How To Get Your Public Service Agency To Take Social Media Seriously
Russel Lolacher
Director, DriveBC Service Modernization - Product Owner - Learn with me on Relationships at Work, my top 5% globally ranked podcast on leadership - Int. Keynote Speaker - 4x ICMI Top CX Thought Leader
Social public service isn’t effective off the side of your desk.
Whether you’re trying to start a successful social media presence for your public service organization or grow an existing one to better serve the public and your organization, there are a few key ingredients you’ll need to be impactful.
And if you don’t have them, you’re going to suck or stall. And certainly not meet the growing expectations the public has for digital engagement.
Serious Social Media
Social public service can’t be thought of as an “oh right, that thing we should also do” check box and expect it to be successful or even relevant. It needs to be treated as importantly as any other public communications channel, and sometimes more so. That is due to its role in public dialogue and the serious culture change/change management internally needed to make it work.?
Traditional communications will continually take priority, time and resources over your social media program if you don’t identify the barriers to be taken seriously.
Of course you need to know how to use the tools and platforms to be successful, but there are multiple factors outside of your team that can get in the way of your growth.
Success Barriers
Here are some reasons why your government social media isn’t going anywhere (and what to do about it):?
No executive champions?– You can’t be alone in your effort to grow and improve your digital engagement. Having no consistent executive support or a “seat at the table” in communication decisions makes you a side project, not a valued communication channel. It is essential to have someone at the executive table (or has the C-suite’s ear) who champions your work and its benefits on your behalf. To not have an executive champion prevents you from being part of the larger strategic conversation and may leave you forgotten or an after thought.?
Don’t know how to sell it?– No one cares what you do… until you give them a reason to. If you can’t tell your stories of success and impact consistently, regularly and over time, you’ll never be seen as an important part of your organization. Why should you? People are busy with their own work and if they can’t see how you help them, they’ll stop giving you their time or attention. You have to be able to tell your story, tell it often and tell it well.?
Culture is too risk adverse?– to be successful in your digital public engagement, you can’t be surrounded by the risk-adverse. These are those people that are paralyzed with worry in what negatively could happen, feeling more comfortable in over analysis and being generic rather than timely and impactful. How does this show up? Approval processes and micro-management. Lengthy processes to have content, content calendars, campaigns, communication plans, or even a tweet approved, serves fear, lack of confidence and a culture’s need to micromanage and control, not your audience or your customers. Risk-aversion paralyses timeliness, relevancy, connection, relationship building, accessibility, and public trust.?It also frustrates your social media managers and their ability to do the job they were hired to do, building a barrier to meeting the growing expectations of those they are trying to serve.
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Don’t have enough staff/resources?– so your organization wants a copywriter in various formats; digital/multimedia producer in graphics, video and audio; metrics analyst; news curator; customer service representative; community manager and engagement facilitator; digital marketing campaign strategist and executor; stakeholder relations and and and… but they want this all in one person AND they want it to be successful? And if your one-person team manages to start growing any size of following, their reward is more work via engagement. Which means your one-person will be too busy answering questions and comments than doing all their other jobs. It’s the price of even a smidge of success. If the public service organization is going to take social media seriously, it needs to invest in the program seriously.
No plan or purpose?– it’s very hard to grow or be successful if your organization doesn’t know what success looks like. Do you even know why you’re on social media? “Hey, lets get a Twitter account” is not a plan or a purpose. It’s a checked box for someone in a management position to feel like they’re doing something or being “innovative”. That’s a huge waste of time for anyone involved.
You can’t expect success if you won’t do the the things that earn that success.?That recipe demands the right ingredients.
REMINDER – You are communication professionals. Ironically, we are quick to say “but no one understands what we do” but don’t understand that we’re the ones that are responsible for communicating that. Think of getting internal buy-in as a communications strategy (cause it is). What kind of planning and tactics would you use to inform, educate and get your internal audiences on board? That could help.
Next Steps
This above list should start you down the path of where to look and what to address, whether as a member of a social media team, as the entire team yourself, or as a manager wondering why your program isn’t being taken seriously.
In my experience, your growth and success depends on individuals taking the reins and being their own champions, their own advocates, their own salespeople, their own leaders. It’s far more successful than waiting, and waiting and waiting for others to do it for you.
Good luck.
For more public service social media perspectives, go to SocialPublicService.com
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Award-Winning Social Media Manager | Public Information Officer | Crisis Communicator | Drone Pilot
2 年Thank you for sharing this! One of the first things on my post conference implementations list is meeting with staff to get more buy-in and truly see the importance of it.
Customer Service & Sales Training That Reduces Escalations, Improves Client Retention, and Boosts Sales | ICMI Top 25 CX Thought Leader & GTACC Award Winner
2 年Russel, this is excellent advice for anyone looking to start a public service agency's social media presence!