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Page 1: Promoting the Arts with Social Media

Copyright © 2011 Michael Powers

Promoting the Arts with Social Media

Michael PowersJune 6, 2011

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Copyright © 2011 Michael Powers

Michael PowersDirector of Web Services

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Copyright © 2011 Michael Powers

Facebook 13,755 Fans

Twitter 961 Followers

YouTube 168,641 Views223 Subscribers

IUP on Social Media

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Copyright © 2011 Michael Powers

• museyroom.com

• twitter.com/mjpowers

• www.slideshare.net/michaelpowers

• www.linkedin.com/in/mjpowers

On the Web

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Copyright © 2011 Michael Powers

What I’ll Cover1. Strategy: Why Social Media?

2. Tactics: How to Do Social Media

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About You0

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Who are you?

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How many of you usesocial media in your

personal life?

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How many of you usesocial media for

professional reasons?

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Strategy: WhySocial Media?

1

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It’s 2011.Do you have to beon social media?

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No, you don’t.

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Yes, Social Media Is Big

Facebook More than 500,000,000 active users

Twitter 175,000,000 accounts

YouTube 390,000,000 visits per day

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But Not Everyone Is Online

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• You don’t have to do it.

• You don’t have to do every social network

• Social media is not free—it takes time. It can take a lot of time.

Since You’ll Probably Do It Anyway...

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If You Do It, Figure Out• What you really want to do

• Who you need to talk to do that

• If those people are on social media

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• Get people to events?

• Find gigs?

• Sell paintings?

• Get feedback/inspiration?

• Reach out to more people?

What Do You ReallyWant to Do?

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You aren’t in the social media business

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• How many?

• How much will each contribute?

• The 1,000 True Fan Theory:1,000 Fans × $100/year = $100,000

Who Do You Need to Talk To?

http://www.kk.org/thetechnium/archives/2008/03/1000_true_fans.php

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Are They on Social Media?

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• You think your potential fans are on social media

• You think you have the time

• Go for it.

IF...

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Tactics: How to Do Social Media

2

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• You have a computer

• You are online

• You can make or have someone make a website

Some Assumptions

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Preview of Part 2Foundation: Your Website

Blogging

YouTube

Facebook

Twitter

Other Services, What’s Next

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Foundation: Your Website

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• Where do people go when they Google you?

• Where do they go when they hear about you on Twitter?

• Where do they go to get your whole story?

Foundation: Your Website

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• Where do people go when they Google you?

• Where do they go when they hear about you on Twitter?

• Where do they go to get your whole story?

Foundation: Your Website

Your Website

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Hub and Spokes

Website

Facebook

Twitter

YouTube

Others

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• Build one spoke at a time

• Learn one social network at a time

• Join and join in

Spokes

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Every Network Is Different• Audiences have different goals

• News? Friends? Jobs? Learning? Entertainment?

• Social conventions are different:

• Twitter: share up to 22 times per day

• Facebook: share 0-1 times per day

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For All Networks• Quality of relationships is often more

important than number of followers.

• What’s more valuable:

• 5,000 fans who have blocked your messages

or

• 1,000 who support you?

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• You are making real relationships. It takes time and effort

• Don't just sell, sell, sell

• Share

• Offer something of value: create it or share what others do

Always Remember

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Always Remember• Don’t become “spam” for your followers

• Post with the right frequency

• Converse: Talk and encourage conversation

• For second and later spokes: Use the same icon and username

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Blogging

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Blogging• A bit old school, but:

• Your blog can double as your website

• Blog posts give you something to share and talk about in other social media

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But...• To blog effectively, you need to be able to write

things people want to read

• And you need to produce them regularly

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If You Blog• Start with a free service, like Wordpress.com

• Find, follow, and read similar blogs

• Link to and interact with those blogs

• Allow and respond to comments

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Example: Do the Math• Blog from Ethan Iverson,

pianist for jazz trio The Bad Plus

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What He Does• Interviews with other musicians

