How to deal with (and prevent) social crisis situations

Post by @ChelseaHartling

A lot of times in crisis situations, companies will let their social accounts go dark rather than face the doomsday music sounding their name from the trending topics list. However, silence during a crisis is actually quite deafening in the social space. This kind of action (or rather, lack of action) sends the message that you have something to hide. But you can’t hide in your Twitter closet because the doors are transparent. People know you’re in there, covering your mouth like a kid who thinks closing his eyes equals invisibility. The Internet is a fast and sometimes unforgiving space, unless you address your mistakes immediately.

But first we must take a step back. First you have to care about your audience. It all starts with your ‘Why’. If your ‘why’ isn’t in the right place to begin with, crisis situations are doomed to become disasters. Reminder: Social communication simply amplifies what already exists.

Take Mitt Romney, for example. After his very public loss to President Obama in the 2012 Presidential elections, all social communication came to a dead halt. Aside from one Facebook post wishing his fans a Merry Christmas, neither he, nor anyone in his camp, has posted on Facebook or Twitter since November 10th – just 4 days after the election. There’s a golden opportunity to build trust and loyalty when your audience is hanging on your every word. He took the stage and then turned his back on his following, proving that his intentions within the social space might not have been genuine. What kind of message does that send to his fans and the people who tirelessly campaigned for him throughout the year? Social media wasn’t invented for advertisers and campaigners. It was invented for communicators and if you want to build a relationship, you can’t just disappear on your loyalists.

A recent crisis situation that was not dealt with head on was the KFC chicken brain debacle. After a customer found a disgusting brain-like substance in his fried chicken he took to the social space to post an image, which went viral and set the social media fire ablaze.

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The fast food chain continued on with a regular stream of marketing messages as if nothing had happened. While they were trying to ignore the brainy poultry that was running rampant across the Internet, people were noticing and wondering what exactly KFC was hiding behind its kitchen doors. By ignoring the situation instead of owning up to it, they may have potentially damaged their brand for a long time to come.

Crisis situations are inevitably going to come up and when they do, there is an inherent need for social media education, and specifically a stop, drop, and roll plan. Remember during the Presidential election when a KitchenAid employee accidentally tweeted an insensitive comment about the President’s Grandmother from the @KitchenAidUSA account? They immediately issued an apology, addressed the mistake, and offered a solution. They stepped up to the plate and owned it. The result? News outlets covered the situation the next morning but they also covered the brand’s response. Instantly the KitchenAid brand surfaced from the sea of sameness and became relevant during a peak news time frame.

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Or remember when UFC president Dana White accidentally tweeted his personal phone number out to 4.3 million people? He chose to lean into the discomfort of his mistake and give his audience what they wanted, which ultimately received overwhelmingly positive feedback from his fans.

Our motto at Digital Royalty for dealing with social fiascoes has always been to face the music and address it head on, just make sure your ‘why’ is solid to begin with. Social communication is about humans connecting with humans and we all know humans make mistakes. Our society loves a good comeback story and resilience is an honorable trait in the real world as well as the virtual world. Rather than try to avoid an issue through silence, use your social channels for their intended purpose and communicate with your audience. Your loyal followers will respect you for it, and it may even increase their faithfulness to your brand.

Does your business have a social media crisis management plan? In our experience, the majority of these social debacles could have been prevented with education.

 

A Powerful Collision of the Virtual and Physical Worlds

SoxPhoneBannerPost by: @AlanaGolob

Myself and Nate Ludens were just in Chicago this past weekend for the White Sox’s annual SoxFest. My second SoxFest and Digital Royalty’s fourth to attend. During SoxFest thousands of fans get unique access to their favorite players and the entire White Sox organization through seminars, autograph sessions and so on. The challenge each year is how to create an experience online for those fans that don’t have the ability to attend SoxFest. One word? #SoxPhone.

This concept was originally created one special evening when the President of the UFC, Dana White, accidentally tweeted his phone number to his millions of followers on Twitter. The tweet was intended to be a Direct Message (DM). The social media mistake, turned into a social media success, when Digital Royalty introduced the concept of Fan Phone (watch video). The social media stunt was scaled to other fighters within the UFC, and eventually sponsorship opportunities surfaced.

The White Sox first introduced #SoxPhone during spring training last season with a few different players taking fans calls in-between workouts. Based on the success of Spring Training and the positive sentiment from players, we decided to take #SoxPhone to the next level and conducted 11 different #SoxPhones with 11 different players, throughout the weekend at SoxFest.

