In this video I talk about what I’ve been up to and an explanation for my intentional time being less active in social media.
Again, thanks for being such a great community! I’m excited to come back in full force with some great content.

In this video I talk about what I’ve been up to and an explanation for my intentional time being less active in social media.
Again, thanks for being such a great community! I’m excited to come back in full force with some great content.
I’m just going to be completely blunt and tell you that I think the social media portion of my web strategy has been a failure so far. Yes, I’m only a month in and awareness has increased and volunteer numbers have gone up, but I want more. It isn’t that social media is “not working” or that the numbers aren’t there. It’s that it hasn’t looked like what I expected. I had hoped the pages would be burgeoning with active engagement. I dreamed of times where students and members of the Springfield community would @reply a quick question to @uisvolunteer or write on our fan page’s wall to discuss how they liked an event and start to use the space as their own. That simply isn’t happening.
So I started to dig into the problem to understand why. I talked to students and looked at different trends and numbers for our campus and Springfield in general. I found a few good nuggets. I learned that students here don’t want to use Facebook or Twitter for information, they want to limit it to social networking. Students also don’t care for blogs. Most didn’t know what a RSS feed was. Further, out of all of our students (both undergraduate and graduate level) less than 1% are using Twitter. In the entire Springfield community? Less than .01%. Those numbers are staggering and factor into the big picture, but still doesn’t address the level of engagement. Low usage simply isn’t a sufficient excuse.
I’m noticing the voluntary nature of social media leads to a level of interaction that is unpredictable. Think about it. I could post this and you could forward it to some friends, retweet it on Twitter, comment, or do nothing. I may have an idea how something may go over and predict possibilities to a certain extent, but never completely know what will happen. So what does this mean for social media strategies? A cornerstone of any strategy should include periods of evaluation that include three stages: the Research stage, Adjust stage, and Build stage. It is my belief that if you’re not doing these things, you’re not creating the best strategy possible.
Research
We’ve all been told to listen, but here’s the thing, listening isn’t enough. It’s just one piece of an entire puzzle. What other points of data are you analyzing? Are you considering and learning about the target’s environment? How are you actively getting to know the people you’re targeting?
This is also a time where your organization analyzes internally. How is our progress looking? Are we still adding value and helping solve problems? Do our objectives align with our mission?
The marketing world revolves around the buzzword of influence. A major problem I have seen with marketers is incredible rigidity. Instead of reevaluating, time is wasted attempting to influence people to adopt a failing system. This research portion is the first step in meeting people where they’re at; focusing on relationship, trust, and collaboration, not simply influence. We need to focus on relationship and trust because we should come from a short-term and long-term perspective and this heavily influences positive word of mouth.
Adjust
After doing research it’s now time to set a plan of action. That’s why it’s important to have an overarching mission, flexible goals, and solid objectives so that plans can be perfected as you learn more. You need to do something with your research. Your strategy should never stay the same because people always change. As needs, desires, and be interaction shift, you should be right there moving with them. Don’t forget to consider long-term goals as well. Social media isn’t actively used on our campus now, but it will be in the future. That’s why I am focusing so much on building a sustainable system that can function well even when I’m not around.
Build
Now it’s time to implement your objectives and build on your foundation. Remember to think big and build small. Every small victory leads to more accuracy, more reach, and better content.
One thing I’m also working on that is important to remember is patience. I’m heavily engrossed in social media so it affects the rate at which I expect things to happen, i.e., immediately. Not everybody works on 140 characters and real-time communication.
Think of crafting your social media strategy as art. In photography there are rules that help you compose good photos, but ultimately rules can be broken and one photo can have forty different interpretations. Photography also requires trial an error to see which shots work. Building a masterful strategy can be arduous, but as you test the waters, evaluate, and learn, you’ll be creating an amazing community of engagement and effectively reaching your niche.
