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Social Media Seminar for Development Educators Part 1: Social Media Basics How are these websites being used for social change? http://www.slideshare.net/mzkagan/what-the-fk-social-media On Road Media Is an award-winning social enterprise


  1. Social Media Seminar for Development Educators Part 1: Social Media Basics How are these websites being used for social change? http://www.slideshare.net/mzkagan/what-the-fk-social-media

  2. On Road Media • Is an award-winning social enterprise • We deliver training to communities and public & voluntary sector organisations • We teach people how to podcast, make video blogs and set up their own social networks

  3. We help people find ways to communicate their messages and stay in touch online

  4. Static sites were web 1.0 Blogs, wikis, podcasts, social networks... ...any site where ordinary people create content, network and socialise... = web 2.0

  5. BLOGS

  6. Blogs – the basics • A blog is a special kind of website that organizes articles or “posts” by date or subject, and allows readers to comment • Blogs are usually less formal and more dynamic than a normal website • Good blogs invite comments and discussion and repeat visits • Search engines like blogs!

  7. Let’s hear it for the blog • http://www.openforum.com/marketing/video_hearitfortheblog.html • www.concern.net

  8. Organisation blogs

  9. Children’s blogs

  10. Starting a blog • Read some blogs yourself, then try a free blog tool for yourself - www.blogger.com - www.wordpress.com - www.typepad.com The best blogs are honest, interesting, useful and consistent – not an easy task Ask yourself: Do I have the resources to make a good blog? Is a bad blog worth it?

  11. MICRO BLOGGING

  12. What is Twitter? Twitter? • www.twitter.com • “Twitter is a service for friends, family and co-workers to communicate and stay connected through the exchange of quick, frequent answers to one simple question: What are you doing? What are you doing?” • Yeah – I didn’t get it either – at first

  13. Twitter Twitter is a lot of conversations

  14. Why is Twitter Twitter popular? • It’s like instant messaging or text messaging but to a huge group • Oddly enough, communication happens and communities form in tiny bursts • It’s quite addictive…

  15. Starting with Twitter Twitter • Sign up, it’s free • At first, you’ll see almost nothing • Start “following” people • Participate – say something, ask a question, respond to others’ questions

  16. PHOTOS

  17. AUDIO / PODCASTS

  18. VIDEO

  19. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uiRjAXEvnsI

  20. SOCIAL NETWORKS

  21. What is Facebook? Facebook? • Facebook is a “social utility” • People “live” online there • It’s not just for kids (half of you are there!) • The average Facebook user views 45 pages during a session • There are different kinds of FB pages: personal, groups, companies or organisations like yours

  22. Starting with Facebook Facebook • Sign up for a personal account • Find your friends, look at what they are doing • Join some groups • Search with keywords relating to your organisation’s mission • Start contributing and creating

  23. Everything is on Facebook Facebook

  24. RSS – Really Simple Syndication This is what powers social media technology

  25. To keep in the game, organisations MUST: • Let go • Facilitate conversations, don’t control them • Involve people, don’t ‘own’ your cause • Allow people to get involved: Student or employee on social network does not equal messer! • Try things and be patient • Aggregate content for your audience

  26. What’s so different about web 2.0? • It is fundamentally different from previous forms of media • Social media platforms provide a framework for people to connect directly to each other – the architecture has permanently changed, though technologies will continue to evolve • People are using social media to glean information from each other without relying on organisations • This shift is permanent! Get involved or lose out!

  27. This doesn’t mean we replace offline activity

  28. The best users of social media blend online and offline activity • Example: If you’re running an awareness event for your students or organisation • Create a network or start a group around the event • Write blog posts in the run up to the event • Invite people to post their own photos onto your site, ask them to post their feedback etc • Those who took part will feel like part of a team • Those who couldn’t be there will feel like they haven’t missed out

  29. Setting expectations • Social media isn’t a miracle cure • It may take a long time for your social media investment to pay off • It might even never pay off in the way you originally intended

  30. Social Media is one one tool • Don’t overinvest in social media • Know your audiences (current and future) and court them appropriately • If you neglect conventional media, you might leave out your core audience / supporters • Don’t underinvest in social media either

  31. One more warning • In social media, you might be the topic of discussion but you’re not always the centre or the master of it • You will have to give up some control to gain more followers and influence. This is OK.

  32. Relaxing your grip • It’s the nature of social media that not all information is exactly right exactly right but the bulk of it is generally right generally right (see wikipedia) • Not all comments will be favourable Not all comments will be favourable • How you react to unfavourable comments says a lot about you • Pick your battles and don’t be afraid to apologise when you’re wrong

  33. Keys to success • Social Media is just one piece of the puzzle, don’t neglect the rest • One size doesn’t fit all, do what’s right for your organisation and your people • Keep experimenting and always test • You will give up some control – learn to live with it and learn to love it

  34. Savvy Chavvy & the power of bespoke social networks

  35. Savvy Chavvy • A social network for young Gypsies and Travellers in the UK • 3500 members • Won the first Catalyst Communities award in July 2008 • ‘Chavvy’ is a Romany word for ‘child’

  36. Savvy Chavvy • Young Travellers use the network as a safe place to learn, have discussions, find family members, make friends and arrange events

  37. Rosina Hughes is 17 from Wareham, Dorset. She says: • "It's great to have a "It's great to have a site where you feel site where you feel comfortable and safe discu comfortable and safe discussing these ssing these things” things” • "They have Gypsy hate groups, so it's "They have Gypsy hate groups, so it's important that we have our own space." important that we have our own space." • “You're all “You're all dirty” dirty” and “ and “ you're all you're all scum” scum” , are , are some of the racist responses she says she some of the racist responses she says she has received on other social networking sites. has received on other social networking sites.

  38. You can set up your own network for your community or organisation by using free networks like: • www.ning.com • www.webjam.com We set Savvy Chavvy up using Ning We set Savvy Chavvy up using Ning

  39. Some examples of other bespoke social networks • http://heartsounds.ning.com • Hundreds of people in the UK with mental health problems use the network to share information with professionals and other service users in Uganda • www.harringayonline.com • 2500 residents of this town in London use it to share information, launch campaigns and build community spirit • www.tudiabetes.com • Over 6000 people with diabetes use the network to support each other and share information

  40. TOP TEN TIPS to set up a network on Ning • Firstly, you need to consider the purpose of your network – who will be your members and why will they use this website above others? What need does your network address?

  41. Set Up • Go to www.ning.com and set up your network, choosing a catchy name and Ning web address. It’s very simple; all you need is an email address and it takes a couple of minutes

  42. Privacy • Choose how public or private it is going to be – can everyone on the web see and contribute to your network or will it be closed and private for your members only?

  43. Tagline • Give your network a tagline and short description - what’s it all about? The tagline should consist of one pithy sentence, E.g. www.savvychavvy.com: ‘A social network for young Gypsies and Travellers in the UK’

  44. Features • Next, add features to your network. You can drag and drop functions like ‘forum’, ‘chat’, ‘blog’, ‘video’ & ‘photos’ into the front page. • You might, for example, place the ‘forum’ function prominently in the middle of the page if having discussions is the main purpose of your network

  45. Design • Choose a design – Ning will give you lots of templates to choose from and you can customize one with your own choice of images, fonts and colours

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