Here’s a quick look at how #SoxPhone plays out:

  • We created a Google Voice number and synced it to an existing phone number. In this case it was my phone. Side note, big thanks to our Tech Cowboy, TJ Hucka, who came to my rescue a few times when I wasn’t able to deactivate the number once the #SoxPhone was over. Fans will call as long as you keep the line open, so at one point I had about 50 incoming calls on my phone before TJ was able to deactivate it for me. Panic attack.
  • Prior to each #SoxPhone, @WhiteSox sent a tweet that included the custom number, typically including a photo of the particular player who was taking the calls and encouraged fans to give the player a call. The photo makes it real deal for fans.

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  • Each player answered calls as long as they wanted to, typically 5-10 minutes in this case. There was a live twitter feed in the booth, so the players were able to see fans tweet about their call within seconds of hanging up, which was a cool experience for them. Most all players would have continued to take calls far beyond that time allotment if their schedule permitted.
  • Fans typically tweet about their experience after the call and @WhiteSox and players on Twitter actively engaged back.

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  • We took video footage of the calls to post online so others can experience it as well. Virtual storytelling. Here’s a video of pitcher Chris Sale having fun with #SoxPhone.

The fans were stoked, the players had a great time and actually verbally expressed on multiple occasions that they really enjoyed the #SoxPhone. And, I was personally psyched to witness all of the happiness being had in the virtual and physical worlds. It’s a win-win and an equal value exchange for the fans, the players and the White Sox organization. Engagement and sentiment climbed with each round of #SoxPhone and those fans who actually had the opportunity to speak to their favorite player, instantly climbed the fan loyalty ladder and will be fans for life. The White Sox weren’t using #SoxPhone as a sales tool, they were open to experimenting and delivering the golden rule of social media: Value. When, where, and how their audience wanted to receive it.

#SoxPhone wasn’t the only social media stunt or activity happening over the course of #SoxFest, it was one of several concepts that were implemented this year. Others included, Hide & Tweets, Photo Scavenger Hunts, “Guess the Autograph” contests on Instagram, mobile alerts and active engagement on all outlets. When all of those activities are combined it’s a magical social combination.

To learn more about this concept and other social media stunts for events, we encourage you to take our Digital Royalty University class, “The Art of Event Activation”.

What’s New: cha, cha, cha…changes! Again.

Blog by @erinneray

A few new features and tips for Twitter, Foursquare and Facebook.

Embedded Tweet Enhancements:

Embedded tweets just got better as they now display with expanded media like photos, videos and other content shared in a tweet, just like on Twitter.com. New updates to the design make embedded tweets easier to read and you’re able to view actions like retweets and the total number of people who have favorited the tweet to evaluate engagement levels. The tweets are interactive and enable those viewing to reply, retweet and favorite directly on your website.

The loading time is also faster which means you aren’t taking that usual candy break while you wait for that tweet to load on the page. And they’ve made it easier and faster to navigate through embedding them on your sites.

How to embed a tweet on your website:

  • Just click the ‘more’ button in any tweet on twitter.com, select ‘embed this tweet’
  • Copy the HTML embed code and paste this directly into your article where you’d like the Tweet to appear (there’s a handy little preview which shows you how the tweet will look.)
  • If the tweet is a reply, you’ll be given a checkbox inside the embed dialog that allows you to exclude the rest of the conversation.
  • Voila! You just plused out content on your website.


Check out some of @‘s predictions for key social media trends in 2013, via @: http://t.co/kQfjIp7O
@DigitalRoyalty
Digital Royalty

Foursquare’s got a new look:

Foursquare had a mini-mobile facelift. Now your friends get to see all of your adventures, organized right on their phone and vice versa. When you view check-in’s that your friends have shared on Facebook or Twitter from their phone, you’ll see a brand new page visually organized with all the details of their check-in, including address, photos, badges, points, comments and likes. And you’re able to easily like or comment on their check-in right from the web view, or open the Foursquare app to learn more about that location.  The restructure and makeover of their dashboard makes it much more user-friendly.

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Facebook Graph Search:

Facebook’s latest feature is Graph Search, which is still in beta. If you don’t have access yet you can request it here. It’s a new form of social search that relies on your friends and connections on Facebook for results on topics you’re looking for.

From a personal page side, Graph Search helps you find people who share your passions, discover restaurants, music and more – all through your friends likes interests.

From a business perspective, Graph Search is all about connecting your audience. When people are asking friends of friends about a topic related to your industry, Graph Search will connect them. It is important to have your Facebook Page up to date with your location and address since Graph Search uses geo-targeting.

Hypothetically lets say you own a pizza restaurant in Chicago. If people are searching for “Restaurants in Chicago my friends have been to,” and if any of their friends have checked in at your pizza restaurant it will populate in the search results and drive more traffic to your Facebook page. It will be a great way to drive more traffic to business pages.

