5 Things Every Rotary Club Facebook Page Should Have
23 de May de 2014•0 gostou•17,071 visualizações
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Learn five elements your Rotary Facebook page should
have that will help you reach club goals, such as attracting
new members, finding more project resources, and letting
the community know about your club.
5 Things Every Rotary Club Facebook Page Should Have
1. 2014 ROTARY INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION
Five Things Every Rotary Club
Facebook Page Should Have
#ricon14
2. • 20 years
communications
experience
• 6 years social media
experience
• Manages
facebook.com/rotary,
@rotary, LinkedIN
Antoinette Tuscano, Communications senior
supervisor at Rotary
3. 1. Determine your audience and create a strategy
2. Use images that make your club look great
3. Make your About and other Facebook tabs work
for you
4. Post content that is relevant to your audience
5. Get club buy-in
The Facebook Five
5. Who would you like to read your
social media posts? And why?
6. Who is best reached by Facebook?
Club members that you see every week and you have email
addresses and phone numbers for?
Or an external audience looking to learn more and might
want to join or donate to your club?
Audience
7. What Rotary does can provide the content Facebook audiences look for
9. 80 percent of your Facebook posts should be
about what’s most relevant to your audience.
Strategy – How do you reach your audience?
10. How do you want someone to feel after
reading your post?
What action would you like someone to take
after reading your post?
They read your post, and now so what?
11. Simone Collins
•Rotary Club of Freshwater Bay, District
9455, Western Australia
•RICON14 Organizing Committee &
Promotions Committee Member
•ROSNF Charter Chair & former ROSNF
Training Chair
•14 years professional experience in
online communities / social media
•Facebook.com/rtnsimone
•Facebook.com/ricon14
•Facebook.com/freshwaterbayrotary
•Facebook.com/rosnf
•Facebook.com/membershiptips
12. • Professional look – close up, in focus, good lighting
• Colour!
• Action
• Happy people…and lots of them!
• Tell a story
• Showcase your members and achievements
Photos – What attracts people?
18. • Profile picture needs to look good as a small
square
• Nothing too busy
Easily identifiable, e.g. Rotary emblem
Not likely to change regularly
• Cover photos can showcase your club
Photos are easy (only see 850 x 315 px) but
choose wisely
More professional mashup with appropriate
text (e.g. website URL) even better
Profile Pics and Cover Photos
21. About Section -- Overview
• Set the scene succinctly in the
“About” overview, just under your
profile pic – don't overrun the space
provided!
• In particular, mention where
precisely you are! It can be
impossible to work out where a club
is from its name alone, especially
since many places share the same
town name.
• If you have room, include your web
address.
22. About Section -- Details
• Fields provided
depend on page
category chosen.
• Fill in as much
detail as possible –
especially your
contact details!
• Be sure to include
your web address so
visitors can explore
further.
23. About Section – Life Events
• Use Life
Events/
Milestones to
record key
occasions: club
presidents,
awards and etc…
24. Connect with other organizations
Like the pages of other organizations you work with,
including Rotaract and Interact clubs, and interact with them!
25. Events
• Events are a great way to
increase attendance
• Very quick to set up
• Guests can buy tickets
online
• Map of location
• Easily update attendees
and those considering
going
• Automatic reminders
through Facebook
26. ABOUT THE SPEAKER: Susan E. Fisher
Susan’s Rotary Social Media Sites
Rotary Club of Wilmette Harbor Facebook page
Rotary Club of Wilmette Harbor LinkedIn group
Rotary Club of Wilmette Harbor Twitter account
President Elect & Communications Chair
Wilmette Harbor Rotary Club, Wilmette, Illinois, USA
Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Scholar in Journalism
Related credentials: M.Ed. & interactive marketing certificate
Meet me on
LinkedIn
28. PUT A FACE ON ROTARY: Tell your club’s story
Reflect your
brand
Set call to action
Remember: A
picture says …
Encourage
“likes”
Promote
events
29. PUT A FACE ON ROTARY: Show who you are & what you do
This iconic club photo
attracted 768 unique
users:
Why?
• Many people tagged
• Many people “liked”
• Several people
commented
• One person shared
30. • Use a conversational
voice
• Target audience with
relevant messages
• Strike an emotional
chord
• Try questions to
engage
• Make clear calls to
action
ENGAGE THE VISITOR: Be simple, relevant, and direct
31. ENGAGE THE VISITOR: Help people find you with “like”, @, “tag” & “#”
Help people find
you and learn your
story through
• Likes
• Tags
• Hashtags (#)
34. SELL YOUR CLUB: Be clear about benefits
• Encourage dialogue
• Tell them: FB is too big to
ignore
• Be clear about objectives:
awareness
• Contrast with other media
• Explain benefits:
• Puts a “face” on Rotary
• Strengthens club ties
• Builds support
• Supports recruiting
35. ADDRESS FEARS: Be frank and keep it simple
•Simplify
concepts
•Discuss
privacy
Define terms: FB, pages, groups, friend, like,
messages, news feed, notifications, poke, profile,
ticker, timeline, wall
36. GET STARTED: Ask your members to take specific action
• Sign up
• Visit
• Like
• Visit
• Click
• Comment
• Share
• Keep the momentum – champion the champions, send reminders, set a
regular cadence of posts, use scheduling tools, designate a page roles
39. PUT A FACE ON ROTARY: Show ‘em who’s coming to dinner…or breakfast
40. PUT A FACE ON ROTARY: Show how to get involved
Notas do Editor
[Susan Fisher’s speakers’ notes]
If you really want to get buy-in, you need people to use Facebook – at least – give it a try. Be very specific in your asks. If you don’t ask members to do something, they won’t do it. If you do ask, some will do it.
Tell them to
Sign up for Facebook
Visit the page – preferably every week at least once a month
“Like” at least one posts at lest month
Click links on the posts at least once month
Comment on the posts at least once month
Share the posts at least once month
To MAINTAIN THE MOMENTUM: Champion the champions. – For example, one members displayed a number of photos on his Rotary trip to Guatemala to help build a health clinic on his personal Facebook page, and I reposted in on our club Facebook pages. We’ll call it out when he speaks on his trip.
Also tell success stories, send reminders
For example, I told my club that we reach hundreds of people through our club post after “Feed the Hungry Children” event because a number of members shared the post and distributed a flyer illustrating how to share posts
Keep the momentum
--
Set up a regular time to post, e.g.
Preview meeting
At the meeting
Follow up to meeting
Recruiting post at first of the month
Use scheduling tools, i.e. HootSuite (hootsuite.com)
Designate multiple page roles: administrator and editors
Teach others in your club to use the tools to post
[Susan Fisher’s speaking notes from PUT A FACE ON ROTARY: Show ‘em who’s coming to dinner…or breakfast ]