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All Hands on Board for Social Media

September 3, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Let’s say you’ve made the decision: you want your employees on social media.

Many handsIt took some courage to arrive at that decision.  You’ve heard the horror stories  about what can happen when things go wrong.  But you know that people will talk about you online, no matter what.  It’s better for your organization to be a part of that conversation.

And there are great advantages to being there:

  • Keener sense of what your supporters want
  • Stronger relationships with your community, customers, or clients
  • Better customer service
  • Reaching people earlier in the buying cycle (which is also the giving cycle, for nonprofits!)
  • Creative ways of accomplishing your mission

Why Get Your Employees Involved?

You could assign your social media to just one person, or just one department.  Why should you get as many people involved as possible?

Because your employees are a source of all the good stuff you can share on social media.  Success stories.  Fascinating facts.  Good advice for people looking to use your products or services, and fast responses to people who have questions or complaints.  Inside looks at  how the organization works.  In short, everything that would make people follow you on social media.

How to Get All Hands on Board

Let’s face it: your employees are already busy.  If you ask them the wrong way, they’ll see social media as just one more task they have to do.  What’s the right way to get them involved?

  1. Ask for their stories.  People like to be listened to. Make a habit of asking your staff about successes, challenges, and memorable or funny things that happen during work. Write the stories up for your website or newsletter…or ask them if they’d like to write their own stories. You can do that even if you’re not yet on social media!
  2. Let them create a social media policy.  Provide templates–you can find some at the link–but let them discuss the issues and come up with solutions that fit your company.
  3. Have and share a strategy.  Make sure that employees know what the organization is trying to do.  Empower them to figure out how to do it.
  4. Provide training.  A person may be active on her own Facebook account, but that doesn’t mean she’ll recognize opportunities to post to the agency’s.  Brainstorm.  Provide examples.
  5. Welcome mistakes and learn from them. You can’t know in advance what will work with your specific audience. Even highly paid “social media experts” goof.  As long as everyone is sticking by the policy, expect mistakes, allow for them, and reward learning.

Has your organization already empowered employees on social media? How did it go?  If you share what you learned, you will be doing us all a favor!

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The Top 10 Things to Know When You’re Starting Social Media

March 16, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Are you or your organization just beginning to use social media?  It’s a little like being a new driver. “Keep your eyes on the road. Keep your eyes on the rearview mirror. Watch out for pedestrians. Watch out for signs.”

There are so many things to learn and to keep track of. How do you tell which are important for you?

Fear not! I’d like to share with you the top ten things you need to know when you’re putting your social media in gear and hitting the road.

1. What to do before you start social media. https://dennisfischman.com/ten-reasons-your-nonprofit-should-not-be-on-facebook/

2. Why you should listen first, post later. https://dennisfischman.com/listen-up-if-you-want-to-succeed-on-social-media/

3. Who sees what you post. https://dennisfischman.com/who-actually-sees-what-you-post-on-social-media/

4. How to make sure your social media actually speaks for you. https://dennisfischman.com/write-a-social-media-policy-that-works/

5. Where you start. https://dennisfischman.com/social-media-starting-small/

6. Which social media you should use. https://dennisfischman.com/what-social-media-should-i-use-the-answer/

7. How many social media you should use. https://dennisfischman.com/the-magic-formula-for-choosing-social-media/

8. How to find the time to post. https://dennisfischman.com/social-media-how-do-i-find-the-time-2/

9. What to automate and what to keep personal. https://dennisfischman.com/social-media-for-nonprofits-how-do-i-keep-up/

10. What else you’ll want to learn as time goes by. https://dennisfischman.com/congratulations-youre-our-new-social-media-expert/

What are YOU doing new this spring? I’d love to know! Drop me a line at [email protected] or give me a quick call at and tell me about it!

Dennis

 

 

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Write a Social Media Policy that Works

January 30, 2014 by Dennis Fischman 4 Comments

social media policy cartoon

Your organization should have a social media policy, not so much to tell employees what not to do as to tell them what they can and should do.

Why?  Because your employees are a source of all the good stuff you can share on social media.  Success stories.  Fascinating facts.  Good advice for people looking to use your products or services, and fast responses to people who have questions or complaints.  Inside looks at  how the organization works.  In short, everything that would make people follow you on social media.

Neither the head of your organization nor your marketing department (if you are fortunate enough to have one) can do it all.  Empower your staff with a clear set of guidelines and you will multiply the ways you interact with the people you want to reach: your potential clients, customers, donors, and other supporters.

Yes, a good social media policy will set limits.  But those limits should give a lot of leeway, to make room for creativity and initiative.

Don’t be the pointy-haired boss who makes it impossible for employees to do their work.  Be the one who shows trust, and earns it in return.

Here are some templates you could use to create a social media policy that’s right for your company:

Society for Human Resource Management template

5 Examples of Corporate Social Media Policies (from Hubspot)

Online Database of Government & Non-Profit Social Media Policies (socialmediagovernance.com)

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