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Some Key Social Media Trends To Look For In 2013

By @AmyJoMartinBlog_Icon

The social space moves fast and it can seem overwhelming to stay abreast of all the news and changes. Every year, my Digital Royalty team and I like to look ahead at what we think is up and coming. Last year, our predictions for Social Media trends had to do with TV integration and big businesses embracing the social space. Below are a few key trends to look out for in 2013:

1. Need for education

Whoever coined the term ‘social media’ didn’t do us any favors. It’s simply communication versus media, more like the telephone than the TV. With more people and businesses using these social communication tools now than ever before, the need for proper education is imperative. Through my years of working with global brands and celebrity clients, I have seen first-hand the lack of social training and education. The majority of social media debacles could have been prevented with some degree of social media training. Social media affects every aspect of business— from entry-level to executives in HR, legal, customer service, etc.—that’s why everyone needs some level of education

When a disaster (on social media or otherwise) occurs, many people and brands choose to hide in their “social closet” in hopes of waiting out the storm. The problem is, silence erodes one’s credibility (i.e. Mitt Romney disappearing from the social scene post-election) and makes it seem like there is something to hide or their intentions for using the communication channel in the first lace weren’t pure. Successful brands that understand the power of social media know to face the music head-on when an issue arises. Kitchen Aid handed their social media snafu during the Presidential debates last year quickly and efficiently, addressing the issue openly and making a public apology. While they may have lost followers, they acknowledged the situation. Kitchen Aid’s willingness to handle the issue created a great deal of discussion about their brand. When handles correctly, social media debacles can end up strengthening brand loyalty. However, most brands would prefer to prevent the debacle in the first place. This can be done with education.

2. Socializing the Social Commerce Shopping Experience

Platforms have started identifying ways to make the shopping experience more social and they are offering brands more options to monetize their social communication efforts. Today’s analytics tools make every interaction trackable, from a user’s first interaction with a brand to final purchase. Listening tools like Radian6 and Simply Measured or web analytics tools such as Google Analytics allow companies to collect data throughout any given social media campaign.

To determine the value of a company’s social media efforts, companies can use my RevPAF (Revenue per Available Fan and Follower) formula. Simply take the amount of revenue generated from a social media campaign and divide by the number of fans and followers. If the value of each fan increases, the campaign was successful in engaging the customer. With the RevPAF metric, we further validate that traditional impressions don’t always convert but influence does.

Brands are able to deliver value, when, where and how their (targeted) audience wants to receive it. Zappos is working with Pinterest to test its new “Pinpointing” service, which recommends products based on what the user has pinned to their boards. Similarly, a shopping- centric social site called Fancy allows merchants to provide custom deals or specific information about products once a user has “Fancy’d” the item. In 2013, a sure bet is that Facebook will continue test and roll out new changes like the ‘want’ buttons and wish lists. Similarly, YouTube is working with several brands to deliver “shoppable” videos in which users can purchase products seen in the video with just a click. Unlike past shoppable videos, this new technology (currently in beta) doesn’t interrupt the viewing experience or disturb the video’s storyline.

3. Social Media Fatigue and Simplicity

Fatigue, consolidation, and the continuing struggle to remain relevant within the sea of social sameness are definite trends to watch this year. People are busy. They can only budget so much time toward their social communication efforts which means they can’t participate within all social platforms. Social fatigue is becoming a digital epidemic. Many social media platforms are adapting to this fact by finding more meaningful and interesting ways to engage users. Instagram and Pinterest revolve around sharing simple visuals. The platforms are clean, easy and convenient. Instagram’s ability to grow so quickly, (even without a desktop web-based solution until recently) proves that users seek simple, quick and mobile solutions for sharing photos. Within the click of a filter-adding button, we all feel like professional photographers sprucing up our snapshots. This year alone, dozens of new social apps and platforms were launched based on solely on the targeted user’s interests. There are numerous examples like Untappd for the beer connoisseur, Foodspotting or Ness for curious foodies, and Ravelry for avid knitters. As people tire of reading pointless updates from their high school acquaintances, for example, they will migrate to networks where they connect with those who share similar passions and interests. Niche, like-minded environments are becoming more appealing to users.  

As niche platforms grow in popularity, establishes platforms like Facebook need to be cautious as they continue to alienate users and brands with constant, yet inconsistent changes to brand pages. Dallas Maverick’s owner Mark Cuban famously called Facebook a “time-suck” last year and instructed the 70+ companies he has invested in to move Facebook to the bottom of the priority llist due to changes in Facebook’s content selection algorithms.

4. Better value offering for the user

Savvy brands recognize the power of providing relevant content vs. just trying to push products. Via Pinterest and Instagram, yoga and running gear retailer Lululemon features not only products, but useful information like yoga poses and running tips. Patagonia shows off its outdoor apparel line via Instagram while wowing the user with gorgeous landscape shots, and Red Bull provides adrenaline junkies with exciting snapshots of extreme sports to fuel our inner Renegade. Through these channels, they sell products by selling the lifestyle. By toning down the sales pitch and showing real-life uses for their products, people feel a more authentic connection with the brand.

