Gov't & Social Media

The real Facebook issue for government…

The real Facebook issue for government departments is what employees are doing to the organization’s brand.

Most responsible folks in communications are aware that there are rich, online conversations about their activities, and few would argue that they don’t have a responsibility to at least be aware of these conversations.

Don’t get me wrong: This is challenging, as it forces Communicators to adapt their thinking of who is a “key influencer”. At the end of the day, though, this is not impossible to deal with, as it will ultimately be just a new form of interaction with the public environment. The tone, voice, style are all different, but it is just another form of Communications that has to be learned.

Facebook has made it much easier for these public conversations to take place, with rapid organizing around issues now even easier for Canadians to do. But, I would argue, government communicators will be able to deal with and adapt to these changes. We have a monitoring-analysis-response playbook that can be adapated and applied to the changing nature of the public environment.

But, Facebook is pushing a new, and much more difficult reality on organizations: Our employees are no longer anonymous.
A quick search revealed:

  • Most federal departments have approximately 50 to 150 employees who self-identify as employees.
  • There are groups of employees for most government departments, and most of these groups contain the departmental logo and links to the website.
  • One department has a network of over 700 employees online.
  • Some statements on some groups could be seen as inappropriate.

We have seen the knee-jerk reaction to this: Ban Facebook.

While that may make senior executives feel better, all it has really done is prevent media monitoring and issues managers people from actually understanding what is going on out there. How can departments know what their online profile looks like when their employees can’t visit the sites?

A better longer-term response is to think about and find ways for officials to participate in Facebook in ways that are in line with official policies. Challenging? Absolutely. Impossible? Nope.

We do media relations because Canadians spend time with the media and get information from the media. If they are now spending time on Facebook and getting information from Facebook, then don’t we have a responsibility to do Facebook relations?

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Doing outreach differently: Why you should ditch webcasts and consider Youtube

I often hear this in the chats after my social media presentations:

I work in PR/Communication for a large, risk-averse department/organization that does a lot of outreach and consultation.

Part of our outreach program involves ‘webcasts’ targeted to our core audience (youth, business, partners, employees, etc.)

We spend a lot of money on webcasts.

Our audiences aren’t really that big, particularly given the cost and headaches.

Our senior managers love webcasts.

Webcasts are shiny and make it seem like our organization is very tech-savvy and with it.

I’ve heard of Youtube.

It is shinier and newer.

I’ve noticed that videos about our organization, uploaded by our stakeholders, and with very low production value get ten times the audience that our webcasts do.

What should we do?

My first instinct, and I think the instinct of many organizations, is to gravitate toward promoting mash-ups or contests that encourage users to submit videos as part of some new (and very shiny) campaign, or some other interesting little marketing exercise. (If I weren’t so lazy and jaded I’d insert the obligatory link to some ill-conceived mash-up contest on Youtube).

This approach is wrong.

For the risk-averse organization, with a button-down brand, this won’t get past the first meeting with your senior managers. I can guarantee that at this phase of adoption your organization isn’t ready for this kind of remixing of its brand. Or, in the case of a government department, user-generated mashups will never really be appropriate.

So, does this mean there is no value in posting videos to Youtube?

Nope.

Why do we do webcasts?

Traditional PR primarily serves the media. Why? Economies of scale. In Canada, five phone calls to the right media outlets can get your message out to most major media in the country. We want to reach Canadians, and this is the most effective way to do it.

One scrum, quick press conference, or afternoon of interviews and you have reached most Canadians. The flaw in this approach is that the outcome is a quick mainstream media blip with a sound bite and a backdrop, interpreted as the media want to interpret it, and all sliced up into a 90 second spot.

This is a blunt tool approach that doesn’t work well for targeting an engaged niche audience. They are left wanting. But, it has been one of the few tools available to us.

Webcasts are seen by many PR practitioners (in government anyway) as a way to reach an engaged niche through the in-depth video broadcast. They get 90 uninterrupted minutes of their issue, spilling crumbs on their keyboard while they learn about grain subsidies, a climate change education for kids, or a panel on economic development in Atlantic Canada (These are all made up examples, No government communicators were harmed in the writing of this post).

