45
NAHO Speaker Series Social Media Part 2 Strategy and Case Study Mark Buell & Trevor Eggleton December 15, 2011

Social media speaker series Part 2

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Social media is not a replacement of previous forms of communication. Keep doing those things you used to do, social media is just another tool. The strength of social media is that it can empower your audiences to participate in your communication and brand development….hopefully in a good way.

Citation preview

Page 1: Social media speaker series Part 2

NAHO Speaker Series

Social MediaPart 2 Strategy and Case Study

Mark Buell&

Trevor Eggleton

December 15, 2011

Page 2: Social media speaker series Part 2

Let’s get started

Page 3: Social media speaker series Part 2

Great. Now what?

Page 4: Social media speaker series Part 2

1. Look within

• Goals, objectives• Resources• Should you be using

social media?

Then…

Page 5: Social media speaker series Part 2

2. Listen: Find out where your stakeholders are, what are they doing, what are they talking about?

• Stakeholders & competitors

• Influencers• Popular subjects• Trends

What’s this strange thing you’re handing me?

It’s called ‘paper’.

Page 6: Social media speaker series Part 2

What are people looking for?What are people talking about?Who are people listening to?

You?

Page 7: Social media speaker series Part 2
Page 8: Social media speaker series Part 2
Page 9: Social media speaker series Part 2
Page 10: Social media speaker series Part 2

Who are people listening to? Or….Who are people listening to? Or….Who should you be talking to?Who should you be talking to?

Page 11: Social media speaker series Part 2

Who has

time for this stuff?

Page 12: Social media speaker series Part 2

TweetdeckTweetdeck

Page 13: Social media speaker series Part 2

Google Reader (RSS feeds)Google Reader (RSS feeds)

Google AlertsGoogle Alerts

Page 14: Social media speaker series Part 2

Use (and create) certain hashtags.

Match content and audience with platform.

Find Facebook groups.

Connect with influencers: Twitter and blogs.

Leverage partners.

3. Get involved: Start building your community

Page 15: Social media speaker series Part 2

4. Have something to say.

– Be professional, credible and responsible.

– Always add value.– Be a leader.– Simply put: Participate in social media

the same way as you would participate with other media or public forum.

Page 16: Social media speaker series Part 2

A.L.I. Social Media for Government

June 2010

Page 17: Social media speaker series Part 2

1. Overview of CIRA2. Identification of problem – setting objectives3. Solution and rationalization4. Planning and execution 5. Metrics6. Lessons learned

Overview

Page 18: Social media speaker series Part 2

Who is CIRA?

• CIRA is the organization that manages the .CA domain space

• on behalf of all Canadians, the policies that support Canada’s

• Internet community and Canada’s involvement in

• international Internet governance.

Page 19: Social media speaker series Part 2

The Challenge

•The registration of a domain name is most often seen as a means to an end (i.e., I want a website)

•.CA domain names are not sold directly to the end user by CIRA

Page 20: Social media speaker series Part 2

ShowUsYour.CA Contest

Page 21: Social media speaker series Part 2

Objectives

1. Update online advertising content, refresh CIRA’s (and .CA) image.

2. Establish CIRA in social media.3. Raise awareness of CIRA and .CA.

Page 22: Social media speaker series Part 2

Target Audiences

• Primary: All .CA domain holders; specifically individuals and small business.

• Secondary: Influencers; young (mid 20s to mid 30s), middle class, well educated men and women (single) who work in the creative field (i.e., graphic design, web design, public relations, marketing) and are entrepreneurs. These individuals are most likely to live in an urban centre.