5. Expanding use of rich media

Sharing random tidbits of your life is becoming much easier with the explosion of new photo-sharing and (especially) video-sharing apps. Humans are highly visual. Studies show that social posts garner better engagement rates if a photo or video is included. Apps like Flavyr, Threadlife, Viddy, Tout and Socialcam are just a few examples of numerous new platforms that are shaping the way we share visual content with one another. Even established social media giants like Twitter and YouTube are jumping on the bandwagon. Twitter recently upgraded its photo sharing capability to include filters and YouTube just launched an iPhone-only app called Capture, designed to make video-sharing and uploading extra simple.

6. Social Power to the People

After Instagram’s controversial change to and subsequent double-back in their terms of service, social platforms are now starting to acknowledge more than ever that consensus is the true authority. Instagram lost 25% of their daily users because of this change. However Instagram wasn’t the only social platform this year that had to back-peddle on its controversial policies that angered users. In February, hackers brought to light Path’s practice of downloading user’s phone contacts to its servers. Path publicly apologized and ended up deleting all the data collected. Now, users can opt-in to share their contacts with Path. Instances such as this have created a precedent within the social media world that will continue into 2013. Privacy settings are being ramped up by many platforms. From Pinterest’s Private Boards to Facebook and Foursquare’s new privacy settings. If users aren’t happy and platforms choose to remain silent or committed to unpopular policies, users will find another platform. The people have spoken which requires the platforms to listen louder.

I Am A Renegade: Shauna Harrison

At Digital Royalty we’re constantly inspired by hearing your stories of how you’re coloring outside the lines and innovating the way things have always been done. We’re all about designing our own days, finding our Royal Bliss and sharing it with others. After all, where passion, purpose and skill collide, bliss resides. As we continue to grow the community of Renegades we are sharing various inspiring stories in hopes that it will motivate others to embrace the Renegade way.

Our friend Shauna has been a huge inspiration to our team because she lives and breathes a Renegade lifestyle each and every day. She decided long ago that she didn’t want to follow a neat little yellow brick road if that meant having to choose just one of her passions. Instead, she designed her own colorful road so she never had to give up certain passion points in her life.  A self-proclaimed nerd, hip-hop head, jock, and yogi, with a PhD in Public Health and an Under Armor endorsement under her belt, she integrates all of her passions and skills on a daily basis. Whether that’s getting people excited about a new fitness class or teaching yoga on the Golden Gate Bridge, Shauna doesn’t succumb to any formulaic routine or old school template.

When challenging her to define her Royal Bliss in 140 characters or less, this was her response:

“My life is a mixtape of evolving tracks that make my heart, brain & body sweat. Inspiring others to find their own beat makes my soul glow.”

Check out her Renegade story.

Are you a Renegade? Share your story with us to be featured in our “I Am A Renegade” initiative.

The Power of Brainstorming Naked

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Blog by @julieyeats

Have you ever found yourself in the midst of a creative brainstorm, following along with the flow of ideas, and just as your are about to come up with something brilliant your phone lights up or your mind wanders to the 97 million other things going on in your life? You look at your phone and instantly start thinking, what could that be? An email about a new project? A text from your date last night? So, you pick up the phone and realize it was just a notification that one of your friends checked in at the gym on Path. Then your mind starts wandering to the gym. Are there any spin classes around 6pm? Or maybe you should run errands instead. That would be productive. Then you can go home, cook dinner and maybe relax a little during the new episode of The Big Bang Theory. So what was that brilliant idea you were about to contribute?

We’ve all been victims of our sometimes unfocused and capricious minds. Left to its own devices, your mind will happily lead you down the proverbial rabbit trail and you end up confused as to how you spent the last 15 minutes. This is why at Digital Royalty we instituted a new brainstorming technique that goes right along with one of our mottos: Get comfortable being uncomfortable. We gather around, light a few candles, and put them in the middle of the designated brainstorm space to help bring the energy and attention of the group towards the center since fire stimulates growth and focus. Most importantly, we place all our digital devices in a box in the center, out of reach of even the sneakiest Renegades, leaving all of us digitally exposed, and pretty uncomfortable.

It’s an odd feeling at first, to be digitally naked. It’s a feeling that we don’t often experience, especially at Digital Royalty. Once we get past the first few minutes of digital withdrawal, we have found that our conversations are richer and the brainstorm is generally more productive with minimal distractions. It’s amazing what can happen when you ignore the impulse to check your phone and pump that energy into the creative process.

Give it a try the next time you need some ideas, whether you’re on your own or with a group. Get digitally naked, find a focal point, light a fire and let it flow.

Let us know how it goes!