It is really the television model applied to the Web. The webcast is a new, temporary “channel” for your event. You advertise the channel, either through a press release or other broadcast format; build momentum for the day of the webcast; and hope that the people show up. Afterwards, you archive the webcast and hope that people continue to trickle in to view it. And, six months from now you hope your numbers are good for your wrap-up report.

Don’t get me wrong. I don’t hate webcasts. They have had some success because they have been the best tool we’ve got for reaching an engaged niche with video over the web.

We take this success with a few lumps, though:

• Live broadcasts via the Web are expensive and complicated. We need to hire outside contractors, and pay through the nose for the production and the pipes.

• Scheduling is tricky because of time zones, and many people just can’t make it at that time.

• Technology usually fails for at least a small portion of those who want to see it

• Interactivity is limited to those on the line at the time

What changes with Youtube?

First and foremost: By moving away from expensive, real-time webcasts you have reduced your distribution costs dramatically. Immediately you have freed up resources to produce more and more compelling content. For those of you who have done webcasts, you will know that this means you have just freed up a very large percentage of your budget.

Now, we still have the problem of getting people to view our video and, depending on the level of consultation you are seeking, to interact with us and each other.

Let’s circle back. As I mentioned a couple of screens ago: “Traditional PR serves the media” because that has been the most cost-effective path to large audiences.

This all changes with “social media.” Those people we have been thinking of as our stakeholders or our “target audience” become a new distribution channel. They can help us get out our message and draw traffic to our content.

Instead of relying on a couple of dozen journalists locked up in a stuffy press conference room for 20 minutes, you have the chance to get your message out to the 500 people who care passionately about your organization’s activities, and you can draw on them to spread the word to the people in their networks via their blogs, podcasts, e-mail forwards, word of mouth pitches, etc.

You will build on the “brand audit” you’ve done of your organization, and the identification you did of the bloggers, podcasters, youtubers, and taggers that are engaged with your issues. (You have already done this, right?) With this understanding you will be aware of the ways in which your organization is being praised, criticized, mocked, etc. online, and you can gauge the strategic risks and opportunities of the outreach program.

At this point, you are ready to consider contacting your key influencers and let them know about your video and how it fits into your campaign.

The webcast pitch is a tough one: “Please be at your computer on Tuesday at 11:00 Eastern time for 30 minutes to watch a broadcast about our program. We’ll be in front of an audience of 50 people in Sudbury, and webcasting to the rest of the country. You can ask questions through a moderator. We’ll take 10 questions. You need to test your browser ahead of time. You and your colleagues will need to crowd around a PC, or all sit at your own PC. We hope your connection is fast. Don’t spill your coffee. You can watch it in the archives after, but won’t be able to ask questions.”

The Youtube pitch is much easier: “This video is the first in a series of videos that will talk about our program. Just click the link to watch it. Got comments? Post them in the comments field. Embed the video in your blog and talk about it. Heck, do your own video response if you want. We are listening, and we will come back with another video addressing some of the issues we hear. We’ve saved so much money by not webcasting that we are actually going to do a whole series of videos. This is the first of ten videos we plan.”

Compelling, eh?

What could possibly go wrong?

OK. I am not suggesting that caution be picked up and tossed into the next available breeze.

This has to fit with the strategic goals of your outreach program. The medium of choice has to align with the content, messages, and audiences involved. Basic PR stuff.

And, you may have some other very specific concerns to address, such as translation, or have accessibility restrictions that require you transcribe each video. Figure out a way to deal with these issues. But, keep in mind that you still have some coin left over from all that money you saved when you abandoned the expensive webcasts.

But what if we fail, you ask? You very well might, at first. But, that is good, and it is healthy. These efforts will cost you little, and they have the potential to create entirely new opportunities to reach your audiences. My advice on dealing with failure? Experiment. Sandbox. Pilot. Beta. Alpha. Whatever you want to call it, take a small, controlled risk up front and start to get your feet wet. Don’t kill the webcasts: just do both for a little while. Take some of your videos, and post them to Youtube. Cross-post them to your website as well. See what happens.

