Getting noticed: The Five Step Programme

by Sarah Lay on August 12, 2009

in Guest post

The second Wednesday guest post! Thanks to Sarah for this great post – if you’d like to contribute, just email me – and being called Sarah isn’t necessarily a requirement!

Online communication isn’t always taken seriously. It’s a nice to have on top of offline work or something organisations have been told to do. It isn’t necessarily considered a channel in its own right. And those that work online aren’t always respected in terms of their skills, their knowledge or the value they can bring.

Convincing others of your worth within an organisation is sometimes a bigger hurdle than convincing them of the value of online communications.

So, how to go about raising your profile and getting social media offerings to the table? I’ve worked up a list of five approaches. This list isn’t exhaustive. I’d like to hear people argue against or add their own take and experience.

1. Passion

Fall in love with online but don’t be blind to limitations and suitability. Talk to anyone who will listen about the possibilities but respect their concerns. Be able to explain why you are passionate about online – have examples of where social media has helped improve life, improved efficiency (internally or for citizens) or has saved money (pick according to your audience). Be savvy and believe in what you’re trying to get others to see the value of. And while being a geek is something to be cherished try to remember than social media is about being social so get out there and talk!

2. Persuasion

You may be the only person that believes that online communication, social media and digital engagement has an important part in your organisation. This can lead to frustration, doubts about your sanity and a relentless need to persuade others to listen to your suggestions. A good way to get people to listen to you is to listen to them – why don’t they value / understand / like online? Once you understand where they are coming from you can work out how best to showcase options to them. They still might not be sold but at the very least they will be more aware of what social media is (and probably think you’re a decent, reasonable sort as well).

3. Persistence

Things move slowly in the public sector, and social media is developing fast. Be the middle ground between the need to develop strategy, policy, protocol and being left behind because by the time you get to the dock that particular online ship has sailed.
Just because the answer is no today doesn’t mean the answer will be no tomorrow. Keep making suggestions, keep listening to the concerns around the use of social media, keep trying out ideas. Just keep on keeping on.

4. Private sector attitude

If you believe you could lose your customers to a competitor you’ll try harder to be the first with innovation and the best with services. We’re all citizens as well as public sector employees so what use of social media would make your personal dealings with the council easier? What would your neighbour, your mum, your friends find more useful. In the private sector you need to get the edge on your competitors and by having this attitude in the public sector you’ll get closer to delivering above and beyond what is expected and be able to prove why what you’re doing is of value to the organisation.

5. Play, practice, prove

Alright, that’s not one but three things. I really mean knowing what you’re talking about. Being passionate and persuasive will come more naturally if you use and know social media. The Internet is a playground so don’t be afraid to try out new platforms and ideas. Get to know other people in the sector and find out what they’re doing, share your ideas and experience with them. Collectively we can be more innovative and efficient than working in silos. And gather your evidence. Know how many people are online and using social media, know the demographics of different platforms, know how far you reach with online communications, know what your citizens think of what you’re doing. Know which tool to use for which job.

So, what do others think? Anyone used a different approach or mix in order to get word out about what they can do for the organisation with social media?

Sarah Lay blogs at www.sarahlay.com, works in online communications for Derbyshire County Council (who don’t necessarily share her views) and is studying for a Masters in eCommunications, concentrating on local government use of social media. She is also the organiser of the first social media cafe for Derby and Derbyshire. If you live or work in the area and are interested in online communications and social media come along to meet others – find out more and join the group.

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{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Michele Ide-Smith August 12, 2009 at 11:47 am

Thanks for this great post Sarah / Dave. I think there are quite a few of us in a similar situation in local government.

One invaluable tip I took away from a Will Perrin talk recently was to screenshot online “conversations” that citizens are having about your organisation for Senior Managers to see. I did this and put screenshots in a presentation along with a summary of what we, as a Council, should do about it (similar to Carl Haggerty’s steps) e.g.

Step 1 – Monitor
Step 2 – Listen
Step 3 – Define a strategy
Step 4 – Participate
Step 5 – Take action, feedback

I have found this approach to be a very effective way to communicate a) what social media is, b) how it is used and c) why we, as a Council, need to pay attention to it and use it as a communications and engagement channel.

2 Adam Bailin August 12, 2009 at 2:00 pm

Interesting post. Social media provides a great opportunity for local councils to find out what people want.

I find the classic user-centred design approach applies well to online communications: analysis, design, evaluation. Or, in plain English:

- find out what people want
- develop services to meet the need
- get feedback on how well you have done (and what needs improving)

In an online context, there are so many tools that support the above (iterative) process, particularly on the evaluation side. For example, feedback forms, online surveys, web analytics, page ratings, user polls etc. The inherent measurability of the Web means there are a number of ways to demonstrate value for money.

3 suzeric August 12, 2009 at 2:57 pm

Thanks to Sarah & Dave. Can’t agree more. We need to get involved in PR/communications planning from the beginning, not just in the end. If join the discussion early then we can make suggestions that are truly part of the communication strategy and not just a nice to have appendix.

Small steps like having a dedicated time slot on online communication in weekly team meetings can help to raise awareness. Good reporting (fact & figures) can provide proof of business benefits. E.g. communicating something online brings down phone queries by XX per cent.

Good luck

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