FULL ENJOY 🔝 8264348440 🔝 Call Girls in Diplomatic Enclave | Delhi
Let's Get Engaged
1. Let’s Get Engaged
Logan H. Aimone, executive director
National Scholastic Press Association
Online: slideshare.net/loganaimone
Friday, March 16, 12
2. What is social media?
It’s the use of Web-based
and mobile technologies
to turn communication
into interactive dialogue.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
3. How journalists use
social media
Distribution: Sharing / referring content
Crowdsourcing
Searching for sources or subjects
Interviewing
Monitoring
Story ideas
User feedback / engagement
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
4. Primary social media
journalists use (or should):
Facebook / LinkedIn
Google+
Twitter
Vimeo / YouTube / Flickr
Geolocating: Foursquare, Google Latitude/Maps,
Gowalla, etc.
Pinterest
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
6. FACEBOOK: Definition and statistics
Among world’s largest social media websites with more
than 845 million monthly active users (December 2011)
who create a network of friends
425 million mobile users (December 2011)
Average user has 130 friends
50% of users return daily to the site
Photos are most popular shared and viewed item
280 million photos uploaded per day
Source: Facebook + Journalists, July 2011 Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
7. FACEBOOK: Impact
“If searching for the news was the most important
development of the last decade, sharing the news may
be among the most important of the next.”
— “Navigating News Online, Pew Research Center’s
Project for Excellence in Journalism, May 2011
Facebook drove 3% of traffic to 21 of 25 news sites in
study, and 8% of traffic to Huffington Post.
Headlines have been organized by editors. Now
they are organized by friends.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
8. FACEBOOK: Statistics
Users are 3-4 times more likely to click “Like” for a
story if they see a friend’s face as someone who “liked”
the story.
Journalists who post content on a page or profile are
likely to get more traffic if they…
Use a 4- or 5-line post
Ask a question
Include a thumbnail or photo
Source: Facebook + Journalists, July 2011 Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
9. FACEBOOK: Profiles & Pages
A Facebook Profile is the standard user experience.
An individual develops a personal network of friends
(up to 5,000) and can share status updates, photos,
links and videos. With the Subscribe feature, you can
determine who sees which updates — even targeting
updates to certain groups.
A Facebook Page is a more professional site where a
journalist can share and interact while maintaining the
traditional separation from sources and avoiding
conflicts of interest. You can distribute, engage and
have a public presence — and no limit to connections.
Source: Facebook + Journalists, July 2011 Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
10. FACEBOOK: Pages
Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times uses Facebook
to tell microstories. He says a good story is a good
story on Facebook.
Source: Facebook + Journalists, July 2011 Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
12. FACEBOOK: Pages
During breaking news, post often. Readers expect it.
Engagement increases.
Be transparent about who’s posting. Tag the person
posting, or indicate in the text.
Pages allow targeted distribution based on gender,
age, location, language, etc.
Provide a behind-the-scenes look
Source: Facebook + Journalists, July 2011 Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
13. FACEBOOK: Crowdsourcing
Crowdsourcing is using the “crowd” to provide ideas,
sources, information and leads.
Submitted content
Enlisting readers in the process
Story ideas
Direct access to the source (source available to
respond to questions via Facebook, etc.)
Using Questions feature for high engagement
Let viewers decide content
Source: Facebook + Journalists, July 2011 Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
14. FACEBOOK: Other items
Feeds don’t work. They’re impersonal and automated.
Readers engage when they know a person is behind
the post.
Find sources with Search.
Search public updates.
Search administrators of Groups.
Videocalling (soon with Skype) for interviews
facebook.com/journalists
Source: Facebook + Journalists, July 2011 Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
15. FACEBOOK: What you should do
Build a network of “Likes,” because you will have a
broader network for sharing.
Use Insights to determine when the best time of day is
for posting.
Mid-day, 6 p.m., and late night are best, though your
community’s peak may vary.
You want engegement, which means you must
improve reach.
Use a long post.
Ask a question.
Include a thumbnail or photo. Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
17. GOOGLE+: Definition and statistics
Similar to Twitter, Google+ allows a Google user to both
follow and be followed online.
One significant difference is the ability to group
followers in “circles” and to determine what pieces of
information are shared with which circle. People are not
told the circle in which they are grouped.
Additional features include the ability to save items to
read later (compared to a linear stream of information),
video chat in “hangouts,” and integration with other
Google products like Gmail, Google Docs or YouTube.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
18. GOOGLE+: Definition and statistics
The service launched June 28, 2011. In the first two
weeks, it grew to 10 million users and within four
weeks over 25 million users. As of March 2012, it had
more than 100 million users.
After the first few months, only about 12.5% of users
were women. As of March 2012, about 29% of users
are women.
