Five Social Media Tricks to Grow Your Audience - for Colombia 3.0 Conference

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Transcript of Five Social Media Tricks to Grow Your Audience - for Colombia 3.0 Conference

1 Billion people all on Facebook at the same time

…that’s a lot of procrastination

Last week 1 billion people were on Facebook

AT THE SAME TIME

52 million live web viewers

Owned Media is any media produced by a

company about, or in support of, it’s own

product

Sales up 13% worldwide

Lazy+Social Media=$$ ???

Selling Ferraris on YouTube

1. Plan. Take it seriously. (No interns!)

2. Use Professional-grade tools.

3. Be creative – use a “voice” that fits.

4. Measure what you do, using analytics

5. Use social grooming as a reward

You cannot rely on accidents and luck to build an audience.

1. Planning for growth

Understand who your audience is

LISTEN

If your social media manager looks like this …

… maybe you should hire someone like this.

2. Use professional tools

Go to http://bit.ly/Colomb30

3. Creativity –find a voice that fits

The point of using social media is to get people’s attention

Craft viral headlines/content

There is no “one formula to rule them all”

But

There are no rules – but there are general

guidelines

No “One Strategy to Rule Them All”

10 techniques to

use to get

people’s

attention

Curiosity

1. Curiosity

• Is social media worth paying attention to?

• Would you do THIS for money?

• This sucks, you lose.

• What’s your problem? Do you HATE

money?

• Why does everyone love my content?

Offer

2. Offer

• Here’s my presentation – free!

• I have a gift just for you

• Copy and paste this business plan for free

• Steal my best offers and use them to build

your audience

Flattery

3. Flattery

• I’ve always wanted to tell you this…

• Your site is amazing

• You have everything you need to succeed

already

• Here are some people who are saying

nice things about you

Social Proof

4. Social Proof

• This guy is just like you – and now he

makes $1 million a year!

• This company followed our example - and

now they’re crazy successful

• Read how this guy took a useless website

and just sold it for $188,000

Utility

5. Utility

• The best tools to build your social media

audience are…

• A complete guide to how to use Google

AdSense

• Here’s my cheat sheet on how to build the

best social media community

Urgency

6. Urgency

• This offer disappears at midnight

• Flash sale! 51% off ends tonight!

• You have ONE day to watch this video

• This is your last chance!

• You forgot this during today’s training

session

News

7. News

• Have you heard what happened

yesterday?

• Latest report: your company is headed for

trouble

• New study shows that your best

customers are finding someone else

Story

Story

• “It was midnight, and the car was running

low on gas. I could hear the zombies

chasing me…”

• “Male birth control pills could end human

life on Planet Earth…”

• “I looked at the shadowy figures on the

video screen, and then pulled the trigger

on the drone…”

Sentimental

Sentimental

• This little girl walked 300 kilometers to

bring this to her father

• Why this dog never stopped searching for

his master for 12 years

• Baby pigs saved by mother tiger

Funny/Cool

Funny/Cool

• Crazy Russians use tractors as race cars

• Monkey uses skateboard to deliver pizza

• Playing new video game will make you

stronger than a bull (sort of)

• Cat riding a Roomba dressed as a shark,

chases baby duck

4. Analytics – what counts

• Measure what you are doing

• Find “influencers”

• Find what platform people are talking on

• Find the most popular subjects/keywords

• Find what people HATE (and try not to do it)

• Know when your audience is online

Google Trends-

http://www.google.com/trends/

This will steal your brain…

http://www.google.com/trends/hottrends/visualize?nrow=5&ncol=5

Alexa – to judge site popularity

See what your competition is doing – and is it working

R&D = “Rip off and Do it better”

Compete.com

http://trendsmap.com

5. Social grooming as reward

• If you have a Twitter feed with no @ or RT

in it, you are doing it wrong

• If you have a Facebook feed with no

replies or conversation, you are doing it

wrong

• If you have an Instagram account with no

Likes, you are doing it wrong

• If all you do on YouTube is publish your

videos and never comment or share

others’ works – you are doing it wrong

SOCIAL MEDIA IS NOT ABOUT A

ONE-WAY CONVERSATION.

THAT IS ADVERTISING.

I’ll tell you a secret…

PEOPLE

HATE

ADVERTISING

6. TROLL-KILLING BONUS TIP

Don’t be a ***hole. Someone is going to say something on the internet that is going to enrage you.

PUT THE PHONE DOWN. Print out the nasty comments on paper, put them in the driveway, and run them over with your car.

Is anyone else sick of these guys?

Social Media Ninja Social Media Guru

CAN WHAT IS SAID ONLINE

REALLY HAVE AN IMPACT

ON THE ECONOMY OF AN

ENTIRE COUNTRY?

Costa Rica: Social Media to sell coffee

So

what is

the

overall

effect

of this?

GREAT. NOW HOW

CAN WE BUILD AN

AUDIENCE USING

SOCIAL MEDIA?

Exercises: 1.Go to the following sites.

2.Type in the name of your

organization.

3.Share results

Once we’ve found a conversation – how do we know that the people who are having

it are real – and not “sock puppets” or trolls?

Or what they are saying is real?

• Politifact.com

• Snopes.com

• Truthdig.com

• Opensecrets.org

Fact-checking sites

Compare their use of social media on various

sites to see if they are using the same “voice”

Compare their public messages with the ones

that appear on their official site

Confirming Identity

Look for email address in their name if that ispossible

Verify that it is them in the photos. This is a quick and easy way to discover if a profile isfalse, especially in Facebook

Verify the list of their friends that they are actually people that know this person

Confirming Identity

Is there a consistent phrase or expression theyuse? Is that something that seems familiar?

