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HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

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Social media is not just for teenagers and geeks...it's for EVERYONE! Learn how to leverage this as a local chapter of HDI.

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Page 1: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)
Page 2: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Social Media is:

• Technological evolution of human interaction

• Communication tool of today

• Evolving from personal into business use and the marketplace of the future

Page 3: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

What is Social Media?

Page 4: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Why are we here?• Local chapters are already using Social Media

• Needed guidelines and best practices

• Some officers/chapters need basics of what and how

• Some officers advanced “power users” on leading edge of using Social Media for local chapters

• Committee formed to explore and formalize ideas

• Resulting white paper on CHKR

Page 5: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Committee members

*LinkedIn profile pictures were used in this slide

Brandon Caudle, Chair

Roy Atkinson Marie Clark Eric Euting Phil Gerbyshak Jamie Kuttenkuler

Who are we?

Page 6: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Why use Social Media?

• This is where the people are:

• Twitter – 9 Million accounts

• LinkedIn – 40 Million accounts

• Facebook – 400 Million accounts

• All ages, not just Gen Y

Page 7: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Why use Social Media?

• Engage members and bridge time between meetings

• Grow membership

• Increase meeting attendance

• Find speakers

• Find sponsors

Page 8: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

How to use Social Media?

• Need a chapter brand and logo

• Set up accounts

• Use your accounts

• Develop a strategy

• Succession planning

Page 9: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Why Use Social Networking Tools?

Page 10: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

LinkedIn

• Respected professional social network

• Easy to create groups, send messages to a focused audience

FaceBook

• Most popular site

• Links to inline communities and bidirectional conversation

Page 11: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Twitter

•The “next big thing”

• Short, simple messages with links to drive traffic to your site

Plaxo

•A good mix of friends and business

•Your “Pulse” can be sent out to your connections indicating changes

Page 12: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Best Practices

• Use your profile as an elevator pitch for your chapter

• Use each Social Media tool to promote other social media tools and your website

• Use spell check

• Ask questions to spark conversation and activity on your page

• See how other businesses and chapters are using Social Networking tools

Page 13: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Worst Practices• Concentrating on quantity over quality

• Using the tool only to sell your chapter

• Not having enough people dedicated to keeping your site updated

Page 14: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Document, Video and Photo Sharing

Page 15: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

What to do with Document Sharing?

• Upload slides from presentations

• Pictures of chapter meetings

• Video testimonials

• Post written recap of meeting to website

• Collaborate with members on a document

Page 16: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Why use Document and Media Sharing?

• Engages members

• Disperse information to those that couldn’t attend meetings

• Increases ease of accessing information and collaboration

• Testimonials to communicate value and add members

Page 17: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Best Practices

• Consistent usage

• Present information and slides from meetings

• Maintain professionalism

• Ensure you have rights or permission to post material

• Obtain feedback on member needs

Page 18: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Worst Practices• Offensive material

• Alienating members

• Illegibility

• Broken links

• Stolen information (non-cited)

• Surveys with no follow-up

Page 19: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Tools to Use

Video Sharing

• YouTube

• Vimeo

Document Sharing

• Office Live

• Huddle.net

• Google Docs

• Slideshare Photo Sharing

• Flickr

• Shutterfly

• Snapfish

Page 20: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Blogs

Page 21: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Why Blog?

• To reinforce the chapter's Web presence.

• To publicize events, speakers, meetings.

• To deliver content that contributes to professional development

Page 22: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

• To entertain and enlighten all, not just members

• To broaden the reach of HDI's mission and message.

Page 23: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Launching Your Blog

• Consider the decision – it’s not a whim• Make a commitment to keep it up – include

succession planning• Have an editorial policy• Use the blog to expand your Web presence• Tell your story• Use the best tools at your disposal (maybe your

Web host can host a blog as part of your site)• Free blog sites are plentiful

Page 24: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Worst Practices• Plagiarism• Posting intellectual property without

clearance• Posting internal business• Poor writing• Neglect (70% of blogs are neglected)• Duplicating effort across media (repurpose

instead)

Page 25: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Best Practices

• Use HDI logos according to guidelines• Identify the blog as a chapter blog, not just

“HDI”• Have a bio about your chapter• Welcome comments as feedback• Respond to comments with good info – and be

kind• It’s all about interaction and communication

Page 26: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Newsletters

Page 27: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Old School

• Many people still prefer newsletters

• Periodic, regular schedule

• Aggregate information in one delivery method

Page 28: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Best Practices

• Use a template

• Decide on HTML or PDFs

• Look to other chapters and associations for ideas

Page 29: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Best Practices

• Include educational content

• Ask vendors and chapter officers for articles

• Interview members

Page 30: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Worst Practices

• Not prof-raeding it befor it is sennt out

• Just throwing something together

• Stealing

• Selling

Page 31: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Available on CHKR

Page 32: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Join The Discussion on LinkedIn

Page 33: HDI LCO Social Media Presentation (Fall 2009)

Questions?