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SOCIAL MEDIA, AN INTRODUCTION NE UNION WOMEN’S SUMMER SCHOOL Donna L. Schulman, SMLR, Rutgers, University
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What is Social Media? a new set of internet tools that enable shared community experiences, both online and in person. It allows people with basic computer skills to tell their stories using publishing tools such as blogs, photo sharing, podcasting, wikis, social networks, to network. it can help us filter and organize the overwhelming amount of information on the web. Social media tools make it easier to create and distribute content and discuss the things we care about. It can be used for personal passions, advocacy, business, and fun.
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Types of Social Media - BLOGGING Journals written by individuals or groups of individuals. Allows for lots of writing and images, flexible. Most blogs allow for comments from their readers. Simple Complicated to do. Use Blogger, Wordpress, Moveable Type. Also called CMS – content management systems. Popular with journalists, people passionate about an issue who like to write or photograph. Some labor organizations incorporate blogs into their web sites. Important to keep up-to-date.
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Types - TWITTER A text service owned by Twitter, Inc. It is free. Allows users to send and read text-based messages of up to 140 characters, including punctuation + spaces. All “tweets” are public! You can follow certain Also called “microblogging” You can send and receive messages on the Twitter web site, http://twitter.com/,http://twitter.com/ Or through your PDA/smartphone (this may cost $) Twitter has helped bring back the Haiku (short poems of 17 syllables - 5-7-5)
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Types – FACEBOOK, MYSPACE Social Networking Platforms Originally developed for personal use for younger people Now used by nonprofit organizations, businesses, causes, etc. Global Set platform—limited flexibility, dependent on company’s rules. Privacy issues. Extremely popular.
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Types – PHOTO SHARING Share and store photographs (and videos) with friends and people with common interests. Hosts photos that you can use for your blog, Facebook, etc. Free and fee-based. Flickr.com, Photobucket.com, Picasaweb.google.com Some sites, like Flickr, encourage networking activities like creating groups, tagging favorites, etc. Flickr Creative Commons: http://www.flickr.com/creativecommons/ http://www.flickr.com/creativecommons/ Flickr: The Commons: http://www.flickr.com/commons
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Types: Wikis A way of sharing information and expertise in a structured format. Collaborative groupo web site. Wikipedia, WikiHow (http://www.wikihow.com), Memory Alpha (the Star Trek wiki), WikiLeaks (http://wikileaks.org/)http://www.wikihow.com Free and fee-based. Software - PBWiki (http://pbworks.com/), others availablehttp://pbworks.com/
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Types: Social Bookmarking + Reading Document and share your Internet Bookmarks + Favorites Delicious (http://delicious.com/)http://delicious.com/ My Delicious page: http://delicious.com/queensgirlhttp://delicious.com/queensgirl Catalog your books online, see what other people are reading LibraryThing (http://www.librarything.com/)
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Top U.S. Social Network Sites Facebook (2) - 34.93% of global Internet users on 7/28/10 YouTube (4) – 23.38% of global Internet users on 7/28/10 Twitter (8) - 8.25% of global Internet users on 7/28/10 Blogger.com (11) MySpace (13) LinkedIn (17) Wordpress (20) Flickr (23) PhotoBucket (39) Yelp (48)
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Getting Started 1. Create a Plan 2. Create + Develop Content 3. Making Friends 4. Keep Them Coming Back
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Resources TechSoup - tech advice for nonprofits - http://home.techsoup.org/pages/default.aspx New Organizing Institute – community and labor organizing techniques - http://neworganizing.com/– http://neworganizing.com/ http://www.neworganizing.com/resources/noi-and-field- research/one-pagers http://www.neworganizing.com/resources/noi-and-field- research/one-pagers Strategic Organizing - blog focusing on using technology for organizing - http://www.union- organizing.org/
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PROJECT Your Union president has asked you, as a graduate of the NE Union Women’s Summer School on generational issues, to develop a plan to integrate Social Media into the union. (S/he has no idea what Social Media is, but thinks it sounds cool.) You need to come up with 2 plans: A Fantasy Plan, the best there could be, with an unlimited budget. A Real Life plan, that your union may be able to implement. To come up with this plan, consider the following questions:
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Project - Goals What are the goals + objectives + challenges of your union? Which SPECIFIC Social Media tools would help achieve these goals, overcome these challenges? Is your union already using Social Media tools? Is your international? Which ones? Are they goal-oriented? Are members involved? Could they be used more effectively?
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Project – Target Community Who is your target community? Members Staff Officers Committee Community Coalition partners Employer(s), management What are the ages and economic status of your target community? What Social Media tools are they using or could be using? Would a survey be helpful? Would they be interested in learning how to use Social Media? Could the union provide training?
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Project - Resources For each Social Media tool you recommend, think about: How much time would be involved in doing updates, answering comments, monitoring for problems? How many people would be needed? Who? Skills required? Tech staff – needed? in-house? Consultants? Volunteers – members, retirees, school interns, etc. Remember – you are envisioning a Fantasy plan and a Real plan!
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Project - Payoff What would be the benefits of using Social Media in your union? (you don’t have to think about all of these activities, these are suggestions). For Collective Bargaining? For Organizing? For Member Mobilization? For Coalition Building? For tell your story to the Community? (even to Management?) For Fun (as in making the world a happier place?)
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