If you are scared of criticism and this feels too risky you can mitigate your risk to a certain extent by disabling comments on the video. Be prepared to take criticism, though. Consider it a natural part of the consultation and outreach that you are going through. Not everyone will love you. And, don’t forget that one of the most important goals of any outreach/consultation activity is to improve the extent to which you are listening to your stakholders anyway.
Like any good consultation you need to set some boundaries up front, pay close attention to the directions the conversations are going, and recognize that consultation requires constant gardening.

Pick the weeds, water the plants, and reap the harvest.

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P.S. Sorry for the absence of links in this post. Most of these thoughts have been inspired by materials I have read and tagged here.

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Mashing up the UK Parliament

Some interesting conversations with Michael Geist after our Third Monday event in Ottawa (see Joe’s writeup) reminded me of the very innovative TheyWorkForYou.com website, which blows the doors off of any other project I’ve seen for shining the light on what happens within a public institution.
The site, which launched in 2004, is a project of the very innovative mySociety. In a nutshell: ” TheyWorkForYou provides a searchable, annotatable version of what is said in [the UK] Parliament, as well as useful pages providing clear, non-biased information on a range of different measures of activities by MPs. Originally built by volunteers while mySociety was getting started, it is now part of mySociety.”

Sounds all fine and dandy, it is only when you start poking around that the depths of this coolness become evident.

Here is a quick example. In 2 minutes I found out that MP Danny Alexander (chosen at random):

  • strongly supports smoking bans
  • is very strongly for investigating the Iraq war
  • is most likely to ask questions about: Disability, Benefits, Tax Credits, Pathways to Work, Housing Benefit
  • most recently asked questions about the post office and disability living allowances
  • has spoken in 43 debates in the last year (above average)
  • Is a member of 1 select committee.
  • has voted in 74% of votes in parliament — average amongst MPs.
  • spent £21,428 on travel last year, and £1,048 on stationery
  • and has used three-word alliterative phrases (e.g. “she sells seashells”) 91 times in debates — average amongst MPs.

Wow. How is that for transparency and really letting me evaluate my MP?

I can receive e-mail messages whenever he speaks in Parliament, track an RSS feeds of his speeches, and send him an e-mail message. I can also add comments to any of his (or anyone else’s) statments in Hansard, and sign up to the “HearFromYourMP” service to get messages from him (without giving him my e-mail address).

Nothing exists like that here in Canada. The closest example I’ve seen is How’d They Vote?, but it seems to have gone dark.

Great site, and only one of the interesting projects being worked on by the mySociety folks (full list here).

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“So Said the Organization”

Colin McKay has started up a worthy project with the “So Said the Organization” blog.

Here’s what it is all about:

So Said The Organization is a collaborative blog intended to help government communicators from around the world share ideas, tips and practical examples of how to integrate new technologies into their daily work.

Content is contributed by a number of authors working on different continents. Their work does not represent the interests, policies or intentions of their employers, and should be considered as personal opinion.

It is a worthwhile activity that I hope really starts to get legs among government communicators.  Kudos to Colin for having the guts to get it going.

“So Said the Organization” can be found at http://sosaidthe.org

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Today’s social media links: Risk factors in ministerial blogs; and how to pitch milbloggers

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Today’s links: Three ministerial blogging examples, and the return of VerizonMath

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Government and social media in the UK

There are lots of interesting things happening in the government and social media space in the UK.

Here are a few recent links of interest:

  • The Hansard Society came out before Christmas with its report on Phase One of the Digital Dialogues initiative, established by the Department of Constitutional Affairs.  I have printed out a ‘dead-tree’ copy of the 87-page report for reading in the next couple days.  A quick glance of the findings suggests this will be very relevant for anyone thinking about launching social media initiatives in a government environment.  Worth a detailed read.  PDF available here
  • Jim Murphy, Minister of State for Employment and Welfare Reform, has launched the second Ministerial blog in the UK.  Available here: http://www.dwp.gov.uk/welfarereform/blog/
  • For those were weren’t aware, David Milliband is the first Ministerial blogger.
  • The Hansard Society maintains a list of government-led social media initiatives here
  • Simon Collister’s blog is a good source of news on what’s going on. He recently pointed to this little battle over how open Conservative leader David Cameron really is being on some financing issues. Interestingly enough, Mr. Cameron today responded directly to the challenging questions by posting up a list of all groups that had lent the party money.
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Two examples of government outreach and podcasts

Oversight blogging bounty - Commentary - The Washington Times, America’s Newspaper

The US House Subcommittee on Livestock and Horticulture has set up a blog asking people for input on what should be covered.

