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Carri Bugbee

Social Analyst Playbook: Future-proof your social insights | Brandwatch - 0 views

  • In our three-part series we spoke to leading consumer insights professionals innovating in the social analytics space to get their thoughts on this changing landscape: Ben Donkor takes us through the foundation of the social analyst Bex Carson explains the importance of a solid methodology Dr. Jillian Ney rounds it off by describing social analysis in action and answering business questions
Carri Bugbee

How to Manage a Social Media Crisis Without Losing Your Mind - 0 views

  • snag your free template to put together a complete crisis communication strategy. Use this post as a guide to complete it.
  • Create a Social Media Crisis Scale Convince and Convert devised a great solution to this problem. They built a customer response flowchart that matches the severity of an issue, to the right course of action.
  • Crisis Level 1: Isolated customer complaints and questions. Crisis Level 2: Angry customers, broken links, posts directing to the wrong page, factual inaccuracies, major misspellings on social posts. Crisis Level 3: High volume of angry customers, service outages, lack of product availability. Crisis Level 4: Product recalls, defective services or products, widespread negative press coverage, layoffs. Crisis Level 5: Lawsuits, serious accidents resulting in injury, illegal employee conduct.
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  • Terms You Should Monitor What should you track with these tools? Consider the following: Mentions of your brand name. Mentions of your CEO or important executives. Competitive brand mentions. Relevant industry terms. Key influencers.
  • Keep an eye on your brand mentions. Check in periodically and use email alerts to stay on top of discussions as they happen. Use your crisis scale to assess problems. Then, respond accordingly.
  • To determine how many negative messages constitutes a crisis, Hootsuite recommends setting crisis thresholds.
  • Using your crisis scale, establish who is responsible for managing the response at each level. It might look something like this:
  • Your employees likely all have their own social media accounts. When disaster strikes, they may not know what they can (and can’t) say about the issue publically. So, it’s important to make sure they don’t go rogue or leak information you don’t want to be released. This could make a bad situation worse. Get in front of this with a documented response plan.
  • Craft Emergency Response Messaging Templates When a mistake happens, you may not have time to issue a detailed response right away. However, you’ll need to say something to acknowledge you’re aware of the issue before things get out of hand.
Carri Bugbee

FTC Issued Warnings to 45 Celebrities Over Unclear Instagram Posts - WWD - 0 views

  • Last month the FTC issued warnings to celebrities who plugged products on their Instagram accounts without clearly identifying their relationships with brands. The letters were meant to “educate” the celebrities on how to post without violating the organization’s disclosure guidelines.
  • The FTC said it sent out similar letters to each influencer to “call attention” to the post in question. Each letter reads: “The FTC’s Endorsement Guides state that if there is a ‘material connection’ between the endorser and the marketer of a product — in other words, a connection that might affect the weight or credibility that consumers give the endorsement — that connection should be clearly and conspicuously disclosed, unless the connection is already clear from the context of the communication containing the endorsement. Material connections could consist of a business or family relationship, monetary payment, or the provision of free products to the endorser.”
  • The FTC cited cases in which disclosures appeared in captions at the bottom of a post, and were only found if consumers clicked on the “more” button to reveal the full text. Multiple hashtags, tags and links also were frowned upon, as they obscure the disclosure.
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