Social media

Five forms of social media anxiety – and what to do about them

Catherine Manthorpe works at the University of Hertfordshire and has been exploring how academics use social media to support their research.  She has noticed that there is a broad divide between those that have enthusiastically embraced social media and those that view the prospect with varying degrees of alarm.  Scratching the surface a bit more Five forms of social media anxiety – and what to do about them

Building social media into your stakeholder engagement strategy

Stakeholder engagement is considered by 82 per cent of senior communicators across Europe to be important to their organisation’s success, according to research by Brunswick Insight – and 90% expect the scope and scale of stakeholder engagement activities to increase dramatically over the next five years. But surprisingly, while most acknowledge the importance of strategic Building social media into your stakeholder engagement strategy

First steps for Twitter beginners

Well done! You are about to join the one billion Twitter users worldwide – thanks to Craig Smith for all these Twitter statistics. But why do you want to start tweeting? Probably like most newcomers you have no idea, because you don’t know the potential?!….

How to make great video clips for YouTube – 11 examples of the best and worst

Last week I spotted a great post by Lloyd Pearson on the PM Forum LinkedIn group (Professional Marketing) saying ‘A plea to Legal Marketers – please don’t do this’.   He linked to the video clip below, which he says ‘parodies the modern corporate advert: laden with clichés, stock images, buzzwords, and emptiness’.  If you cannot How to make great video clips for YouTube – 11 examples of the best and worst

Impact and the REF – and the role of social media for economic and social impact

What is academic research for?  As a REF manager recently said “This is not a question that academics have had to consider in the past.  Measuring impact is a completely new concept.” The rules of how the UK government funds research have changed.  The most money has always gone to top-ranked researchers, but as the Impact and the REF – and the role of social media for economic and social impact