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Posts tagged ‘howto’

29
Apr

Keeping Up with All the Social Networks

Edelman Digital, the digital and social marketing arm of Edelman PR, has a great post on their blog about keeping up with all of your social networks:

Managing all of these networks often presents two options: either set them all up to post to each other and get the same content and updates on every network, or spend an inordinate amount of time typing made-up words into your address bar.

If you’ve got the right tools in hand, though, your task becomes a little easier. There are a few great applications out there that will help you manage all (or at least some) of your social networks all in one place, making interacting and connecting much simpler and more efficient.

Some of the tools they suggest?  TweetDeck, Brizzly, and Seesmic.

22
Apr

Statistics to Judge Your Social Media Efforts

Business.gov (“the Official Business Link to the U.S. Government”) posted recently an article on quantifying your social media efforts.  The article provides a list of social media benchmarks, which should be helpful for any organization.

  • Are you using video to market your small business? Not sure it’s worthwhile? Well, consider this: 62% of adult American Internet users watch videos on video-sharing sites* such as YouTube.com.
  • If your Facebook business Fan page has more than 100 fans, you are in the top 65%* of all users.
  • If you post at least one Twitter update per day, you are among the top 15% most active Twitter users*.
  • If you have 100 Twitter followers or more, you are among the top 7% of Twitter users as measured by number of followers.

If you need help hitting any of these benchmarks, govfresh recently had a good article on the subject, titled “Social media in government is like riding a bike.”

Why do I tell this story? Because I think government can greatly benefit from a “small glider bike” when first taking on social media. Too many agencies are reluctant to try not just because they’re afraid of falling, but because some mistakes lead to severe consequences.

21
Apr

Building a Social Media Guide

Orange County, California, details how it created a social media guide.  And the best part?

During several panels and workshops, I’ve shared our draft social media guide and asked for feedback from social media users. I also posted the guide on my blog. After all, isn’t that what public engagement is all about? You can download the guidelines here.

19
Apr

Added New Social Media Resources

We recently added a new social media resource section to FollowYourGov.

Be sure to check out Introduction to Social Media for some very instructional videos.  We will be adding more resources as we see them (or as you request them).

If you think of anything else we need, let us know in the comments or contact us.  Thanks!

14
Apr

Creating Your City’s Facebook Presence

AllFacebook, an incredible Facebook resource, has a great new article on starting your brand’s presence on Facebook.  I know we post a lot of articles that don’t specifically apply to governments or the public sector, but these articles typically have the best information.  Like this:

1. Build It, And They Might Come

For years, people have asked “What’s your brand’s AOL/Second Life/Twitter/YouTube/iPhone/MySpace Strategy?” Facebook is the world’s leading social network, with over 400 million users — 50 percent of whom login everyday. It’s easy for brands to become distracted by the latest trends, but let’s face it, Facebook is the real deal. Affluent consumers are slowly gravitating to social networking, specifically Facebook. However, simply creating a Facebook presence alone just doesn’t cut it. It’s better to create the destination, guide it, nurture it — and allow your followers to flock to an official channel. Your brand’s Facebook Page may not explode overnight, but at least you control the medium.

Does your organization have a Facebook presence?  Let us know in the comments.

30
Mar

Tips on Government Blogging

Governing People put together a great list of 20 thoughts on government blogging.  While they are good tips for blogging in general, I like the usefulness:

  1. Post at least weekly to maintain an audience. Less than weekly tends to lose your audience as they don’t develop a habit.
  2. Keep a couple of posts in hand at all times to cover busy periods. Otherwise you can easily miss a few weeks and start losing your audience.
2
Feb

DoD Wikis and Scientific Collaboration

The DoDLive blog, an official Department of Defense blog, writes about how the Defense Department has used wikis to increase scientific collaboration.

11
Jan

eBooks to Learn Social Media

Ten great eBooks to help you learn about social media and community, from Mashable.

9
Jan

Saving Money with an Internal Blog

To follow up on yesterday’s post on using internal blogs, Government Technology talks about how Oakland County uses an internal blog to save money:

Phil Bertolini, CIO of Oakland County, Mich., established a Cost-Reduction/Investment blog in summer 2009 on which employees, regardless of rank, could propose cost-cutting ideas. Suggestions from the blog have slashed $600,000 from the county’s annual IT budget so far.

8
Jan

How to Use an Internal Blog

In this video on Government Technology, Seattle CIO Bill Schrier talks about how he helps his organization with an internal blog.  On the blog, he can communicate with his employees, explain technology changes to other department heads, and recognize high-performing employees.

8
Jan

Protect Name and Brand in Social Media

Protecting brands (or your government’s name) in the age of social media.

6
Jan

Training Employees on Social Media

How to train employees on social media usage, from Mashable.

21
Dec

Social Media Marketing

Business.gov on social media marketing.

18
Dec

Glossary of Twitter Terms

SocialSmallBiz provides a glossary of Twitter terms, perfect for any new to the tweet-world.

30
Nov

Open Gov Challenges

The federal deputy CIO discusses the challenges to open government.