This webinar will provide an overview of popular social media vehicles used by many non-profits. We will cover how to best utilize these sites to enhance your program. We will take an in-depth look at using a Facebook Fan Page, using and understanding your Twitter account, and other social media tools that can boost your program.
At the end of the session you will learn: how to increase traffic to your social media sites, best times to post items on Facebook, Twitter, etc., how to use your Fan Page wisely, calculating the value of social media to your non-profit, and links to social media resources for your pages.
3. Did You Know?
ï 60% of the online population uses Social Media.
ï Every member of congress has a Facebook Page.
ï It took 9 months for Facebook to reach 100 million
users.
⊠Radio took 38 years to reach 50 million listeners.
⊠The internet took 4 years to reach 50 million people.
ï 1 in 8 couples married in the U.S. last year met via social
media
ï Department of Education reports online students out
performed those receiving face-to-face instruction.
ï You would need to live for 1,000 years to watch all the
videos on YouTube.
ï 77% of internet users read blogs.
4. Social Media and Youth
ï 85% of youth communicate
online in some form.
ï 61% of youth engage in Social
Networking Sites.
ï Facebook is most popular
social networking site for every
youth age group.
ï Teens spend 11 hours 32
minutes per month online.
ï 29% of youth report being
cyber-bullied.
ï 52% of youth know someone
who has been cyber-bullied.
5. The Value of Social Media
ï Increasing Awareness
ï Staying Updated
w/Community News
ï Free Promotion
âSocial Media has given
us (anyone) the power to
ï Connecting with Your
Audience change the world.â â
ï Networking Mark Horvath
ï Collaboration
www.invisiblepeople.tv & www.hardlynormal.com
Opportunities
ï Fundraising
6. The POWER of Social Media
Betty White SNL Facebook Free JetBlue Flight Attendant
Campaign Steven Slater
Jimmy Wayneâs Meet Me
Halfway Campaign
TIME: Can Post Secret & Mark Horvath & InvisiblePeople.tv
Facebook Save a Life?
7. Getting Started â Things to Think About
ï Create a Social Media
Plan
ï Where will you have a
Presence?
ï Whatâs Your Messaging?
ï Whatâs Your Target
Audience?
ï Who is Listening?
ï What are your Social Media
Goals?
8. Use it or Lose it!
ï Decide who will be in charge of social media
forums.
ï Set up Google Alerts/RSS Feeds
⊠Use Key Words that apply to your Non-Profit
ï Ex: Homeless Youth, National Safe Place, etc.
ï Monitor Daily!
ï Participate in Online Conversation
ï Share information
ï Make Connections
9. Facebook
ï Once strictly for college users,
now the most popular social
networking site on the web.
ï If Facebook were a country, it
be the 4th largest in the world.
ï Has 500 Million users
worldwide.
ï The avg. user has 130 friends.
ï Users spend an avg. of 25 min a
day on Facebook.
ï Users avg. over 700 billion min.
per month on Facebook.
ï 1.5 million pieces of content
(links, news stories, photos) are
shared daily.
10. Facebook Fan Page
ï 90% of the power of a
Facebook Page is in the Status
Update
ï 77% of fan pages have fewer
than 1,000 fans.
ï Engage users with relevant
content.
ï Make people feel apart of
something.
ï Offer a variety of posts
ï Ex. articles, quotes, videos, pictures,
links
11. Using Your Fan Page Wisely
ï Itâs all about Interaction and Engagement!
ï Establish a username for your Facebook Page.
⊠after reaching100 fans, a Facebook Page Username can be
reserved at www.facebook.com/username.
ï Build a sense of community.
⊠Become a fan of like-minded agency pages.
⊠Create a list of these pages.
ï Distinguish Yourself from other non-profits or
branches of your non-profit.
⊠For Safe Place programs, use Safe Place of your city/state or
for ex. CASA of Las Vegas
ï Observe Page Insights regularly.
12.
13. Fan Page Challenges
ï When is the best time to post?
ï Suggested âhigh traffic windowsâ to post:
Depending on your time zone sometime
between 8:15am and 2:00pm.
ï Avoid posting too many status updates.
ï Find your own style in what you share.
ï Find your rhythm with your audience.
ï Investigate âCommunity Pagesâ.
ï Keep up with the ever changing landscape of
Facebook
14. The Power of Twitter
ï There are 110 Million accounts on Twitter.
ï 1 in 5 Americans use Twitter (ages 18-35)
ï Twitter started as a simple SMS-text service.
ï Fortune 100 CEOs are the slowest
demographic to join Twitter.
⊠Only 2 of the top 100 CEOs are on Twitter
ï Facilitates constant flow of communication.
ï Has the ability to create new relationships and
connections that may never have been possible.
15. Twitter 101
ï Twitter lets you write and read messages of up
to 140 characters.
ï Twitter replies start with @
ï Ex. @SafePlace Great TXT 4 Help program!
ï Incite Conversation and ask Questions
ï Share links with followers, re-tweet info from the
people you follow.
ï Utilize the Side Menu â Observe your retweets,
â@â Replies , and direct messages.
ï Tip: Thursdays and Fridays are the most active days
on Twitter.
16. Twitter Terms
ï Tweet: an update or message posted on Twitter.
ï Following: adding people/companies youâre interested
in to read their updates and messages in your timeline.
ï Re-Tweet: used to share ideas by reposting messages
from your followers and giving them credit.
⊠ex. RT @hardlynormal :A homeless man wanted my @safeplace
wristband so I gave it to him. I told him if he runs into homeless youth to
share info
ï Direct Message (DM): Private message sent to
another user.
⊠To send a DM start message with âdm usernameâ ex. DM @SafePlace
ï Hashtag(#): Categorizing Tweets.
⊠ex. @JimmyWayne nears end of his walk halfway across US for
#HomelessYouth.
17. Twitter Etiquette
ï The âRe-Tweetâ- the preferred way by users to
share info from other people.
ï HT (Heard Through)- sharing info seen or heard
from another person/organization.
ï Ex. invisiblepeople: A youth created documentary, "The Untold
Story: Homeless Teens" http://bit.ly/dyySmD ht @safeplace
ï Give credit where credit is due.
ï Share info with each other!
ï DanRatherReport: @SafePlace 100,000 - 300,000 minors r
forced into prostitution every year. A look at underage sex
trafficking in Portland, OR. HDNet Tue 8pm
18. Twitter Resources
Once comfortable with Twitter, utilize these tools:
ï Twitter 101- A Guide for Businesses
http://business.twitter.com/twitter101
ï Twitter Lists
Grouping people together by subject.
Ex) Charities, Non-Profits, Homeless Advocates,Youth Advocates,
ï Mention Map
http://asterisq.com/blog/2009/10/14/explore-your-twitter-network-with-mentionmap
Loads each user's Twitter status updates and finds the people they interact with
the most.
ï Bit.ly
http://bit.ly/
Shortens hyperlinks to fit within the 140 character status update.
Ex) @SafePlace: A youth created documentary, "The Untold Story: Homeless
Teens" http://bit.ly/dyySmD
19. Social Media Best Practices
ï Communicate Frequently.
ï Celebrate Successes.
ï Follow your organizationâs code of conduct.
ï Become a resource to your community.
ï Encourage the âSuper Fanâ
ï Observe the behavioral cultures within each
network and adjust your outreach accordingly.
ï Establish and nurture relationships online and
in the real world.
ï Stick to Business.
20. Q and A
Chrissy Marzano
cmarzano@nationalsafeplace.org