Developing Social Media Content

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Presentation for COMS632 class.

Transcript of Developing Social Media Content

Developing Social Media Content Jessica Hagman

COMS 632August 04, 2012

Objectives

Draft a basic social media content plan

Objectives Generate Facebook, Twitter & YouTube content ideas for an organization

Objectives Identify strategies for monitoring stakeholder sentiment via social media

Oops.

Why Social Media?Connect with stakeholders

accomplish organizational goals

Website or blog

Twitter

Facebook

YouTube

Twitter

Facebook

YouTube

Share | Listen | Engage

Share | Listen | Engage

“I’m suggesting that if you can’t imagine anyone linking to your coverage — if you can’t imagine anyone saying “this was new,” “this is good,” “this was valuable,” “go here for more,” “I didn’t know this,” or “you should know this” — then chances are, it’s not worth saying and in the link economy it won’t get audience, and so it’s not worth making.”

Jarvis, 2008

Unless you are already famous, you will need other people to mention you in order to gain followers. Give them a reason to.

“Trust agents have established themselves as being non-sales-oriented, non-high-pressure marketers. Instead they are digital natives using the Web to be genuine and humanize their business.”

Smith & Brogan, 2010

tv.winelibrary.com

Content Ideas forYour Organization

Lists

answer questions

how-tos

in the news

Share | Listen | Engage

“The concept of listening, on the

other hand, invokes the more

dynamic process of online

attention, and suggests that it is

an embedded part of networked

engagement – a necessary

corollary to having a ‘voice’.”

Crawford, 2009

Google Alerts

Twitter Search

3rd Party Tools

Share | Listen | Engage

Conversation > broadcasting

Information Communi

ty Action

InformationCommunity Actio

n

Although nonprofit organizations have

become more interactive in their use of

Twitter as opposed to their websites

alone, we found Twitter is still used by

many nonprofit organizations as an

extension of information-heavy

websites. These organizations are

missing the bigger picture of its uses as

a community-building and mobilizational

tool.

Lovejoy & Saxton, 2012

Mention and Be Mentioned

“So, how do you get retweeted and mentioned? Primarily by retweeting and responding to others.”

Mansfield, 2012

Your Turn

BibliographyFacebook. (2012). Key facts. Retrieved from http://newsroom.fb.com/content/default.aspx?NewsAreaId=22

Jarvis, J. (2008). The journalism of filling space and time. Retrieved from http://buzzmachine.com/2008/11/04/the-journalism-of-filling-space-and-time/

Lovejoy, K., & Saxton, G. D. (2012). Information, community, and action: How  nonprofit organizations use social media. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 17, 337–353. doi:10.1111/j.1083-6101.2012.01576.x

Mansfield, H. (2012). Social media for social good : a how-to guide for nonprofits. New York: McGraw-Hill.

YouTube. (2012). Press statistics. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/t/press_statistics/