I’ve been inspired by the great Todd Sanders (@tsand) and am going to be participating in the Springfield Polar Plunge. I didn’t know it was even going to happen in Springfield until yesterday. If you don’t know what the Springfield Polar Plunge is, it’s basically a benefit for the Special Olympics. Plungers like me will jump into Lake Springfield (and hopefully be sponsored) and then hangout afterwards. Some other students wanted to join in and voila, our Polar Plunge team was assembled.
The event is coming up quickly (actually it’s this Saturday at 12:00 PM), so the time to support raise is fairly short. Please join with us to help out!
Here are some of my team’s fundraising goals:
LOCATION (Google Map): http://bit.ly/qsNH0
There will definitely be a photo and video blog post follow-up and I’ll make sure to give you a shoutout somehow in the video. I’ll get creative.
So please join me and sponsor us & come watch us!
I really appreciate you helping out, reading, and being a part of my life!
Team UIS Volunteer (So Far):
UIS Students:
Craig Rebou – http://www.firstgiving.com/craigjasonrebou
Justin Bournes – http://www.firstgiving.com/justinbournes
Andrew Nicol – http://www.firstgiving.com/andrewnicol
Steve Gifford – http://www.firstgiving.com/stephengifford
Howard Kang – http://www.firstgiving.com/howardkang
Jak Kern- No URL
UIS Staff:
Jeremy Wilburn – https://www.firstgiving.com/jeremywilburn
Ralph Shank – http://www.firstgiving.com/ralphshank
My thoughts on this question. Please comment up and let me know what you think!
Links Mentioned:
Kami Huyse – @kamichat - http://overtonecomm.blogspot.com
Chris Brogan – @chrisbrogan – http://chrisbrogan.com
Gary Vaynerchuk – @garyvee – http://garyvaynerchuk.com (http://tv.winelibrary.com)
*A Kodak family favorite:
Todd Sanders – @tsand – http://utodd.com (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PA69dFMAfPY)
(*Note: I just used family stuff to help illustrate “sharing life” along with content. Other stuff is awesome too! Anything to help us get to know you.)
Today I’ll be focusing on the elements that can help make your Facebook Fan Page for your office/business/organization remarkable and tips on how to promote it.
Facebook Fan Pages used in the most effective way are gateways; one-stop-shops. What do I mean by that? Think of your fan page as the exterior of a house. You want it to look as welcoming as possible; lawn trimmed, a little gnome here and there, a welcome mat, you know what I mean. It sets the stage for people to enter the home, connect, and go deeper. You don’t want to target your Facebook Fan Page to be a destination, but an open door to the separate rooms in your house. Your facebook fan page should be set to point your target audience in the right direction of what they’re looking for and help them connect on a deeper level (whether that means groups, link to your website, social media, etc.).
Before anything is started marketers usual ask the question, “Who’s our target?” I’m going to be honest with you. It kind of matters, but it doesn’t matter. Target everyone, not anyone. The better question organizations can ask is, “Who are we and how do we want to represent ourselves to everyone?”
Look at these numbers:
1. Facebook Demographic Statistics (allfacebook.com)
2. istrageylabs reports: 2009 Facebook Demographics and Statistics Report: 276% Growth in 35-54 Year Old Users
With these numbers and your Facebook Fan Page being a one-stop-shop gateway do you REALLY want to ignore all these users? It’s their choice if they want to enter and go deeper. Let them decide.
What does this mean for the Facebook Fan Page?
The picture you select is more important than you think. It represents your brand to everyone. Do you want to go with a logo, a more organic photograph, simple text? It will be different for everyone. I chose to go with the organic photo route for our office because I think a logo looks too rigid and doesn’t send the right message when representing a volunteer office. Here’s the photo I went with:

I found a picture that I felt could represent service, but not show faces or specific action. Our target is everyone, not anyone. If we focus on a picture of someone serving, we brand what a volunteer looks like, what volunteers are doing, and possibly unintentionally alienate people. Focus on everyone, not anyone.
Important Notes for a Remarkable Fan Page
Applications I Use & Recommend

Notes on Promotion
While you can’t send mass invites for Facebook Fan Pages to the people you’re not Facebook friends with (use suggestion feature for that), fan pages are easy to build a buzz around. How can you get your word out?
I hope these ideas help you get started on your road to creating a remarkable fan page. Comment up your thoughts or if you think anything else needs to be added!