Hold the phone.  I was too hasty: this blog doesn’t exist yet. It is a scenario put forward by Scot Faulkner, a former chief administrative officer of the U.S. House of Representatives.   Here is what he suggests is a possible scenario for committee activity:  

The House Subcommittee on Livestock and Horticulture announces it plans to review the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s commodity programs. The subcommittee’s Web site sets up a blog asking people for input on what should be covered. As with any blog or Internet Forum, participants, who include committee staff and members, can self-enforce participation by driving out inappropriate and irrelevant comments and questions.

People obsessed with asking about “boxers or briefs” or whether someone is a Cylon will be marginalized. A unique requirement would be for all participants to identify who they are and to disclose whether they are employed or compensated by any special interest. Agency officials and lobbyists would be welcome to join the blog discussions. 

The subcommittee’s blog generates ideas on what issues should be addressed, who should be called as a witness, and what questions should be asked. In this example, farmers who actually farm could provide details on what is working and not working with the program. 

The hearing takes place. It is simultaneously Webcast and made available for Podcast. Questions arising from the blog are asked as part of the official record.

 After the hearing, the blog continues with everyone reacting to the hearing, critiquing its effectiveness and identifying follow-up questions and issues. Some of these additional questions may be sent on to agency officials for written response. 

The subcommittee issues its report online. Once again the blog allows public reaction and input. If enough additional concerns are raised, a new hearing is scheduled and the process begins anew.

This is the kind of thinking that I am hoping begins to surface in 2007. 

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Social media in Canada: My predictions for the next 12 months

I guess these would be my prognostications for the evolution of “social media” in 2007, written from a Canadian perspective.

First, I believe that 2007 will be the year that real money starts moves into the social media space, with corporations, governments, and organizations of all stripes finding ways to embed social media in their monitoring, outreach, and other PR functions.

The roll-out of “real” initiatives that embed social media will result in a degree of cynicism from purists and a feeling of hangover from those who were drunk on the promise of “pure” social media in 2006.  Mesh 2007 will include way too much navel gazing and concern that the principles of authenticity, transparency, etc. have somehow been compromised by the desire of large organizations to use these new tools to engage in conversations with their stakeholders.  

From where I sit, this is a natural movement that we have been through countless times before in the arrival of the introduction of new social software, whether it was the first spam sent over ARPANET; changes in multiplayer gaming that led from MUDs/MOOs to commercial spaces like Ultimate Online; or even the obsession with online retail in the dot com boom of the 1990s, which represented the first wave of commercialization on the Web.

Face it, when Internet tools hit a certain level of acceptance and legitimacy within organization, money starts to move in, real initiatives start rolling out, and the medium changes.  For good or otherwise, this is what will happen. It’s happened before and it’ll happen again.

While I’m not too troubled by the changes that will accompany greater corporate and institutional involvement, it is important to emphasize that the underlying values and ethics  (articulated to a certain degree in the WOMMA ethics code  will remain. Organizations will still need to recognize that deceptive practices are dumb, and will (1) be found out, (2) be sharply criticized, and (3) and will do more brand damage than you suspect.

Even though social media will look much different a year from now, flogs, astrotufing and other deceptive practices will still be inexcusable.

I do think, however, that a bigger concern in 2007 be the sharp spike in social media spam (note to self: we need a new term for this). Organizations, legit and otherwise, will realize that the attention shift brought on by social media represents an opportunity to make some serious cash through deceptive practices.  This will dramatically reduce the effectiveness of aggregated content, and will start to drive us all crazy.

