Harnessing the power of social media for womens rights

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Transcript of Harnessing the power of social media for womens rights

Harnessing the Power of Social Media for Women’s Rights

Nana Darkoa Sekyiamah

Communications Officer, AWDF

Social Media 102

This presentation will:

• Highlight key opportunities that social media presents for women’s rights organisations

• Make recommendations on how to effectively utilise social media for women’s rights

• List good practice for using social media

The Social Media World

Money making potential?

Comic Relief’s “Twitrelief”

Twitrelief

• For RND 2011, Comic Relief decided to try raising money from twitter…

• They succeeded in raising:

£286,074.23

So what does it take…

… to raise money online through social media…

A lot of ‘offline’ work

• With the Comic Relief case study for e.g, the help of Emma Freud (a trustee) and Emma Kennedy (a celebrity) was indispensable

• Other key resources included dedicated staff time, collaboration with EBay and celebrity support

Twitrelief

• @twitrelief was however the main promotional tool used to publicise this fundraiser

• Comic Relief auctioned off a RT, mention and a follow

Communication opportunities?

AWDF’s mentions…

Social media in 2011

Prof Steven Van Belleghem…

• More than 1 billion people use Facebook

• Average Facebook session lasts 37 minutes

• Average Twitter session lasts 23 minutes

• 50% of social network users are connected to a brand

• Women typically outnumber men on social networks

Harnessing social media

• Decide which social media tools you are going to use

• Dedicate resources to social media – human & time are main costs

• Issue guidelines on social media for staff

• Remember media is ‘social’ and not ‘corporate’

Your website goes social

Your newsletter goes social

Social shares via newsletter

Social Media Analysis

Good practice/Tips

• Use 3rd party applications e.g. Hoot Suite, Tweetdeck and Uber Social

• Cross link

• Incorporate pictures with Facebook updates

• Respond to comments, mentions and DMs

• Maintain good grammar

• Only RT links you have read/agree with

Good practice/tips

• Update social media regularly

• Post relevant, useful or interesting content

• Remember ‘social media’ is a two-way or multi-way conversation flow

• Do not demand that others ‘follow back’

CCCD and Social Media

Monitoring Social Media

• What kind of content should women’s rights organisations have on their social media?

• What kind of comment should women’s rights organisations not have?

• Who is following you on twitter?

• Who are you retweeting?

• What are your privacy settings?

See you in the social space

• ‘Like’ www.facebook.com/africanwomensdevelopmentfund

• Follow @awdf01

• Subscribe to ‘TheAWDF’ on You Tube

• View our photos at http://www.flickr.com/photos/awdf

Any Questions?