• Analysis and criticism of music

• Responds to what similar blogs are doing

• Responds to comments from readers (monthly)

• No regular schedule, but 8-12 posts per month

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Copyright © 2011 Michael Powers

YouTube

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Why YouTube?• It’s free

• Makes it easy to get video on the web

• You can embed them on your own website

• They work on smart phones

• Give current fans something to share about you

• New fans can find you through your videos

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• YouTube account is called a “channel”: it shows all of your uploaded videos

YouTube Basics

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• Videos are limited to 10 minutes, 59 seconds

• Use iMovie or Windows Movie Maker

• Technical quality can be less than pro (but have good content)

• Don't violate copyright (YouTube notices copyrighted music)

• Fill out all the fields when you upload

YouTube Basics

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• How to do things

• Previews

• Performances

• Events (you can create a slideshow of pictures)

What Videos Do You Make?

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• United Breaks Guitars

• Summit of Awesome (on Vimeo)

Examples

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Once you have them, use those videos in othersocial media venues

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Facebook

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Make a Page• Don’t use your own profile

• Don’t make a group

• Pages are meant for promotion:

• www.facebook.com/pages/create.php

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• Profile• Limited to 5,000

friends

• Does not provide in depth stats

• Groups• Meant for sharing

amongst a group.

• Members get tons of (annoying) notifications

Why a Page?

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• Fill out all the slots

• Your page name is permanent after you reach 100 fans

• You can choose a URL after 25 fans

• Add some pictures

Setting Up Your Page

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• Your own content

• Performances

• Photographs (people can tag friends)

• Videos (including YouTube)

• Ask questions, answer questions

• Content people can use (how-tos can work great)

• What do people read? Check your stats

What to Post

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• Event invites can be very insistent, so use with care

• If you would send a paper invite, go for it

• Use in addition to other means

• You can create events with your Facebook page, but invites come from you personally

What to Post: Events

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• According to DanZarrella.com

• Post every other day

• Saturday is a good day to post

• So are mornings

• www.slideshare.net/HubSpot/the-science-of-timing

How Often to Post? When?

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• According to DanZarrella.com

• Post every other day

• Saturday is a good day to post

• So are mornings

• www.slideshare.net/HubSpot/the-science-of-timing

How Often to Post? When?

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See what works for you

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• Mention it everywhere

• Website

• Print materials

• E-mails

• Could use paid ads, but I haven’t seen them to be very effective yet

Promote your page

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• Posts about music, teaching, upcoming events

Ex. Keweenaw Family Music

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Twitter

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Twitter: Social Media Darling• The 140 character

limitation is somehow compelling

• It’s a bit of a secret language

• But—of 175,000,000 accounts, how many are active?

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Set up your profile first• Twitter name (shorter is better)

• Location

• Website

• Bio: 160 chars

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Start w/ Twitter on the Web• Follow people

• Getting followed

• Mentioning/replying

• Retweeting

• Hashtags

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• Your own content

• Performances

• Photographs

• Videos (YouTube links)

• Ask questions, answer questions

• Content people can use

• Pictures

• Send out news & links

• OH: overheard

• #FollowFriday

• Repost things (on Twitter, things are gone in 5 minutes)

• Up to 22× per day

What to tweet

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Ex: They Might Be Giants

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What They Do• Converse with fans (a lot)

• Post videos

• Make announcements

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• Twitter has good ones

• Tweet deck is popular

• Hootsuite is great for orgs

Get a Good Twitter App

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• Have lots of accounts

• Share social media duties

• Preschedule things

• But—costs money

Hootsuite

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Other Social Media

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• MySpace

• Flickr

• Vimeo

• Tumblr

Similar to What We’ve Seen

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• Who knows? But these might be interesting

• Foursquare

• Kickstarter

What’s Next?

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Questions?