Social Media Basics - Arkansas State University Public Relations Class

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Social Media Basics Abbi Siler Training Specialist & Business Consultant [email protected] or @abbisiler © 2014 Arkansas State University Small Business and Technology Development Center

description

This presentation was offered to public relations students in Spring 2014 and covers basics to apply to future professions in community management, questions to ask clients when consulting and general information about social media and PR.

Transcript of Social Media Basics - Arkansas State University Public Relations Class

Page 1: Social Media Basics - Arkansas State University Public Relations Class

Social Media Basics

Abbi SilerTraining Specialist & Business [email protected] or @abbisiler © 2014 Arkansas State University Small Business and Technology Development Center

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How Are Brands Using Social Media?

• Customer Service• Story Telling – engaging advertising• Promotions and Sales Incentives• Relationship Building• Advertising – pay per clicks, like campaigns,

Twitter campaigns• Data – demographical analysis, trends, news• Press – getting journalists attention, compelling

press releases

© 2014 Arkansas State University Small Business and Technology Development Center

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Facebook

• A simple Facebook Icon alerts visitors to your website and can help increase your likes.

• Facebook is going to give you mass distribution.• Use pictures and balance your posts between links to your site and

information that is relevant to your audience.– Example: You are working with folks on taxes – share articles on new

tax laws or data that may impact or inform your customers. • Facebook is a great social network to build credibility and trust with

customers. To get started post once or twice a day or at minimum 3 times a week. The more you share, the more likely you are to show up in the newsfeed.

174,000,000+ people in United States1,540,000+ people in Arkansas

*Data collected March 2014 via Facebook Ad Engine.

© 2014 Arkansas State University Small Business and Technology Development Center

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Twitter

• A simple Twitter Icon alerts visitors to your website and can help increase your followers.

• Twitter is a little smaller than Facebook and more easily targeted toward specific audiences.

• The goal on Twitter is a conversation and information sharing. Only 140 characters, so keep it short and sweet.

• A bit more of a time commitment – you want to tweet at least 3-5 times a day to get started and to grow.

• Hashtags are your best friend on Twitter when used effectively.– Example: https://twitter.com/IRSnews/status/438762953782099969– https://twitter.com/FreedMaxickCPAs

645,750,000+ total Twitter Users58 million tweets sent per day2.1 billion search queries per day40% of users who watch Twitter but do not tweet

*Data collected March 2014 via Statisticbrain.com

© 2014 Arkansas State University Small Business and Technology Development Center

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LinkedIn

• LinkedIn is the professional network – what you share here will be building your personal brand or your company’s brand.

• Share articles, tips and join groups that are pertinent to your industry.• This network works great for legal offices, CPAs, Real Estate and other

businesses that really depend on the personal brand of their employees and owners.

• Learn more about creating a Company Page – this is a great tool for recruitment and product/services marketing.

270,000,000+ total Twitter Users84 million LinkedIn users in the United States187 million unique users per month38% of users visit the site on a mobile device.

*Data collected March 2014 via Mediabistro.com

© 2014 Arkansas State University Small Business and Technology Development Center

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Think About The Online Strategy

• What are the goals?– Education? Brick & Mortar Sales? Phone Call? Online Sale?– Lead Generation?– Communicating an idea, thought or brand?

• Where are the customers?– Do they interact and research on Facebook? Google? LinkedIn? Twitter?– How are you currently trying to reach them?– Where are your competitors?

• Website?– Is it updated? Is it flexible?– Are customers finding and using the website?– What’s the main call to action on the site?

© 2014 Arkansas State University Small Business and Technology Development Center

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Helpful Tools for Managing Social Media

• Hootsuite:– Time management tool – schedule tweets, cross promote from one

platform, short links, and more!– https://hootsuite.com/features/social-networks

• Facebook Insights:– This comes with any Facebook Page.– Offers demographic information, likes, reports and growth

opportunities.– Shows you interactions and statistics for your Facebook Page.

• Help Sections on all Social Networks:– Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and many other social networks provide

white papers in their Help areas to get you started – these can be downloaded and read or shared with other staff members.

© 2014 Arkansas State University Small Business and Technology Development Center

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Pinterest & Instagram

Visual outlets – great for retail brands, how to articles, creative businesses. Demographics aren’t just women!

Instagram – a great tool to show what brands are doing in the world around them.

Check out these examples: The White House, Lipton Tea (instagram)

© 2014 Arkansas State University Small Business and Technology Development Center

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Thanks!

Abbi SilerTraining Specialist & Business [email protected] or @abbisiler

Let’s keep in touch!

© 2014 Arkansas State University Small Business and Technology Development Center