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Doug Wilber. (Photo: Social Denim)

Life Health > Running Your Business > Marketing and Lead Generation

How to Walk the Social Media Tightrope: Doug Wilber

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Doug Wilber helps financial institutions communicate through social media.

Wilber is the CEO of Denim Social, a Clayton, Missouri-based company that can help life insurers, banks, wealth management firms and other highly regulated clients reach out with ordinary posts and ads on services such as Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and Twitter.

The company has about 250 clients. In 2021, it attracted $5 million in financing from an investor group that included Fintop Capital.

Wilber has a bachelor’s degree in marketing and a master’s degree in business from Penn State University.

He has been involved with financial services marketing and startup management since 2006, when he became a prepaid card marketer at Discover Financial Services. For about 10 years, he has served on the investment committee of SixThirty Ventures, a business development program for financial technology startups.

He took over as the top executive at Denim Social in April 2020.

Wilber answered questions via email about how he thinks financial professionals should go about creating, using and sharing social media content.

The interview has been condensed and edited.

THINKADVISOR: Can efforts to reach out through social media be compatible with all of the compliance concerns that financial professionals face?

DOUG WILBER: Social media compliance keeps people up at night for a reason, but it doesn’t have to.

The right social media management tools can help ensure any post — whether it’s directly from a financial professional or a partner — is compliant.

Look for tools that offer approval workflows and keyword red flags.

What do you think, generally, about financial professionals sharing the content used in consumer awareness and outreach campaigns?

Shared content strategies can be effective, but only if the content is useful and the financial professional is being authentic.

Social media is really about relationships, and that means financial professionals need to engage with their communities online.

If partner content educates investors and showcases an advisor’s expertise, that can be a nice addition to their social feed. But shared content shouldn’t be the only thing they are posting.

Ideally, their social posts would primarily be personal, authentic content, with a measured amount of promotional and partner content.

Just like in real life, advisors need to educate first and sell second.

Are there some situations in which using shared outreach content makes more sense than others?

Shared content can be useful for broader topics, like financial education or market updates.

Financial professionals should avoid using partner content as their sole content source, though. Social media should be an extension of a professional’s real-life relationships.

Think about it this way: If you wouldn’t have a solely promotional conversation in real life, you shouldn’t do it on social media either.

Is creating a post from scratch different from sharing someone else’s post?

Whether a financial professional is creating or sharing a post, they should consider themselves and their firm responsible for the content.

One financial professional’s social media can impact the entire firm brand, after all.

Social media compliance is complex and requires marketing, compliance, and individual advisors to work together.

While we recommend every advisor be active on social media to share thought leadership and amplify the brand, they definitely shouldn’t go it alone or execute a strategy by posting natively to social media networks.

A social media management tool built for compliance can ensure every new and shared post is reviewed and approved by the right experts.

How can financial professionals avoid complaints about use of other people’s content?

Whether it’s financial information or cat videos, it’s good social media etiquette to give credit to the original creator.

The greater risk is a financial professional posting misinformation that could damage the reputation of a firm or non-compliant content that draws the attention of regulators.

What should financial professionals do if they see standard, compliance-approved social media content and want to personalize it?

Financial professionals should definitely be personalizing content. This is a great way to make social media posts more authentic, but an approval workflow in a social media management tool is essential.

Once a financial professional personalizes a post, they can submit it for approval to ensure their commentary is factually correct and compliant.

Without the right tools, scaling a review and approval process is impractical (if not impossible) and opens up a financial institution to risk.

In your opinion, are there any drawbacks to financial professionals using packaged content from outside content? If so, how can financial professionals address those challenges?

Standard and packaged content can be a great tool, but it has to be personalized and useful to be effective. Think about the value a follower is getting from the post. It needs to matter to them.

Today’s financial professionals must be social selling, not just building the brand by sharing content.

Smart financial professionals are using social media to build personal relationships, showcase thought leadership, engage with prospects, interact with existing customers, and ultimately build trust and rapport that will eventually lead to sales.

Doug Wilber. (Photo: Social Denim)


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