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Turning Fans Into More Than Just Followers | OMMA Social

OMMA Social’s first keynote, “Turning Fans Into More Than Just Followers,” showed how to foster and grow active audience engagement.

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Stemming from his experience in the broadcast and digital realm, VP of Marketing for Turner Sports Jeff Mirman described how Turner Sports keeps followers engaged and devoted to the programming.  As social media becomes increasingly advanced (and users as well), a strong digital strategy is fundamental to success.

It’s not just about having the most “likes” on social platforms but keeping followers and friends as long-term consumers of your brand.

Social media

  • Social media is simply another database with more information than other sources
  • Use SM to drive awareness, elongate programming, and create impact

Turner Sports’ Social Media examples

  • Inside the NBA – fans tweet throughout broadcast
  • NCAA March Madness – fans comments are displayed on the “big screen” during games

How to use social media to keep fans

Conversion

  • Represent across platforms
  • Converse with your followers
    • Create cross-platform engaging experience
  • Innovate

Content

  • More important than the medium
  • Where does the content fit best?  Be flexible and innovative
  • Provide relevancy for your audienceOMMA Social Keynote

Content strategy

  • Tell a story
  • Drive engagement & promote sharing
  • Right place, right content, right time
  • Drive “cultivation” which drives “amplification” (by your fans, not you the advertiser)

Elongation, It’s The New ‘Reach’

  • Engage with consumers via their “second screens”
  • Second screens: Off the TV onto the computer, tablet, etc.
  • Create reasons to visit the website, etc.
  • Greater value to sponsors

Social media and fan engagement has worked for Turner Sports through innovation and passion.  Turner Sports has leveraged social media to gain insight, build the brand, and create PR ops.

Thanks for Tweeting @RobMediaPost @acfou @ansleyjo @burstmedia @CandaceMarks  @jtgator @chuckmartin1 @Berly624 @NYCsf

 

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Social targeting, Without Being Creepy | OMMA Social

Do you ever get that creepy feeling that every move you make on the Internet is being watched?  Do you find that the ads that pop up alongside your e-mail and Facebook are strikingly familiar to things that are on your mind?  Creepy, right?  This “creepiness” is because marketers are able to collect social data online to create personalized ad experiences just for YOU!

How, as marketers, should audience data be gathered to create personalized ad experiences without seeming creepy?

This OMMA Social panel, “Invade My Privacy, Please: How to Use Social Targeting Without Being Creepy,” discusses how to gather social data and present it without invading people’s privacy, or seeming “creepy.” Use the insight from this panel to guide you as your generate social data for your brand.

Panel Moderator

Panelists

Creating that creepy feeling

  • Marketers are targeting consumers at the wrong time
  • Is trigger by poor data collecting practices
  • Tracking and targeting are war terms; this doesn’t help when seeking buy-in from consumers

Facebook is.. . creepy?

 Ads on social platforms

  • Ads are an intrusion in a social environment because people are not seeking brand engagement there
  • Search environment ads are less intrusive: Is that because we’re simply more tolerant/trained to expect it?
  • Retargeting is commonplace for ads
  • Data is collected so marketers can monetize the web through ads and continue to provide a free service

Don’t creep

  • The key (and dilemma) is finding a way to collect data without alienating  users
  • Only 1 in 2,500 people opt out of data collection after reading privacy policies
  • Why don’t we educate consumers on what they opt into?
  • A privacy policy should be copy-written, not lawyered
  • Have  copy-writers and community managers produce “non-creepy” practices and content
  • Be strategic: Know when, where, and how to deliver ads

As consumers, the Internet is a vast and open plain where strangers have the ability to access your information.  Panelist John Montgomery warns users against being ignorant: Be aware of the volatility of online information sharing and carefully read privacy policies.

As marketers, use tact and appropriate online etiquette to prevent from being that “creepy” presence on the Internet.  Use copy-writers and community managers to establish privacy policies and share proper information with your consumers.  Further, be a friendly presence; let your audience know when, why, and how you are collecting their information.

Thanks for the Tweets @GroupMWorldwide, @Berly624, @ellenoppenheim, @JackWagner54, @mtuohy, @momma,  @SocMediaRebel, @jmc_nyc, @piperlynmac