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Social & New Media for Mental Health Organizations

Explore the power of social media for mental health organizations. Learn about different platforms, content types, and best practices. Increase your comfort level with using social media.

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Social & New Media for Mental Health Organizations

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  1. Social & New Media for Mental Health Organizations Ritu Sharma, Executive Director & Co Founder, Social Media for Nonprofits Mike Thornsbury, Marketer/Fundraiser, Mental Health America Board Member and Suicide Prevention Advocate Jessica Kennedy, Director of Finance & Human Resources/Webmaster, Mental Health America

  2. Goals • Provide an overview of social media in general • Highlight different platforms & types of content • Address common concerns • Share examples • Increase comfort level with using social media

  3. Speakers Ritu Sharma, Co-Founder and Executive Director, Social Media for Nonprofits @ritusharma1 @SM4NP www.linkedin.com/in/sharmaritu Mike Thornsbury, Direct Marketer/Fundraiser, Mental Health America Board Member & Suicide Prevention Advocate @mikethornsbury www.linkedin.com/in/mikethornsbury Jessica Kennedy, Director of Finance/HR and Webmaster, Mental Health America @jmariekennedy @MentalHealthAm www.linkedin.com/in/jessicamariekennedy

  4. Why Social Media Matters Because instead of looking here… We look here…

  5. Why Social Media Matters • 93% of nonprofits use at least one form of social media • 93% of those use social media for marketing purposes • Only 37% use it for program delivery • Social Media audiences are growing faster than email and webpage audiences Sources: 2012 Nonprofit Social Networking Benchmark Report 2012, and Nonprofit Benchmark Report 2014

  6. Elements of Social Media • Platforms– Generic (social networking site, blog, forum) or specific (Facebook, Huffington Post, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc.) • Content – Generic (photos, blog posts, video) or specific (Vine video vs. Youtube video) • Devices – Mobile, Tablet, Desktop • Audience – The audience drives the content

  7. Social and New Media • Social media: websites and apps that let users share and network with each other • New media: means of mass communications • Example: Use Facebook (social media) on smart phone (new media) • Not all emerging technologies and apps are social, but many are

  8. New Media • Digital computer-based therapy on the National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices • Behavioral intervention apps for smoking cessation and weight loss • Gamification is trending • If apps aren’t social yet, they will be • As critical to understand new media as it is to understand social media

  9. This is Social Media

  10. But… so is this..

  11. Social Media for Nonprofits Strategy & Engagement Presented by: Ritu Sharma Executive Director

  12. The “social reason” of social media Source: Waggener Edstrom

  13. Commons Actions Post Social Sharing Source: Waggener Edstrom

  14. The Social Nonprofit • Having a Mont Blanc pen doesn’t make you a best selling author • Having the top of the line Macbook won’t make you a blogger either • Similarly, knowing the different types of platforms or being present on all them, doesn’t make you a socially savvy nonprofit.

  15. The Social Nonprofit • Understands different platforms and their applications and demographics • Uses each to their strength • Has a clear cohesive strategy in place • Follows best practices in content curation and creation • Is creative, engaging and authentic • Measures, analyses and improves

  16. Role of Social • FACEBOOK • TWITTER • LINKEDIN • YOUTUBE • BLOG • TUMBLR • FLICKR • INSTAGRAM

  17. Social Strategy • Define your policy and process. • Set clear goals and targets. • Track and measure your progress. • Integrate social into your overall communications/marketing plans. • Be true to your cause & it’s brand • Make it personal and interactive.

  18. Define Goals

  19. Choose Platforms & Frequency

  20. Choose Platforms & Frequency (Cont…)

  21. Facebook • Facebook.com/nonprofits • Invite People • Post photos & Videos • Create Events • Facebook Ads • Fundraising campaigns

  22. Twitter • Following Others • Low Hanging Fruit • Post Regularly • RT Often & Liberally • Create a Hashtag • Participate in #ff

  23. Youtube • Youtube.com/nonprofits • Create Vlogs, PSAs & appeals • Drive fundraising via google checkout • Create “call to action” text overlays

  24. LinkedIn • Linked.com/nonprofits • Create organization profile • Link every employee, board member & Volunteer • Ask for testimonials • Join Groups • Post blogs & useful info

  25. Create A Social Media Policy

  26. Listen

  27. Create anEditorial Calendar

  28. Measure & Optimize

  29. Killer Content – Add Value

  30. Use Scheduling Tools

  31. Ritu@SM4NP.org @RituSharma1 Thank You!

  32. Social Media Trends & Analysis Mike Thornsbury, Marketer/Fundraiser, Mental Health and Suicide Prevention Volunteer

  33. Overview • Facebook Statistics • Facebook Insights & Trends • Twitter Trends & Statistics

  34. Facebook

  35. Facebook Statistics * Source: M+R and NTEN

  36. Facebook Statistics • Health & Wellness is the 3rd most popular cause on Facebook *Source: Waggener Edstrom

  37. Facebook Trends • 829 million people use Facebook on a daily basis, an increase from 802 million last quarter. * • A significant 92% of marketers said that social media was important to their businesses. This is an increase from 86% in 2013, where only 49% strongly agreed and 37% agreed ** • The top two benefits of social media marketing are increasing exposure and increasing traffic. A significant 92% of all marketers indicated that their social media efforts have generated more exposure for their businesses. Increasing traffic was the second major benefit, with 80% reporting positive results. ** • Source: Facebook • ** Source: Social Media Examiner

  38. Facebook Insights • Posts from your page that have board members & volunteers tagged increases organic views • “Boosting” a post, or the Facebook term for promoting, should be used for important news and messages where organic views & activity are not being achieved after 24 hours

  39. Facebook Insights • Example:

  40. Facebook Insights • This post received 1,672 Organic views and 21 Likes or Comments

  41. Facebook Insights • This post received 138 Organic views and 884 Paid Views with 19 Likes

  42. Facebook Insights • For the paid post a total of $5.00 was spent to reach 884 people who either liked the page or who liked the post.

  43. Facebook Insights • The difference in the paid versus non-paid post was the tagging of volunteers. That organically spread the message and achieved better overall results with more page likes and overall engagement

  44. Twitter Trends

  45. Twitter Trends • In the USA the number of Adult Twitter usersis estimated at 34.7 million • There was a 24% increase in monthly active users (MAU) over the last 4 quarters with the total now at 271 million. • Twitter has added 53 million users in the last 12 months

  46. Twitter Trends • Twitter is to be looked at more as a news breaking and information source. • Their latest hiring trends are mass media and television centric • Twitter is pushing towards the integration of television, social and mass media. Source: Jeff Bullas

  47. Next Up…. Dealing with some of the challenges of social media

  48. “My constituency isn’t on social media.” • Internet users between 18-29 are the most likely demographic group to use social media at 83% • 73% of teen internet users are involved in social networking • From 2005-2013, older adult social media usage went from 1% of internet users to 46% • People with income less than $30K a year have the highest percent of social media usage among Internet users • If they aren’t there today, they’ll be there tomorrow Sources: Pew Research’s The Demographics of Social Media users – 2012, Pew Research Center’s Social Media Update 2013,

  49. “How can I respect privacy?” • “Opt-In” philosophy • Develop clear policies and procedures around general and specific use • Children – Parental consent necessary • Photographs – General events vs. Specific instances, sharing vs. posting • Names – Careful with clients, secure permission, beware of “tagging” • Events – Photo policies in advance, considerations such as photos with alcohol • Clients and Individuals with Lived Experience – Exercise caution, especially around HIPAA

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