17
Betsy Woods Public relations and marketing manager Bethany Deines Annual giving director Dayton Children’s Social Media in Health Care

Social Media in Health Care

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Social Media in Health Care Panel with Beth Deines and Betsy Woods. From SummitUp 2010

Citation preview

Page 1: Social Media in Health Care

Betsy Woods

Public relations and marketing manager

Bethany Deines

Annual giving director

Dayton Children’s

Social Media in Health Care

Page 2: Social Media in Health Care

The Social Network

Marylin Delphy: The site got 2200 hits within 2 hours?

Mark Zuckerberg: Thousand. Maryiln: I'm sorry? Mark: Twenty-two *thousand*. Marylin: Wow.

Erica Albright: The internet's written in ink, Mark. It's not written in pencil.

Page 3: Social Media in Health Care

Have you ever talked about a health care experience on Facebook, Twitter, blog, etc?

1 2

50%50%

1. Yes

2. No

Page 4: Social Media in Health Care

Our Story: @daytonchildrens

Page 5: Social Media in Health Care

BackgroundConnect with moms, tell story, create

advocatesEnhance customer servicePosition as pediatric expertListened firstResearched what others were doingMade a commitment (3 people)Created a plan

Page 6: Social Media in Health Care

ContentPatient stories (parental consent, complying

with HIPAA)Fundraising eventsHealth and safety tipsVideos/picturesService linesNews storiesRecall alertsAsk questions, respond to commentsCrisis communication

Page 7: Social Media in Health Care

Nevin’s Snowman

Page 8: Social Media in Health Care

Nevin’s Story Goes ViralYouTube video generated over 300 views in 24

hoursWDTN ran storyStory ran nationally on The Weather ChannelNumerous comments on Facebook and TwitterAsked fans/followers to write letters for

Valentine’s Day

Page 9: Social Media in Health Care

GoalsBuild relationships (target audience: moms 18-55)Create advocatesCreate conversations – ask questions, respond to

commentsBuild an online communityIncrease participation/conversationEnhance customer servicePosition as pediatric expertDrive traffic to websiteIncrease revenue and donationsBuild referrals

Page 10: Social Media in Health Care

Are you a fan/follower of a health care organization on social media?

1 2

50%50%1. Yes

2. No

Page 11: Social Media in Health Care

What Are People Saying?

Page 12: Social Media in Health Care

What Are People Saying?

Page 13: Social Media in Health Care

What social media channel do you use the most?

1 2 3 4 5

20% 20% 20%20%20%1. Facebook

2. Twitter

3. MySpace

4. Blog

5. YouTube

Page 14: Social Media in Health Care

RecommendationsListen firstHave a planMake a commitment Be authentic/sincereBe transparent – who is behind the message?Participate offline – attend eventsShare your story internally/get buy-in and

supportFollow back

Page 15: Social Media in Health Care

RecommendationsParticipate in the conversation, be activePass along messages (good and bad)Use social media to improve customer

service, the experienceShare content (give credit to author)Know what your competition is doingCreate a social media policyExpect negative feedbackUse to pitch media stories

Page 16: Social Media in Health Care

What Not to DoOnly push content (selling mode)Not participate in the convoNot respondPost content all at onceAutomated messagesNot make a commitment, leave page(s) idle Participate in every social network channel

and not manage it wellGhost writing

Page 17: Social Media in Health Care

Questions?Join the conversation:Facebook.com/daytonchildrensTwitter.com/daytonchildrensYouTube.com/daytonchildrensBlog.childrensdayton.org