Google+ now has pages for businesses.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
19. GOOGLE+: Uses
Because of the selective sharing options with “Circles”
in Google+, a journalist could share some information
publicly while some only with close friends. This avoids
having people create two profiles — one public and
one private — to share with different audiences.
“Hangouts” could become the next focus group, group
interview or way to interact with reporters or sources.
“Sparks” allows a user to identify interest areas, and
Google will suggest items — like a pre-search.
The +1 button allows users to recommend items.
Content can be downloaded.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
20. GOOGLE+: Big questions
Will it replace Facebook? Maybe — if users can
migrate content from an established social network and
if Facebook doesn’t develop selective sharing. (Skype
chat is coming soon in Facebook.)
Will it be more like Google Buzz or Wave? Google+
doesn’t seem to be catching on with common use
compared to Facebook, and many of its features are
also now available in Facebook.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
22. TWITTER: Definition and statistics
Twitter is a microblogging website with mobile apps
that provides 140-character updates. Users can have
followers, follow others and be part of lists. Non-users
can search or see public tweets.
Twitter turned 6 this week in March 2012!
200 million users and 350 billion tweets per day
(175,000 tweets per second)
A hashtag is a term used to tag a post for search. It
includes the # sign and a word, phrase or abbreviation.
According to the Pew study, Twitter drove about 1% of
referrals to news sites (and 3% for the Los Angeles
Times). Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
23. TWITTER: Uses
The main uses for Twitter are distribution, engagement
and monitoring.
Build a network of relevant followers (and people to
follow). Interact with them in the ways below.
Use Twitter to share content or refer users to content.
Use Twitter to engage with users: ask/answer
questions, clarify, respond to criticism, get ideas.
Use Twitter to monitor what others are tweeting about
to get leads, ideas and sources.
Curate tweets as basis for a sidebar in print or online.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
24. TWITTER: More uses
Go to http://media.twitter.com/newsrooms
#TfN
Report: Search, sources and mobile apps
Engage: Effective writing, promotion and branding
Publish: Tools and display guidelines
Extras: Blogs, copyright and troubleshooting
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
26. VIMEO / YOUTUBE / FLICKR: Definition and statistics
Vimeo and YouTube are video-sharing websites.
Flickr is a photo/image-sharing site.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
27. VIMEO / YOUTUBE / FLICKR: Uses
Vimeo and YouTube channels can be utilized for
sharing extra video from a news story; a behind-the-
scenes look at the journalist’s job; or to interact with
users, like responding to queries.
Flickr can be used in some of the same ways but with
still images.
All can also be used to search for sources or monitor
what people are talking about or find interesting.
200 million videos are watched on YouTube every hour!
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
29. GEOLOCATION APPS: Definition and statistics
Typically, geolocation apps do two things:
They report your location to other users.
They associate real-world locations (such as
restaurants and events) to your location.
These apps use the GPS chip in a phone or mobile
device to determine location.
Apps like Foursquare allow users to “check in” at a
location. Sometimes businesses will offer deals for
checking in.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
30. GEOLOCATION: Uses
Journalists can use geolocation apps to see who has
checked in at a location or event.
Use the apps to monitor buzz or develop story ideas.
Some mobile apps like Yelp! allow users to post
reviews of businesses.
Combine geolocation with other mobile device-based
tools such as QR codes or Groupons.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
32. PINTEREST: Uses
Pinterest is a “virtual pinboard,” where users can
organize and share items they find online. They can
browse pinboards created by other users to discover
new things and shared interests. It’s the #7 social
network, ahead of Google+ and Tumblr.
Home, Arts and Crafts and Style/Fashion are the most
popular categories.
Top five sources for pins are Etsy, Google, Flickr, Tumblr
and weheartit.
The site is two years old and has 11.7 million active
users and 1,090 visitors per hour.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
33. PINTEREST: Uses
Over 80% of pins are re-pins.
That means content is shared and re-shared. The viral
aspect of Pinterest contributed to its rapid growth.
It’s another tool to curate the Web — and show, not
just tell. A user gathers and bundles images and ideas
from multiple sources.
Browse. Listen/monitor.
Curate a pinboard of resources. Top 10 lists. Photo of
the Day.
Share the news.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
34. Other digital media tools
Delicious: Social bookmarking
Tumblr: A place to post anything and everything
Storify: A website that allows curation and combination
of multiple elements from social media (like tweets,
Facebook status updates, etc.)
Instagr.am: Mobile photo sharing
Evernote: Keep track of many bits of information from
multiple formats
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
35. How will you utilize these
powerful new tools?
They are evolving rapidly.
Research data are becoming available, which will prove
valuable to how journalists use the tools effectively.
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12
36. Questions?
Find this presentation at slideshare.net/loganaimone
Email me at logan@studentpress.org
Let’s Get Engaged
Friday, March 16, 12