What will this look like?

  • Tag spam on technorati, del.icious and other social bookmarking sites
  • Lawsuits from brand owners over the use of their trademarks in tags.  What would Verizon think of the Verizonmath tag? Or a campaign to tag blog posts and stories with the Verizonsucks tag?
  • Youtube spam, which will consist of the false naming of videos to generate views and the use of tricks to artificially inflate views.  
  • Growing concern over pay-per-post blog posts 
  • Growing concern over Digg gaming and pay-per-digg

We will also see a social media backlash. MSM journalists who were annoyed with the rapid rise of social media and the endless questioning over their own value in the face of the growing influence of bloggers, will revel in these articles and will report excessively on all of this negativity in excruciating detail.

At the same time, social media will start to look a lot like other media and there will be a lot of head-scratching and existential discussion over what really is different. This has already started among thought leaders in this space. A recent post by John Battelle on related issues is required reading. I subscribe to his perspectives around the move from “packaged goods” media to “conversational media”.

I predict there will be growing demand for enterprise-level social media tools (blogging platforms, enterprise wikis, etc.), as organizations realize that they are paying gazillions of dollars for IT tools that are proprietary, expensive to implement, and actually not that good.  I’ve felt this for awhile, and The Economist has given this feeling some strong validation.

I also predict that somewhere in Canada, a Cabinet Minister will start blogging. No inside information there, just a gut feeling.

And, somewhere in Canada, a blogstorm will lead to the resignation of a Cabinet Minister. Again, just intuition.

RSS will continue its steady, but persistent spread. The breakthroughs on consumer side will be modest, with the inclusion of RSS in IE7 doing little to drive adoption (sorry, Joe). The big breakthroughs will be in number of organizations that start publishing in RSS and improvements in web-based services that are driven by RSS but which don’t require users to actually know what it is.   What will that look like? Pre-rolled Netvibes tabs, sites like Wikio, and enterprise-level blog monitoring and analysis tools.

That’s it. Those are my thoughts for the next twelve months in the world of social media.  Should be an interesting ride!

That’s most likely it for me for 2006. Have a great holiday, everyone. 
 

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VerizonMath and how to answer the “Why should I care about this blog?” question

As social media practitioners begin to make the business case within organizations about the importance of monitoring, analysing, and reacting to issues arising in the blogosphere, they are invariably confronted with The Question.

The Question comes in many forms, but the most common version is the blunt one from the experienced and skeptical veteran: “Why should I care about this blog?” It is usually followed up by: “Who reads this anyway? It’s just idle chatter and not serious news.”

These are tough questions that pose a big challenge to the blogevangelist.

In fact, this issue has been talked about a lot lately, particularly in the context of social media measurement. It was one topic of a recent Factiva-sponsored roundtable, which was very nicely written up by Jeremiah Owyang and Jeremy Pepper, among others. These folks are diving nicely into the measurement question, and I highly recommend a detour their way.

From my point of view, properly dealing with The Question is one of the biggest challenges facing social media practitioners within a conservative organization. Coming up with a good answer will go a long way toward increasing your credibility within your organization, and in preparing your team for the first time it needs to react to an emerging blogstorm.

The Question is easy to answer when you are dealing with the mainstream media. The mainstream media is nice and easy and linear. Folks get the significance a story appearing in The Globe and Mail or the New York Times. We all just automatically understand that a Globe columnist or editorial has a high level of authority and influence in the public environment, and that a breaking story in a mainstream newspaper will have a downstream influence that will lead to follow-up coverage in other papers.

At the same time, the authority of a mainstream media outlet is very stable: the same group of people get the Globe delivered every day, and the readership of a columnist will be more or less stable. Leading Canadian columnists like John Ibbitson or Don Martin have a predictable level of influence.

The landscape of the ’sphere is much different. It is jagged, contoured, slippery, and treacherous.

The influence of a blogger is incredibly tricky to measure, with the importance of an individual post depending as much on how the rest of the ’sphere reacts as on the blogger’s personal influence. The influence of an A-lister’s post varies widely depending on the kind of “link juice” they get from the rest of the ’sphere. At the same time, a Z-lister can quickly rise in influence if they can create a meme with the high pickup that can shoot it with a mad virulence across the Net.

