setting social media policy

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Copyright © 2009, IMRE, LLC SETTING SOCIAL MEDIA POLICY Novemeber 5, 2009

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Novemeber 5, 2009. SETTING SOCIAL MEDIA POLICY. WHAT WILL WE ACCOMPLISH TODAY?. What is a social media policy/guidelines? Why do we need one? Who owns the process? Recommended approach. WHAT IS A SOCIAL MEDIA POLICY/GUIDELINES?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: SETTING SOCIAL MEDIA POLICY

Copyright © 2009, IMRE, LLC

SETTING SOCIAL MEDIA POLICYNovemeber 5, 2009

Page 2: SETTING SOCIAL MEDIA POLICY

WHAT WILL WE ACCOMPLISH TODAY?

What is a social media policy/guidelines?

Why do we need one?

Who owns the process?

Recommended approach

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WHAT IS A SOCIAL MEDIA POLICY/GUIDELINES?

Guidance for employees’ use of social media both personally and professionally.

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A recent social media survey conducted by Travelers Insurance indicates that:

•One out of eight employees post work-related information on social media sites.

WHY DO WE NEED A POLICY/GUIDELINES?

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• 30 percent feel it is acceptable to post information online about their employer as long as they believe it is true.

WHY DO WE NEED A POLICY/GUIDELINES?

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• 75 percent of those who post anything personal online said they were “not at all” or “not very concerned” about information posted online causing professional damage.

WHY DO WE NEED A POLICY/GUIDELINES?

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• 11 percent of people surveyed know someone who has job-vented online.

WHY DO WE NEED A POLICY/GUIDELINES?

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WHY DO WE NEED A POLICY/GUIDELINES?

More concerning than possible negative posts:

42 percent of people who post about their company post something that they think reflects positively.

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WHY DO WE NEED A POLICY/GUIDELINES?

Employees may:

• Discuss a new product• Answer a question from a consumer online• Defend the brand• Post information on what they’re working on• Release news without knowing when and how

information should be shared• Tweet about a business function • Answer a product questions

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WHY DO WE NEED A POLICY/GUIDELINES?

FTC recently announced new guidelines that will affect brands in the social media landscape.

Brands need to:• Require disclosure and truthfulness in social media

outreach

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WHY DO WE NEED A POLICY/GUIDELINES?

FTC recently announced new guidelines that will affect brands in the social media landscape.

Brands need to:• Require disclosure and truthfulness in social media

outreach• Monitor conversations and correct misstatements

(when involved in sparking conversation)

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WHY DO WE NEED A POLICY/GUIDELINES?

FTC recently announced new guidelines that will affect brands in the social media landscape.

Brands need to:• Require disclosure and truthfulness in social media

outreach• Monitor conversations and correct misstatements

(when involved in sparking conversation)• Create social media policies and training programs

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WHY DO WE NEED A POLICY/GUIDELINES?

A policy/employee guidelines will:

• Reduce employee confusion and set specific standards

• Make the current ethical policies apply directly to social media

• Protect you against reputation damage online

• Supply employees with ways to benefit the company while remaining

ethical

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WHO OWNS THE PROCESS?

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WHO OWNS THE PROCESS?

Collaboration is key

• Marketing• Public relations• Customer service• Human resources• Internal communications• Legal counsel• Interactive team

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WHO OWNS THE PROCESS?

Build a social media task force

• Choose a task force leader• Download considerations• Use experts

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RECOMMENDED APPROACH

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OUR APPROACH

ISSUE: Ethical uncertainty• Personal vs. professional use

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OUR APPROACH

ISSUE: Ethical uncertainty• Personal vs. professional use

CONSIDERATIONS:• Gray areas in current ethics codes• Too much risk to “hope”

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OUR APPROACH

ISSUE: Ethical uncertainty• Personal vs. professional use

CONSIDERATIONS:• Gray areas in current ethics codes

• Too much risk to “hope”

SOLUTION:• Easy-to-read, specific guidelines

• Break them out by use

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OUR APPROACH

ISSUE: So many technologies• Policy specificity

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OUR APPROACH

ISSUE: So many technologies• Policy specificity

CONSIDERATIONS:• Managers not equipped • Many tactical questions

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OUR APPROACH

ISSUE: So many technologies• Policy specificity

CONSIDERATIONS:• Managers not equipped • Many tactical questions

SOLUTION:• Resources by medium

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OUR APPROACH

ISSUE: Employees desire involvementEmployee involvement

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OUR APPROACH

ISSUE: Employees desire involvementEmployee involvement

CONSIDERATIONS:• Marketing• Expertise• Reference job

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OUR APPROACH

ISSUE: Employees desire involvementEmployee involvement

CONSIDERATIONS:• Marketing

• Expertise

• Reference job

SOLUTION:• Rapid response plan

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GENERAL POLICY RECOMMENDATION

• Employees SHOULD NOT speak on behalf of of your brand online unless authorized.

• Employees SHOULD be empowered to help address online issues by submitting a rapid response form when applicable.

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GENERAL POLICY RECOMMENDATION

• Employees SHOULD NOT post comments or news about your brand without being asked to help cross-promote something.

• When asked to participate employees SHOULD follow ethical disclosure guidelines.

• Employees SHOULD feel comfortable participating in their own social networks but should be mindful that anything they say or do could reflect on the brand, just like in offline life.

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QUESTIONS