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Family Services à la Famille Ottawa Social Media June 23, 2011

Social media policy family services ottawa

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A presentation about Family Services Ottawa's new social media policy, plus some Social Media 101 information.

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Page 1: Social media policy family services ottawa

Family Services à la Famille Ottawa Social Media

June 23, 2011

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Social Media at FSFO

Intent of social mediaSocial media are meant to “engage” and be a two-way

conversationSame level of risk as sending out a news release, but goes

directly to individualsGenerally used for sharing info/promoting/creating

communities of interest/raising profile

Purpose at FSFOEnhance services provisionBuilding communityKnowledge transferSocial action/advocacyAgency and programs/services promotion

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Social media principles

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8iQLkt5CG8I

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FSFO Social Media Policy

Policy developed to guide the use/introduction of FSFO social media channels

Also guides the use of and contribution to external social media channels by FSFO staff

Employees are accountable for the content they post on social media sites (FSFO and others)

Executive Director – sole authority to determine which programs/services use social media channels, staff members responsible and allocated resources

Purpose, resources, responsibilities and expectations to be established in writing prior to introduction of new FSFO social media channels

Client and staff confidentiality must be protected at all times

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FSFO Social Media Policy (cont’d) All content on social media sites must be relevant to the

agency, its programs and services Names, passwords, account info managed by FSO’s

technology coordinator Profiles will link back to FSFO and be consistent with the

brand (e.g., @Tim_FSFO) Approved staff will identify themselves as employees of

FSFO Images of individuals (stills and video) will be used with

appropriate written permissions Profiles should include disclaimers noting that views

expressed do not necessarily represent those of the agency (e.g., “my views are my own”)

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Channels will avoid endorsements, advertisements, sponsorship (does not apply to Facebook “likes”; Retweets – to be discussed later)

FSFO reserves the right to delete submissions that contain content that is not consistent with the agency (vulgar, personal attacks, offensive comments)

Escalation for problems/concerns – first to program area supervisor, if necessary supervisor to Executive Director

Rules of engagement

FSFO Social Media Policy (cont’d)

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Personal use of social media

All employees can participate in social media, using own computers, on own time

Never post or create anything that would be potentially embarrassing or offensive for FSFO

Those easily seen to represent FSFO are expected to consider that relationship and take precautions to ensure activities reflect positively on the agency.

Policy violations will be subject to disciplinary action, up to and including termination for cause

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Social media 101

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Used to share knowledge/info, promote programs Short statements, including hyperlinks to more information Not applicable to all audiences

101

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101

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Getting started: Set up personal account, photo/logo, profile Follow the right people/orgs to get the best, most relevant information

(e.g., politicians, researchers, clients, peers) [Tip, look at who your influencers are following and then follow some of those people]

Find a tool you like (iGoogle, Hootsuite, Tweetdeck) to help you manage Twitter

Set up searches/mentions Lurk - get to know the lingo, see what people are posting/sharing Retweet a few things Reply to someone

Remember: Profile should include a disclaimer “My tweets are my own.” Once a tweet is out there, anyone can share it; you can delete it, but it

will remain on the feed People will use Twitter to communicate with you; it needs to be

monitored; responses are public unless you do a Direct Message (great way to disseminate clarifications quickly; dangerous for privacy)

101

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Used to share information, promote programs/events/activities, engage your communities, gather feedback and insights from clients/stakeholders

Can create events, ask for donations, ask questions and create polls, start discussions, send links to FSFO website, “like” other organizations

When you post info, it shows up in all your fans’ news streams (their home page on Facebook).

If a “fan” likes you, all their friends get a notification Remember:

When you update your status, everyone sees it If you post photos, everyone sees them (need permissions) If you comment on someone’s comment, everyone who has commented sees

your comment People will use Facebook to communicate with you; it needs to be monitored and

comments need to be acknowledged, if applicable If you “like” an organization, it shows up on your profile; only “like” official

partners

101

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Blogs 101 Writing a blog

Can be written by various people – different voices, but make sure to identify the writer; use an informal tone

Great way to share opinions (thought leadership); provide additional information on a program/event; comment on current affairs, studies, policy; engage your readers and ask for feedback on ideas/policies/potential programs

Use photos/videos, link to other blogs/studies/websites – make it visually interesting

Remember: keep the language neutral; refer to the Guidelines

Responding to comments on your blogs Make sure to keep track of comments and to engage with your readers

(respond) Example:

http://www.child-psych.org/2011/05/breastfeeding-versus-formula-feeding-and-the-rate-of-early-childhood-obesity.html

Negative comments are okay (remember Rules of Engagement); clarify erroneous information; add links to additional info if necessary; delete posts that do not respect Guidelines (link to Guidelines from your blog to help you justify)

Commenting on other people’s blogs Great way to build your own profile and thought leadership Remember to respect the Guidelines when commenting

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Bookmark websites, articles, stories, pictures, videos Share them publically by sending out a URL to your

bookmarking page People can sign up for updates whenever you add a

new link Tag articles/links based on the content (e.g., children,

adoption, etc.) Add a link to your home page, Facebook page, email

signature Value for your stakeholders, clients, colleagues

Social bookmarking sites 101

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Social bookmarking sites 101

http://www.delicious.com/Aroundtherainbow

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Used to post video (have your videos hosted on YouTube rather than your website)

Very shareable/easy for people to find Create your own channels e.g., FSFO Channel Embed the video on your Facebook page; link to a video

from Twitter People can “like” or share your videos Keep in mind the Guidelines Examples of uses for video/animation:

capture/share events share news stories about FSFO create promotional or instructional videos (hope for viral) PR campaigns public service announcements

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If Facebook is the bar, then LinkedIn is the office… Professional network – think of it as your professional

association Used to connect with peers and colleagues Your profile is your CV Post updates/include your Twitter feed/share links and

information Get value from belonging to groups and sharing

information/asking questions Value on a personal basis or for networking with or meeting

new professionals in your sector

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Tools of the trade

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iGoogle

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www.fusecommunications.ca