social media & local government mark tosczak march 29,2012

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Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

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Page 1: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Social Media & Local Government

Mark TosczakMarch 29,2012

Page 2: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

My Assumptions

1. You understand the importance of social media.

2. You have at least some familiarity with most widely used sites – Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn.

3. You try to approach communications strategically (goals, measurement).

4. You have a social media policy.

Page 3: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Four Social Media Challenges

1. Reaching an audience online.2. Increasing engagement.3. Dealing with crises.4. Finding the resources.

Page 4: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

A quick survey of the social media landscape

Page 5: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Facebook

- Biggest, most successful social media site- People use it mostly for social exchanges –

friends and family- Biggest challenge with Facebook is

maintaining engagement- Warning: Don’t rely on it exclusively – the

company tends to change the rules

Page 6: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Twitter

- My favorite (I’m @marktzk)- Fewer active users, but those users are

influencers (journalists, bloggers, people who are active across multiple platforms)

- Good for building relationships with smaller, targeted groups

- Sometimes used as a customer service tool

Page 7: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

LinkedIn

- Social media for people who are afraid of social media

- Great for networking, job searches, professional advancement

- Can be a good tool for cultivating small communities of professionals (via groups, etc.)

- Often underrated by its own users

Page 8: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

And more …

PinterestGoogle+FoursquareYelpMyspaceBlogsWebsite commentsWikipedia

Email listsDiscussion forumsDigg, Reddit, StumbleUponQuoraTumblrFlickrEtc.

Page 9: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 1: Reaching More People

Facebook – More Likes on Your Page(s)- Have some content already there- Promote elsewhere (email signatures,

newsletters, website, etc.)- Ads work, if you have a budget (use geo-

targeting, put the Like button in the ad itself)- Ask your fans to share page content w/ others

Page 10: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 1: Reaching More People

Increasing Twitter Followers- Publish content regularly- Fill out your Twitter profile in full- Follow others- Engage with others – RT them, thank them for

RTs, ask and answer questions, etc.- Promote in other settings

Page 11: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 1: Reaching More People

LinkedIn- Two likely strategies here:

- Create your own group and invite people to join that group (ex. Your Town Planning Department Discussion Group)

- Monitor other relevant groups (if they exist for your community) and participate in those

Page 12: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 1: Reaching More People

Why Organizations Fail in These Efforts- They update/post too infrequently - Too much promotion, not enough

engagement (no viral lift)- Most important: They give up too soon!

Page 13: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 2: Increasing Engagement

Page 14: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 2: Increasing Engagement

On Facebook- Engagement = comments, likes, shares, click-throughs- Pictures & video work better- Keep text status updates short and engaging:

- Ask questions: “What’s your favorite park in [your town]?”

- Look at your FB insights, figure out what’s working, do more of that

Page 15: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 2: Increasing Engagement

Page 16: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 2: Increasing Engagement

On Twitter- Engagement = RTs, favorites, DMs, responses,

click-throughs- Writing a good tweet is like writing a headline

– pithy, attracts interest, WIIFM factor- Allow room for RTs (i.e. make it 120 characters

or less)- Engage with others (RT them, respond, etc.)

Page 17: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 2: Increasing Engagement

Page 18: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 3: Crisis Communications

Page 19: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 3: Crisis Communications

“Ten years ago people would have read about this in the newspaper, then left it alone feeling sad. Now people can take their outrage and turn it into real action … It’s really a testament to the tragedy of this case and the power of social media to draw attention and allow people to have an avenue.”

-- Brianna Bayo-Cotter, Change.orghttp://newsfeed.time.com/2012/03/26/social-media-the-muscle-behind-the-trayvon-martin-movement

/

Page 20: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 3: Crisis Communications

Basic Principles- Get the facts, ASAP

- What happened?- Why did it happen?- How is it being addressed?- What’s being done to prevent this in the future?

- If you don’t know yet, say so!

Page 21: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 3: Crisis Communications

Basic Principles- Many offline principles apply online (speed,

addressing perceived victims, etc.)- Use the same messages, documents as you do

for media & other key groups- Direct people to your website for statements,

news releases, etc. (don’t restrict communications to social channels)

Page 22: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 3: Crisis Communications

Is it a storm, or a tempest in a teapot?- Don’t overreact – be measured in your response- Don’t censor, don’t create the impression you’re

trying to hide something- Questions

- Is the issue spreading online?- Are the media paying attention?- If there is a single person or group driving this, are

he/she/they taken seriously?

Page 23: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge 3: Crisis Communications

Further Tactics- Take it offline – the most vocal people can

often be calmed down through face-to-face conversations

- Good PR starts with good ‘public policy’ – you can’t always resolve issues solely through communications

- Build your community before you need it

Page 24: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge Four: Resources

Page 25: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge Four: Resources

Hub-and-spoke model- Create content once, push it out over multiple

social media channels- Ex. Write a post about something on your

town/county/agency blog- Tweet about the post- Share the post on Facebook- Link to in your LinkedIn group

Page 26: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge Four: Resources

Schedule your outbound content ahead of time- Hootsuite has scheduling capability- WordPress blogs allow you to schedule posts

for publication- Worst case … the intern

Page 27: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge Four: Resources

Content Planning- Create editorial calendars (include content-

due deadlines, publishing dates)- Delegate at least some content creation (you

don’t have to write every word, take every photo)

- Repurpose content (a blog post, a photo album, a video uploaded, etc.)

Page 28: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge Four: Resources

Free and low-cost tools- Consoles: HootSuite, TweetDeck, SproutSocial,

SocialOomph- Bit.ly for measuring click-throughs- SocialMention.com – real-time social media

search- Boardreader.com – search engine for

discussion forums

Page 29: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Challenge Four: Resources

Free and low-cost tools (cont’d)- Monitter.com – real-time Twitter search, by

location- Fbsearch.us – searches publicly available

Facebook posts, pictures, etc.- Locafollow.com, followerwonk.com – Search

for Twitter users based on location, bio

Page 30: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

One final thought:

You can’t do everything. Focus on one or two things that make sense

and do them well.

Challenge Four: Resources

Page 31: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Questions?

Page 32: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012

Where to find me

On the job:[email protected]

Online:Personal blog: marktzk.comTwitter: @marktzkLinkedIn:

http://www.linkedin.com/in/marktosczak

Page 33: Social Media & Local Government Mark Tosczak March 29,2012