Takeaways from this post:
In early 2021, we surveyed 600 enterprise leaders across marketing, communications, and security management roles. The goal was to learn how businesses are approaching the security imperative of digital executive protection. As part of this survey, we learned a great deal about how companies are approaching executive social media strategy.
In our survey, all 600 respondents reported that their companies leverage executive social media accounts. Why? It sounds like an obvious question, but it’s useful to step back and consider the macro goals that organizations are pursuing when they encourage their execs toward platforms like Twitter or LinkedIn.
Our survey revealed that the top two goals of executive social media use (accounting for 70% of responses) are brand building and executives’ positioning as thought leaders.
These two goals are now core to any effective social media strategy for executives. Users and market observers expect companies to have a human face, and social media is where execs can fulfill that need. As CEO Magazine put it, social media enables CEOs and business leaders to “strengthen their own personal brand and raise their profile as a thought leader within their industry.” When the CEO looks good, the company looks good.
Executive social media presence is now such a norm that its absence can be an issue. According to LinkedIn:
In short, in this day and age, an effective executive social media strategy is a PR must. Here is what Lee Caraher, CEO of the Double Forte communications agency, said on the First Watch podcast:
“From a corporate perspective, LinkedIn is no longer an option. You must be on LinkedIn. Even if it's a private account and you're not actively looking for networking, people, customers, and consumers are looking… They want to know who the CEO is, and they want to know what he or she thinks about things.”
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For most (56%) of our survey respondents, the executive communications’ role will “increase in importance or priority” during 2021.
Already, almost half of organizations (48%) spend between 50 and 100 hours per month on executive communication strategy, demonstrating significant investment and commitment. A projected increase in importance suggests that this number will rise.
There's no exact number of how many social media accounts get hacked successfully every year. But the threat to corporate social media accounts is real. Just in January 2023, 200 million Twitter accounts were compromised by hackers.
With social media's ever-expanding role in business operations, it's important for organizations to protect corporate social media accounts using sophisticated cybersecurity technologies and tools. What will this increased investment look like? It could take many forms:
Organizations appreciate the importance of a robust executive social media strategy and are looking to do more in 2021. However, they are aware that executives expanding their social media presence also expands the organizational threat surface:
However, despite this warranted concern, security and compliance lag behind:
Implementing executive protection – on social media or anywhere else – is tricky. 76% of CEOs will try and skip security protocols to get their work done quicker.
However, leaving executives to their own devices is a risky game. Any message arriving in a Twitter or LinkedIn inbox could contain a phishing link. Executives are human and can easily get lax with their login credentials that could be used to mount a takeover. Any robust social media strategy for executives must include security as a core component.
When crafting their executive social media strategy, organizations must include security and compliance as part of that strategy. 84% of C-level executives have been the target of at least one cyber attack. By 2024, Gartner predicts that three out four CEOs (75%) will be held liable for security breaches. Social media is a prominent and visible section of the attack surface and cannot be ignored.
Our previous survey revealed that 56% of businesses look at the impact on business outcomes as a determining factor in their decision to invest in new technology. A security or compliance incident involving executive social media use could be disastrous. Ergo, tools that secure this social media use should be a no-brainer for any org looking to develop a safe executive social media strategy.
Survey: Read the whole digital risk survey and know how
the respondents are adapting to new cybersecurity compliance risks