A case in point is the emerging blogstorm that is hitting Verizon as I write this. On Thursday, someone named “georgevaccaro” create a blog called VerizonMath. In it, he details a bizarre serious of conversations he has had with Verizon revolving around the per KB charges he incurred while accessing data on his phone during a trip to Canada. He was quoted a rate of “.002 cents per KB”, when in fact the customer service representatives had actually meant “.002 dollars per KB.” On his blog, he documents his interactions with the company, posts up a (very funny) audio file of his phone conversation, and he also uploaded a copy of the same phone call to Youtube.

This has spread with the typical speed of a hot blogstorm. His blog has pulled in more than 20K hits, the Youtube video has upwards of 45K views, and the blog has been linked to by more than 300 other blogs. This is going to get much worse before it gets better, and the image it has created of Verizon customer service couldn’t be much more negative.

For the PR practitioner who “gets” social media, the significance of this rapidly spreading meme is self-evident. But, how do you communicate that fact within your organization? How do you convince your management that this blog, from someone your management team has never heard of, and over a measly $72 in charges, is doing significant damage to your brand?

Here are a few tips and analytical lenses that jump to mind. This is a work-in-progress, so I’d be curious for other metrics.

  • Know your baseline. Understand your starting point. Is your organization regularly criticized or praised for its activities? Or, do your customers/stakeholders generate very little commentary about your organization? Understanding how far an event or issue is deviating from the norm will help you to contextualize for management.
  • Know your influencers. Eric Kintz at HP has done some great work talking about the importance of influencers and understanding how memes spread across the Net. What I would add is that organizations need to know who their influencers are and track them closely. Who writes about you everday? Who is being linked to most by the community of bloggers who track your issues? Whose posts about your organization are more likely to get picked up by the A-list in your space? Know who these folks are, read their blogs religiously, and pay attention to what they are paying attention to. It is most likely that emerging storms will show up here first.
  • Understand that influence is not static – As mentioned above, we are all used to the significance of a column in the Globe and Mail. It has a static influence that is easy to digest. It is much harder in the world of social media to communicate the fact that on any given day a post from an unknown person can become the most influential force acting on your brand, far outstripping the power of your regular influencers. Your management team may only grasp this after they have been hit by a blogstorm. Hopefully, you can preempt this by providing some education and case study examples before this happens.
  • Understand how memes spread. Social media is all about the network and its ability to rapidly spread ideas and memes. The pickup of an issue by a key social bookmarking site (Digg, Del.icio.us, Reddit, etc.) results in traffic spikes several orders of magnitude above the norm. You need to communicate to your managers the significance of these spikes, and move quickly to react when one of these spikes interacts with your brand or your issues.
  • Work with the numbers you have. We are a long way away from high-quality social media measurement. This is largely to do with the fact that we are measuring influence and not traffic. Measuring influence involves measuring the number of links, the amount of pick-up on other blogs, and the number of instances when a story crosses over into the mainstream media. In response to this challenge my tendency is to gather as much information as I can find: everything from the number of Youtube video views, the number of other blogs that have picked it up, and document instances when the story jumps to the A-list or crosses the media barrier and jumps to mainstream publications. The job of a good analyst is to put these numbers together to create the most accurate picture possible, acknowledge that you are dealing with incomplete numbers, and move on to recommended actions.
  • Don’t be afraid to downplay significance – In the long-run, communicating the significance of something like VerizonMath (a significant issue) is probably harder than communicating the triviality of a lesser issue. We all have a tendency to want to increase the significance of a budding blogstorm in order to increase our own credibility as social media watchers. Resist the urge. If you can effectively communicate that the issue in question is actually only a minor blip, you have done more for your credibility than if you start ringing alarm bells. (Note to Verizon – You shouldn’t downplay the significance of VerizonMath)

Does this jive with your reality? Anything else to add or link to? I’d be curious to hear other examples from social media practitioners who’ve faced this question in their own environments.

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