Well, BlogHer 2012 is over. I am back home in sunny, warm, non-humid Southern California! I was one of the lucky ones who were on a JetBlue flight that took off an hour after scheduled departure. Any later and I would have been delayed another hour because of some storms coming in.
Many, many thanks to those of you who attended our 10 Things You Can Do to Maximize Your Social Media Expertise panel on Friday afternoon! Confession (but I’m sure you knew): I was so freaking nervous.
I thank my fellow co-speakers Nora DePalma and Stacie Tamaki for THEIR expertise and laidback attitude to keep me in line. I don’t think I’ve had such a good time working on this panel with ‘strangers’ ever.
A few things I wanted to add to our panel:
- Make it easy on yourself and create a baseline measurement report for your social media profiles. What do you want to measure? Followers, fans, reach? What does an increase of fans mean to you? You can create a simple excel spreadsheet and record those numbers every month. The baseline report gives you a starting point, so you can see your progress as you use social media to complement your blog activity.
- Tweetstats.com – this is a free service to show you how many tweets you’ve sent out in a month, who’s been replying to you the most, what times of day you tend to tweet, the keywords that come up on your tweets.
- Facebook analytics- Take some time to look at these numbers. It will tell you a lot about the people who like your page. You can see demographic info which may help you target and/or prepare posts that may resonate more with your fans. If you’re a small biz, you may want to consider testing a Facebook Ads campaign. (It doesn’t have to be a big budget to test.)
- Social media management dashboards (or aggregators) like Hootsuite, Tweetdeck, Sprout Social, CoTweet, Social Oomph can make managing your profiles a little easier. You can schedule out evergreen posts and check/select the profiles you want to publish. FB is not fond of scheduled posts by “outside” dashboards, so perhaps scheduling posts via Facebook scheduling is something for you to consider.
- If you ever need help, email me or tweet me, Nora, or Stacie! We would be happy to help!
As promised, please find below the PDF of resources as well as the PPT for download!
Again, I can’t thank you enough for attending our panel! I hope you were able to find helpful takeaways as well as new resources to make it easier for you to manage your social media program!
Nora DePalma says
It was great to meet you and I learned a lot just by sharing the panel with you! (Which I believe is #10 on our list.) I’m glad you got a picture of the three of us.
chris says
@Nora DePalma, Right on! So glad we were a team! Looking forward to BlogHer13!
Rebecca Rider says
Thanks for sharing this!! Didn’t get to make it to NY this year – but I’m budgeting in the hopes I can make it to Chicago next year!!
chris says
You’re welcome! Right on – I’ve got to start saving up for Chicago too! Hope to meet you soon.
trina says
Great information in the PDF! I’m sure you rocked that panel. Amazing how full that room is! Good to see!
chris says
@trina, Thanks, Trina! Wish you were able to travel for the con this year!
Raquel says
Awesome! Thank you for sharing your presentation with those of us that could not attend. What an amazing experience it must have been!
chris says
@Raquel, Amazing, nerve-wracking, good times! Hope to meet ya at the next SCLB meetup!