustain it with the appropriate content. The SMaASH study can help them move in that direction.”

www.bianchipr.com

Written by

James Anderton

Jim Anderton is the Director of Content for ENGINEERING.com. Mr. Anderton was formerly editor of Canadian Metalworking Magazine and has contributed to a wide range of print and on-line publications, including Design Engineering, Canadian Plastics, Service Station and Garage Management, Autovision, and the National Post. He also brings prior industry experience in quality and part design for a Tier One automotive supplier.