The 8 Best Social Media Marketing Books of 2020

Entrepreneurship Sales & Marketing

ByEmily Delbridge

Updated November 21, 2019

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Social media is the way of the future – but it’s sometimes hard to keep up. Whether you are an individual looking to get a job, a small non-profit looking for donors, a large multinational company or a bold entrepreneur, knowing how to leverage social media is absolutely crucial in the 21st century. It is important to learn how to navigate all of the latest and greatest social media tools to build success. The best social media and brand marketing books will help you get well on your way to becoming an expert.

500 Social Media Marketing Tips  Courtesy of Amazon

How does this book cram 500 tips into 228 pages? By delivering the information succinctly, concretely and in a way that is immediately actionable. This book takes you from zero to sixty relatively quickly and helps you start getting likes and clicks on social media almost immediately. More advanced users and pros might feel like this book is at times a bit tedious, but it is perfect for beginners and those who just need a quick refresher. If you feel like you’ve already grasped hundreds of fundamentals about social media, you’re in luck, because this book still has 400 more for you to learn!

Readers should only be able to tell a great advertorial apart from an actual journalistic report by the labeling at the top of the section. In order to create top-of-the-line native content, you have to know how to tell a story about the things that your readers (and potential customers) actually care about. Enter this book by Joe Pulizzi, which teaches you not only how to write great stories, but what sort of stories you should be writing in the first place. He will guide you through choosing an appropriate content vertical, developing your mission and action plan, curating content and leveraging social and traditional media to share your epic work.

You already know that a picture is worth 1,000 words, so why not leverage photos to attract and build your audience? The human brain engages with images more easily than with written words, and this invaluable guide from Jessica Gioglio and Ekaterina Walter will teach you how to build and share compelling ones. As you should expect, this book is also filled with captivating images and great examples of images companies have successfully used to get their messages across.

In this book, Gary Vanerchuk shares the secrets of getting your message out there in a busy digital landscape. In his extended metaphor, the continual strategies that focus on slowly winning over customers and potential customers on social media are the “jabs,” and are not always so successful –  not to mention, they take a lot of time to test and implement. Lest you think that the author is just speculating, you should know that he increased his small family wine enterprise from a $4 million operation to a $60 million behemoth. He’s also taken smart bets on investing in some of the most wildly successful digital companies –  Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, Uber and Venmo, just to name a few. He walks you through the steps you and your companies need to take to adapt to the changing media landscape and the ways in which consumers devour content, including optimizing for mobile.

This is a book about power. It’s also a book about winners and losers, about the tech landscape today and about how those on top got there and stay there –  or how they crash and burn. This is not a book that gives you actionable insights you can immediately leverage: it is a book that tells the story of Silicon Valley before, during and after the tech bubble. It’s written by an industry insider and is gripping as any true crime novel. The book draws its title from the image of a primate running amok in a data center, an analogy software engineers use to test their online services. The author makes the case that tech entrepreneurs are society’s version of these unruly disruptors –  and he makes the case that they’re very much worth learning from.

If you’re an entrepreneur or small business owner, Rich Brooks’s book will help you make a comprehensive digital plan. This book will teach you skills you need to bring people to your social media pages, increase your ranking on top search engines, add more subscribers to your e-mail list and turn online fans into loyal customers. This book walks you through four essential stages: the building of your website, how to attract people to that website, how to keep in touch with the folks that have visited your website, as well as how to analyze your Web traffic data. This book is perfect for those looking to grow website traffic through several channels, those just starting out on social media and those looking to grow their digital mailing lists.

There’s a ton of information and products out there for consumers to choose from, and in order for yours to stand out above the rest, you’ve got to have a plan. Enter Andrew and Pete, whose book gives you a seven-step plan for creating social media content that people enjoy and, more importantly, that drives clicks and sales. Don’t write another article, record another podcast or shoot another video until you have a plan for how you’re going to send it out into the universe. Reviewers love that this book isn’t about gimmicks –  it’s about actual strategies that will feel (and will be!) genuine for both you and your audience. As a plus, the book not only offers valuable advice on how to craft a strategy but also practical advice on how to put such a plan into action.

Ever wonder how guest experts get their great gigs? Areva Martin dishes on their secrets in this page-turner. She doesn’t have a marketing budget anymore, but she’s been on Dr. Phil, AC360, CNN, MSNBC and FOX promoting her work and her brand –  and now, everyone comes to her. In this book, Martin shares how to pitch irresistible stories to producers, make yourself relevant to breaking news, deliver great soundbites and use social media to build a reputation for yourself that will send more and more gigs your way.

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