Social Media Demographics Infographic

We love how to use social media and are constantly looking for the best and most effective ways to leverage it for ministry, business, and personal use. One of the questions that we have to ask ourselves before we begin to invest too much time into these networks is if it is worth it? Do we have the time, knowledge, and tools to be able to use it? After that, we need to know who is using it to see if it is a viable tool to invest in. The infographic below is a perfect summation of several of the most popular social media networks and who is using them.

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2012 Social Media Strategy: April Review

The last three months have been a great experiment for us on putting together a social media and blogging strategy. We set out with realistic goals that were (mostly) measurable and found out what worked and did not work. Now that we are one-fourth of the way through the year, it is time for us to take the lessons learned, reevaluate these goals, and maybe make some significant changes to our social media strategy. Below you will see only our April reviews of the strategy as well as which ones we will be keeping, modifying, removing, and adding to our strategy.

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Churchmag Love!

I love my family at Churchm.ag. We have many different avenues to be able to socialize together: Twitter, Facebook, and a dedicated Yammer group. The conversation ranges from the very professional discussion about tech and articles to the down right silliness. Yesterday, we went a different route and finally connected on Google+ Hangout.

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2012 Social Media Strategy: March Review

There are two things we need to keep in mind with our social media strategy: we have to be consistent and frequent on the platforms we use or not use them at all and we need to differentiate between the different networks. To the first point, I always state that it is better to not have a presence on a social media platform than one that is abandoned. You send a terrible message that you do not care if your last post was two years ago. Secondly, if you do the same thing for Facebook that you do for Twitter or Google+, you are not effectively using your accounts. Make specific purposes for each group.

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Blogging 101: Integrate Social Media

[This article is part of the Blogging 101 series to help people start up their very own blog.]

We are social media promoters. If you are not using it with your business or in ministry and have great ideas, you need to start now. But at the same time, we argue that it is ONLY a tool and if it distracts from making sales or doing ministry, you need to just through it out the window.

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Guidelines For Hosting A Google+ Hangout

This week we hosted our second Google+ Hangout and it was quite a success. Our discussion for the month was on the topic of “How to use social media well in ministry, including: Google+, Facebook, and Twitter.” While nothing new was brought up as ideas for how to use social media in ministry, the people had some great questions that I was able to answer for them that really allowed them to feel more comfortable with how to use social media.

Google+ Hangout is a completely new concept not only for Google, but for social media in general. There is minimal experience among social media users with being able to have a video chat with multiple people. So with two hangouts under our belt, we want to offer four guidelines to you if you plan to host your own guidelines so that you can have as few hiccups as possible.

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2012 Social Media Strategy: February Review

Yesterday, we shared with you our review of our blogging goals. If you have not seen what we did, you should view it as our social media goals directly interact with that strategy. Below is a list of ten goals that we hope to achieve this year, divided up within each social networking tool.

There are two things we need to keep in mind with our social media strategy: we have to be consistent and frequent on the platforms we use or not use them at all and we need to differentiate between the different networks. To the first point, I always state that it is better to not have a presence on a social media platform than one that is abandoned. You send a terrible message that you do not care if your last post was two years ago. Secondly, if you do the same thing for Facebook that you do for Twitter or Google+, you are not effectively using your accounts. Make specific purposes for each group.

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20 Ways To Do Contests Right On Social Networks

People love to do contests on their websites and that is great! In fact, we are hosting a contest on our blog to give away a $15 Amazon.com giftcard for the top commenter for this month. The problem is that many people do not know what they should and should not be doing on social media sites.

To help you protect yourself, here are twenty random things you need to do to do contests right on social networks. Let us be clear that it is always best to go to the social networks’ terms of use as this is NOT an exhaustive list by an means and only focuses on Twitter, Facebook, and Google+.

  1. The reason for all of this worrying is that laws are different in every state of the United States and even more so in other countries. The simple solution is to not allow it. The governments’ worry is that contests will be rigged and this will promote money laundering.
  2. Contests, giveaways, and sweepstakes are all different things. Some social networks allow one and not the other.
  3. All contests should have a terms of use and privacy policy accompanied with it. That is a general online law, regardless if you host a contest on a social media site or your blog.
  4. If you do not know the rules and still do contests wrong on social media sites, you could be not only banned from the network, but also fined.
  5. Twitter is the most liberal and allows contests.
  6. You can find Twitter’s contest rules here.
  7. Unfortunately, between of the limited amount of characters, you cannot get the rules across, so provide a link back to a website with the full details.
  8. Encourage your Twitter followers not to create fake accounts to win the contest.
  9. Request that contestants provide an @reply back to you so that others do not see your contest tweets as spam.
  10. Google+ does not allow you to run a contest solely from their website.
  11. Here is Google+ rules for contests.
  12. To properly do a contest on Google+, you need to physically host the website on another place, most likely announcing the contest on your profile and then linking back to your website for details.
  13. You cannot do anything that involves their +1, including how many people +1 your link or update.
  14. Facebook is the most strict of these three. They have removes many businesses from their network, so be careful.
  15. You can use a third-party app on Google+ to host the contest and many businesses have done it successfully, but there are not a lot of online resources about the Google+ app or how to create third-party apps for contests.
  16. Here is Facebook’s policy and guidelines.
  17. You cannot use any parts of Facebook for a contest. This includes. “Like our facebook page to enter a contest” or “Leave a comment to enter to win ________.” Illegal.
  18. The previous one includes having the Facebook Like button on your own blog. You are still doing it wrong.
  19. You cannot use “When we get to XXX number of followers, we will give away something.
  20. You can create a custom page within your Facebook page that is hosted on a non-Facebook server. Unfortunately, this takes resources, programming knowledge, and lots of time!

With these twenty tips, will you be doing a contest with the help of social media or because of the endless rules, will you avoid everything accept linking to your website?

Watching You Read My Blog

We officially have our Google Analytics running on our website and maybe the greatest feature for those that are blog stat nerds is the live view. This allows you to see who is reading your site information on a second by second basis with full features including where they are from, what they are reading, and how long they are staying. Not sure what the full potential of this could be, but excited to see what can result from this!

Anyone else out there using Google Analytics? What do you like most about it?

Google+ Hangout with 78P

This last week we talked about our Google+ strategy and one of the big points we will be integrating is Google+ Hangout. The hope is that we will use our Google+ account and host a Google+ Hangout once a month on the second Monday of every month at 3PM EST. (Of course, a baby on the way could throw that off in March.

We would love for you to join us to discuss about a ton of great topics. While we will give you the topics of what will be the conversation ultimately the discussion will follow the questions, comments, and experiences you bring to the table. Here are the future dates in the next five months.

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