15 Social Media Tips To Build Strong Leadership Networks
“The most important social media device is the person next to you.”
This line was one of the most important takeaways from @sree’s opening remarks at #smwknd 2016 @CUNYjschool @tkcuny. Former Columbia University professor and social media expert Sree Sreenivasan (@sree) was quoting David Carr (who also was known for saying that “social media is a listening opportunity, not simply a broadcasting one.”)
If you weren’t at #smwknd (or following the presentations on livestream or the conversation on Twitter) here are 15 more takeaways to improve your social media game:
- Check your Twitter profile. Do you have a powerful headline, a solid headshot and a valid URL? 
- Turn off the “saved media” on WhatsApp unless you really intend to save every gif/jpeg your relatives send to you on your phone. 
- It is not who follows you who matter (according to @sree) it’s who follows who follows you who matter. On this point, checkout @Twiangulate. 
- Good networking advice online and off: the only number of followers / connections that matter is – one – says @tamcdonald, that is, the one person you’re talking to. 
- “How did people write resignation letters before Medium?” joked @sree to stress the point that you should be posting information where the crowds already are(after all, the scarcest resource these days is human attention h/t @leshinton). If you’re contemplating starting a blog do it on LinkedIn, Medium or even Facebook. 
- If you don’t have a Will at least take care of nominating your Facebook Legacy Contact. 
- On Facebook, change your relationship with your timeline by selecting up to 30 friends or pages “who to see first” in News Feed Preferences. 
- Stop the scroll! Admit it, we all madly scroll through our social streams on mobile and by adding a picture or gif, your content becomes a #Thumbstopper (yes, this is why you don’t post directly from Instagram to Twitter – visual content stops the scroll, a link to an image does not). Apps to create a #thumbstopper include @typoramapp @canva @PicCollage @Waterlogue (plus find more cool multimedia mobile apps here). 
- In a Snapchat world, emails still matter (The Metropolitan Museum of Art sends 72 million emails every year), so make sure your email marketing is quick, contains valuable content, has a unique voice / tone, is sent at a consistent frequency and where possible, delights or humors. Note to newsletter readers: Have I achieved this yet? 
- Need an email coach? Check out Crystal Knows and/or subscribe to The Skimm(yes, they get the daily communication very very right). 
- All of your social posts should contain some of these elements (says @sree):helpful, useful, timely, informative, relevant, practical, actionable, authentic, generous, credible, brief, entertaining, fun and occasionally funny. 
- If you’re addicted to Emoji, personalize it with Bitmoji. 
- Twitter allows you to determine length/duration of polls and yes, answers can be Emoji (ICYMI: voters are sent a notification when polls close so your original inquiry/tweet gets amplified, again). 
- Twitter is likely subject to more speculation and rumors than any other social media platform, but here’s some truth: Twitter will stop counting photos, videos, polls and gifs against 140 character limit. 
- Expert Twitter guidance: more than two hashtags looks like spam. Nuff said. 
@NewYorker cartoonist @lizadonnelly captured the day’s insights in images – in case you need more than these 15 takeaways.
This article originally appeared on Kelly Hoey’s Linkedin profile.
About the Author
Author and Investor, Kelly Hoey is a networking expert whose book, Build Your Dream Network will be released in January 2017 by Tarcher Perigee. She has a column on Inc.com, blogs on myturnstone.com and tweets frequently @jkhoey.
 
          
        
      