Lunch on #greatideas

Last month, on the twenty-ninth floor in the Mansueto Ventures offices in NYC, the introductory event for EWIP’s new group, Women in Digital Media was held. Attendees of the luncheon gathered in the bright conference room to talk about “Great Ideas in Social Media”. 

Colleen DeCourcyThe day’s guest presenter, Colleen DeCourcy, CEO of Socialistic, offered a blueprint for publishers wanting to make a strong mark in social media. “There are three main elements that make social media work” she said, “and a smart publisher pays attention to all three. Tagging, sharing, and temporality.” DeCourcy went on to discuss the important ways a publisher can leverage all three of these elements to build an integrated social media strategy. Here are seven of those recommendations:

1. Post content in progress. One of the biggest errors a publisher can make is to mistake this medium for a distribution channel. Remember this is a fleeting medium and you are posting at a specific point in time. Don’t wait to finish a product or duplicate over what you’ve done. Instead, use your content to start a conversation that draws the audience in and makes them look forward to what is coming.

2. Open and close your discussion times. This creates more timeliness and urgency and can lead to more participation.

3. Share content out.  Work with your editors to coordinate the slow authoritative voice of print with the speedy colloquial hit of social media.  Break your content down into information bites and be generous in your postings. Respond to conversations. Listen. 

4. Let people post in their own language. You benefit by broadening to a global audience.

5. Double down. Attach your people to a current topic that is relevant to your category, get in there, and amplify. Go where people are found, to the trending topics, and tie them in to what you are doing. Pay attention to top tweets, hits of the day, what’s hot and getting hotter, and do more than just join in—take the lead

6. Use hashtags that specifically draw people into the conversation. 

7. Integrate your virtual efforts with physical marketing. Print your hashtags, splash them up on billboards or across magazine ads. Be seen offline as well as online in ways that complement one another. 

EWIP thanks Colleen DeCourcy for sharing her great ideas, and to Linda Ruth and Anne Marie O’Keefe for their help organizing the event.

Save the Date—March 7, 2012

Exceptional Women in Publishing is proud to announce the Fourth Annual Women’s Leadership Conference. Attendees can expect a unique experience and hear from innovative entrepreneurs, journalists, writers, and creative and business leaders from a variety of publishing, media, and technology enterprises.

EWIP women's Leadership Conference logo

A Full Day Conference in San Francisco

Wednesday, March 7, 2012.

Parc 55 Hotel
San Francisco • Union Square
55 Cyril Magnin Street
Parking and Directions

Social Media Boot Camp

Event: Social Media Marketing Boot Camp
Dates: September 27 – November 15, 2011
Location: A Virtual Event and Online Workshop

About this Event: Master the social platforms when you sign up for this online conference and workshop, another entry in Mediabistro’s Boot Camp Series. The uniquely designed Social Media Marketing Boot Camp presents weekly keynote speeches online from big-name speakers including Gretchen Rubin , from The Happiness Project, and Jessica Bennett of The Daily Beast. You will work on projects in small group workshops to help you develop a social media strategy and immediately begin to implement social media campaigns. Get personalized feedback from your group adviser and quickly increase opportunities for your business.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Gloria Steinem’s Own Words

Gloria SteinemThank you Gloria Steinem, for adding Michelle Bachmann and Sarah Palin to the list of “women only a man could love.” Steinem had more to say at a luncheon this week in New York City celebrating the upcoming HBO film documentary about her life. “That’s their job,” Steinem said, accusing the two politicians of “selling out” the women’s movement. “That’s just the way it is; it’s inevitable. Think about Phyllis Schlafly; there have always been women like this.”

As reported in New York magazine, I see the luncheon was well attended by women whose lives are better because of Gloria Steinem (Sheryl Sandberg), women that both men and women can love: Tina Brown, Katie Couric, Ann Curry, Gayle King, Leslie Stahl, Christine Baranski, and Kim Cattrall.

The HBO film documentary about her life, Gloria: In Her Own Words, airs Monday, August 15 at 9 p.m.

Photo: Getty Images