1 / 26

Social Media and Library Outreach

Social Media and Library Outreach. Share Resources, Highlight Services, and Build Support John L. Amundsen, Communications Specialist ALA Office for Literacy and Outreach Services. What is Social Media?.  Kaplan and Haenlein define social media as:

declan
Download Presentation

Social Media and Library Outreach

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social Media and Library Outreach Share Resources, Highlight Services, and Build Support John L. Amundsen, Communications Specialist ALA Office for Literacy and Outreach Services

  2. What is Social Media?  Kaplan and Haenlein define social media as: "a group of Internet-based applications that build on the ideological multi faceted and technological foundations of Web 2.0, and that allow the creation and exchange of user-generated content.“ Kaplan, Andreas M.; Michael Haenlein (2010) "Users of the world, unite! The challenges and opportunities of Social Media". Business Horizons 53(1): 59–68

  3. Come again? • Social media – in OUR context - refers to online applications where users can create and share content on Web applications, including: • Facebook • Twitter • Delicious • Pinterest • Foursquare • …and many, many more

  4. Why bother? • Social media is: • Everywhere. Chances are that many of your local businesses, institutions, and patrons use it every day. • Easy. You and your friends probably already use it daily. • Cost effective. Most platforms are free. • Quick. You don’t have to spend a lot of time on it to be effective.

  5. Is it relevant to libraries? • People LOVE their libraries – the kind of online marketing goodwill businesses envy! • As such, people will want to engage with their libraries online, creating an opportunity for you to: • Highlight services • Share resources • Communicate value • Build support

  6. Cool, Let’s Get Started! …Wait. • Before you start, be sure to check with your administration for the following: • Library messaging • Policies and guidelines • Existing accounts

  7. Think strategically. • A social media plan is still a marketing plan. Before moving forward, consider: • Goals • Timeframe • Stakeholders • Message framework for: • Your event AND your library • Tactics (i.e., tools)

  8. Goals • What do you want to accomplish with your social media effort? • Make reasonable goals: • Increase attendance at bookmobile stops • Increase awareness of outreach sevices • Drive participation in library initiatives

  9. Tactics • Identify what social media platform(s) you wish to use – link between them • Identify potiential partners – link to them • Incentivize! Give them a compelling reason to interact (giveaways, etc.)

  10. Tools of the Trade: Facebook • www.facebook.com • Now over 1 billion users • Disseminate news and information • Facebook Pages • Easy to make a page • Easy to link to partners • Easy to link to Twitter • Track activity through Insights

  11. Tools of the trade: Facebook

  12. Tools of the Trade: Twitter • www.twitter.com • The original “Microblog” • Good for quick, concise messages • Disseminate news and information • Linkable with Facebook • Use #hashtags to keep track of the conversation

  13. Tools of the Trade: Twitter

  14. Tools of the Trade: YouTube • www.youtube.com • Share your videos on your YouTube Channel • Encourage your fans to make their own videos

  15. Tools of the Trade: YouTube

  16. Tools of the Trade: Delicious • www.delicious.com • Social Bookmarking • Share, tag, and annotate Web resources

  17. Tools of the Trade: Delicious

  18. Tools of the Trade: Pinterest • www.pinterest.com • Social photo sharing/bookmarking • Similar to Delicious, but for images • Good for developing themed collections

  19. Tools of the Trade: Pinterest

  20. Bringing it all together: HootSuite • www.hootsuite.com • Schedule your posts in advance for Facebook, Twitter, Google+, LinkedIn, and others • Free (premium service available for cost)

  21. Bringing it all together: HootSuite

  22. Cross-Promote! • Always have your social media accounts reference each other and point towards your Web site • Do this creatively through contests, special offers, etc. • Make sure the Web site you're pointing people towards has good and relevant information

  23. Evaluate your results • Reflect on your lessons learned: what worked? What didn't work? • Don't be afraid to ask your fans and followers: • What did they like? • What would they like to see in the future?

  24. Recommended Reading Ars Technica: www.arstechnica.org Mashable – http://mashable.com ReadWriteWeb – http://www.readwriteweb.com/ Beth Kanter’s Blog - http://www.bethkanter.org/ Social Media Examiner – http://www.socialmediaexaminer.com/ Nonprofit Tech 2.0 – http://nonprofitorgs.wordpress.com/ HubSpot blog – http://blog.hubspot.com/ Social Times – http://socialtimes.com/ All Facebook – http://allfacebook.com/ Steve Rubel’s Twitter feed – http://twitter.com/steverubel

  25. Let’s hear from you! • How have/will you used social media to promote your services?

  26. Thank you!

More Related