Is their use of language consistent with theircountry of origin? Or their region?

Are all the messages general commentaries, orsomething you can find easily in the press?

Pay special attention to their words:

Do they repeat the same words, phrases or links over and over again? Then they are probably a SPAMBOT

Check if they follow a lot of people – but not that many followthem

Verify if the account is brand-new, with few messages, ormost of the messages were posted recently

Maybe write a story about the fake famous people to alert your readers that there are scam artists out there

Pay special attention to their words:

• Monitor across platforms (including Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Soundcloud, AudioBoo, Bambuser)

• Spot and understand trends (using tools like Hootsuite, Tweetdeck and Trendsmap to create lists and identify trending topics)

• Build a network of contacts before the story breaks and limit the stress

• Use online tools to examine evolution of images (including TinEye, Google Images and WolframAlfra)

• Verifying sources – speak to them and cross reference answers with social data

• Verifying sources – look at social media history across platforms

Verification Checklist

• Use Whois tools to verify websites

• Check for photoshopping or repetition in images

• Apply the Too Good To Be True test

• Harness online discussion boards and experts (use sites like Snopes to spot urban myths and common hoaxes early on)

• Question edited footage

• How urgent is it – could more steps be taken to verify before you publish?

• Crowdsourcing – 'be judicious' about how you send out unconfirmed information

• Consider any permissions and crediting which may be necessary

• Clearly communicate the level of verification a story has been given

• Made a mistake or new information come to light? Issue a clear and networked correction

Verification Checklist

OK, these are not

even trying hard…

Test Yourself:

• http://area.autodesk.com/fakeorfoto

Attention in the virtual world is like money in the real world; the very presence of it attracts more of the same, producing what might seem like gross iniquities.

A cat falling off a sofa is less important than riots in Venezuela, yet we can now see how our attention goes to one not the other. Measuring how and what we read online has become an obsession for all publishers.

The abundance of possible metrics now

available to publishers is not necessarily

helping either.

Using NSA-style techniques (although

naturally much more benignly), the

Guardian or any other publisher can track

every movement you make on an online

piece, where you come from, where you go

to, whether you are actively reading or

whether you have tuned out.

These metrics form themselves into the

basis of advertising sales and increasingly

inform editorial decisions too.

Morning news conference is more likely to

be an in-depth look at analytics than a

discussion of "what's on today" at the most

sophisticated news companies.

First, some bad news…

We used to think that

the internet was this

magic invention that

would open the doors to

everyone in the world to

all join together and

trade, share, collaborate

and make the world a

better place…

I’m not saying we were totally

wrong

But.

The popular conception is of young,

committed, passionate, freedom-loving

internet activists running circles around the

old, slow, bloated, repressive police state

regimes.

That may have once been true. But it is now

just a fantasy

Why is online opinion important?

Or THINK I

know…

On Sept. 11,

2014

Hundreds of Twitter accounts were documenting a disaster right down the road. “A powerful explosion heard from miles away happened at a chemical plant in Centerville, Louisiana #ColumbianChemicals,” a man named Jon Merritt tweeted. The #ColumbianChemicals hashtag was full of eyewitness accounts of the horror in Centerville. @AnnRussela shared an image of flames engulfing the plant. @Ksarah12 posted a video of surveillance footage from a local gas station, capturing the flash of the explosion. Others shared a video in which thick black smoke rose in the distance.

As politicians and business

leaders have come to recognize

the power of online

commentary

The commentators are known as the

50-Cent Party, as they are said to be

paid 50 cents for every post that

steers a discussion away from anti-

party content or that advances the

Communist Party line.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his political allies claim to be the victims

of a U.S.-sponsored campaign of diplomatic and economic aggression. Fortunately

for them, a lone voice from Washington has emerged to express steadfast support

for the current regime. Over the past several months, White House spokesperson

Jim Luers has been quoted by everyone from Venezuela’s state-run media to

members of its parliament. The only problem: He doesn’t actually exist.

From London, where al-Mahmoud lives, they

invented a fake Iraqi village called Shichwa, which

they claimed was situated just northwest of the holy

city of Karbala and just vacated by ISIS, thanks to the

martial prowess of the Iran-backed Hashd al-Shaabi,

or the Popular Mobilization Committees of Shia

militias, which are leading the ground offensive

against the Sunni terror group. They also doctored

screen grabs from CNN and al-Arabiya, the Saudi-

owned outlet, purportedly showing Anderson Cooper,

Wolf Blitzer and other news anchors discussing the

latest siege of Shichwa, complete with Photoshopped

chyrons.

“We wanted to bait the militias,” al-Mahmoud, an Iraqi

Shia who hates ISIS but is deeply critical of Baghdad

and its outsourced war to sectarian paramilitaries,

told The Daily Beast. “So my friend Firas and I said,

‘Why not invent a battle and a small village to see if

the websites or social media of the government pick

up the story, and this way we can assess how

desperate they are.”

Except the spoof should have been obvious: Shichwa

is actually the name in Arabic of a leather pouch—

really more of a bladder—used by Iraqi peasants to

churn milk into butter.

They also doctored screen grabs from

CNN and al-Arabiya, the Saudi-owned

outlet, purportedly showing Anderson

Cooper, Wolf Blitzer and other news

anchors discussing the latest siege of

Shichwa, complete with Photoshopped

chyrons.

…we’ll get to Photoshop in a bit…

IS THERE NO GOOD

NEWS?

Think of it as

“antibodies

fighting an

infection”

1. Search for person

2. Click on “Conexiones”

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