Page 23: Social media speaker series Part 2

Strategy

• Heavy emphasis on Social Media– Utilize Social Media to crowd source marketing content

• Internal buy-in – staff contest• Phased approach– Entry – Voting

Page 24: Social media speaker series Part 2

Execution • Phase 1: Contest entry

– Three weeks– Entrants developed and submitted short, web-based videos on

what their .CA domain name means to them– Entries were shortlisted to eight by a team composed of CIRA staff

and the Managing Editor for Marketing Magazine • Phase 2: Voting

– Public had the opportunity to vote for their favourite among the shortlisted videos

– To extend CIRA’s reach, the onus was placed on the shortlisted entrants to promote their video

• At the contest close, the winning video and two runners-up were selected

Page 25: Social media speaker series Part 2

Execution

• Traditional Media– Direct mail postcard

• Online– Social Media• YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, blogs

– Email– Advertising• Facebook, blogs, Google, cbc.ca

Page 26: Social media speaker series Part 2

Execution

Page 27: Social media speaker series Part 2

Execution: Social Media

• Utilized CIRA’s three Twitter accounts.• Facebook fan page. • LinkedIn group.• In phase two, put the responsibility on the

entrants to promote their entry.

Page 28: Social media speaker series Part 2

Phase 1 - Entry

Target audiences

Page 29: Social media speaker series Part 2

Phase 1 - Website

Page 30: Social media speaker series Part 2

Phase 2 - Voting

Small Business Owners and Key Influencers

Page 31: Social media speaker series Part 2

Phase 2 - Creative

Page 32: Social media speaker series Part 2

Microsite – Phase 2 Voting

Page 33: Social media speaker series Part 2

Social Media Activity: Phase 1 • Pitch Engine, first media release (social media release views): 200

• Pitch Engine, second media release (social media release views): 32

• YouTube Channel (total entry video views): 6,640

• YouTube Channel Subscribers: 41 new since start of contest

• YouTube Channel/Video Comments: 75

• Tweets about ShowUsYour.CA: 81, not including those from @mebuell, @ciranews or @cira001

• Blog posts about ShowUsYour.CA: 18, not including Public Domain

Page 34: Social media speaker series Part 2

Social Media Activity: Phase 2• Pitch Engine, first media release (media release views): 213• Pitch Engine, second media release (media release views): 55• Pitch Engine, third media release (media release views): 117• YouTube Channel (total entry video views): 26,884• YouTube Channel Subscribers: 47 new since start of contest• YouTube Channel/Video Comments: 132 since start of contest• Tweets about ShowUsYour.CA: 111, not including those from

@mebuell, @ciranews or @cira001• Blog posts about ShowUsYour.CA: 30, not including Public

Domain

Page 35: Social media speaker series Part 2

Results•Unique visitors: phase 1 entry 19,264, phase 2 voting 16,293•Visits: phase 1 entry 20,815 visits, phase 2 voting 20,027•Online advertising: – Google Content Network CTR of 0.05% and

74,261,895 impressions– CBC CTR of 0.04% and 1,899,577 impressions – Facebook CTR of 0.02% and 23,323,340 impressions

•95 entries, 3,548 votes

Page 36: Social media speaker series Part 2

Summary

•Can generate interest•Can convert interest into action•Can create and engage our community

Page 37: Social media speaker series Part 2

5. Be yourself – be human (but not too human…).

Page 38: Social media speaker series Part 2

6. Evaluate: Make sure you’re saying it right, and in the right place.

Page 39: Social media speaker series Part 2

The Five Secrets of Social Media

Success

(how to get people to follow/like you)

Page 40: Social media speaker series Part 2

1. Have something to talk about…

Page 41: Social media speaker series Part 2

2. Use multiple channels…

Page 42: Social media speaker series Part 2

3. Use what fits.

Page 43: Social media speaker series Part 2

4. Some Connections Matter More than Others…

Page 44: Social media speaker series Part 2

5. Set Goals.

Page 45: Social media speaker series Part 2

And have fun with it!

Thank you.

Mark E. Buell Trevor Eggleton E-mail: [email protected] E-mail: [email protected] Twitter: @mebuell Twitter: @trevoreggleton