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mj-motivation-blog · 5 years
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Find the courage to make your life a blessing. #sundaywisdom#suhndaymotivation #publisher #motivational #thursdaymotivation #motivation #realfollowers #lovememore #tuesdaymotivation  #motivation #tuesdaywisdom  #eveninginspiration #mondaymotivation #newblogpost #quote #oscarwilde #oscarwildequote  #realfollowers #tweetwally #business #followforfollowback #eveningmotivation #newblogpost #quotewilder #c #publicationa https://www.instagram.com/p/ByfERIkBGxG/?igshid=1adz0mm1bj9cd
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lindortech · 6 years
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Tweetwall, The Twitter Display Provider Used By The Big Guys, Goes Self-Serve & Launches On iPad
Tweetwall, The Twitter Display Provider Used By The Big Guys, Goes Self-Serve & Launches On iPad
Tweetwall, a twitter display provider for events (you know, for “tweet walls”), which has been used by customers including CNN, PayPal, Yahoo, Intel, eBay, Microsoft, the Obama crusade, race, and more, is today launching a revamped version of its service. The updated version of Tweetwall has been rebuilt from the ground up, and is also accompanied by a brand-new iPad applicationbenefaction…
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imalexwatts-blog · 6 years
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Use social twitter wall and display live tweets in your Event, conferences, meeting, office, and wedding. Taggbox is a social media wall, which provides real-time display of live feeds of your social networks like Facebook, Instagram, twitter, google plus so on. Show your all updates just using #hashtag.
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taggbox-blog · 7 years
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Set Up a Tweet Wall at Event and Entertain Your Guests
Place a Twitter wall at the event and entertain your guest and attendees with a new way. Social media wall is a digital screen where you can show your all social media live feeds in real time. Social media aggregator tool aggregates all live post and displays on the live tweet wall. You can also show social media feeds of Facebook, Instagram, Google Plus, YouTube etc. on a Social Wall. Now build your brand value more popular and spread more information about your product more quickly with tweet walls. Hurry up, Set up a social media wall at the event. You can go with Taggbox for a stunning Tweet wall and themes.
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bengesko · 8 years
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randomly missing Tweetwall lol. 
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u4u-voice · 6 years
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Migrant Kashmiri Hindus demand Kartarpur Sahib-like corridor to Sharda Temple in PoK
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JAMMU: A prominent Kashmiri Hindus' body Monday demanded a corridor to the "world-famous" Sharda Devi Temple in Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir on the lines of one proposed to Kartarpur Sahib Gurdwara in Narowal district in Pakistan. All Party Migrant Coordination Committee (APMCC) of displaced KashmiriHindus raised the demand on the day Vice President M Venkaiah Naidu along with Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh laid the foundation stone at Dera Baba Nanak in Punjab's Gurdaspur district for the corridor to the Kartarpur Sahib Gurdwara. APMCC chief Vinood Pandita and its members have been batting for reopening of the temple for the past ten years and have even sat on fast unto death for it -- once in Jammu and for a second time at Porbonder in Gujarat. The two fasts had lasted 10 to 15 days each. They had earlier also undertaken a yatra to the temple and had marched up to the last point Sharda Teon on Indian side of the Line of Control en route the temple. "We welcome the government's decision on building the corridor to the Kartarpur Sahib Gurdwara to facilitate easy passage to Sikh pilgrims. We want the government to take similar steps to create a corridor to ShardaDevi Temple as well to facilitate Hindu pilgrims reach there," Pandita told reporters here. The decision to build the Kartarpur Sahib Gurdwara corridor, which would facilitate the Sikh pilgrims to visit and return from the shrine without any passport or travel document the same day, was taken by the Union Cabinet on November 22. Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan is slated to hold the ground-breaking ceremony of the Kartarpur Corridor on the Pakistani side on November 28. On similar lines, a corridor to Sharda Devi Temple too can be built across the two side of the LoC between Tweetwal and Sharda,which are hardly few kilometers apart, the APMCC chief said. Pandita, who earlier also met Prime Minister Narendra Modi and former Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti to pursue the cause, said the Centre should take this step as a confidence-building measure for the displaced community of Kashmir. Even PDP chief Mehbooba Mufti pitched Monday for building a corridor to the temple. Sharada Peeth is an abandoned temple located in the Sharda village along the Neelam River across the LoC. It was a major centre of learning and is regarded as one of the 18 highly-revered temples across south Asia. It was also a major centre of learning at par with the ancient seats of learning at Nalanda and Taxila. Read the full article
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maryhare96 · 6 years
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7 Ways to Use Social Media to Create Buzz-Worthy Events
It used to be you spent five minutes registering for an event and then showed up on the big day, went to a few workshops, drank two free Coronas, and went home.
Social media changes all of that, enabling events and their planners to have long-term, nuanced, shifting interactions with attendees.
I gave a speech in suburban Cincinnati to the Mid-American chapter of Meeting Planners International, titled “7 Ways to Use Social Media to Create Buzz-Worthy Events.” My recommendations are based on my work with MarketingProfs and Salesforce to add social frosting to their already fabulous events, and my experiences speaking at several dozen conferences annually. There’s a total of 39 specific suggestions in the slides, but here are the highlights.
7 Ways To Use Social Media To Create Buzz-Worthy Events from Jay Baer
1. Engage
Get your potential attendees interacting with you early on by enabling some measure of feedback or crowdsourcing on the conference programming. South by Southwest has always led in this area, with its “panel picker” process that turns over 30 percent of the programming selection to potential attendees.
Another way you could simplify getting feedback from your audience is use tools like Twtpoll or PollDaddy (as I did when I asked you for feedback on potential new designs for this blog back in the day).
2. Intrigue
Almost all events have an official website. But very few (except for the geek events) take full advantage of all the free event listing and event management opportunities. At a minimum, you should create event pages on:
Facebook Events
Eventbrite (where you can also sell tickets if you’re so inclined)
Linkedin (if it’s a business event)
Make sure to select the platform or registration software that fits with your audience.
Sure, its a bit of a hassle to oversee all of these event pages, but your attendees swim in different ponds. Plus, every conference has the same MVP attendee: some guy named Google. Why would you pass up a chance to double, triple, or quadruple your search engine listings?
These tools also serve as a way to message your attendees leading up to the event reminding them to invite their friends or what they can look forward to.
3. Invigorate
As the event draws closer, you have to pull potential attendees off of the fence with content hors-d’oeuvres.
Social Media Examiner does this well by consistently sharing what attendees can expect at their annual Social Media Marketing World conference leading up to the event. They share what speakers will be presenting and fun events to look forward to.
Collaborate with your speakers to produce teaser content. Most speakers are already creating short videos and content they are promoting to their audience. This can be a great opportunity to partner with them to align promotional calendars
Actively promote the event hashtag and invite users to share their content on Twitter and Instagram. Begin interacting with attendees before the event begins to build buzz and personal relationships with attendees. Social Media Marketing World has a healthy mix of attendees and speakers consistently adding content before and during their event using the hashtag #SMMW.
Use Pitchengine to create multi-media enabled press releases, and send the URL for the release to any and all “maybes” on your list. You should also gather social information from all registrants. Create a Twitter list of all attendees, and update it each time a new person registers.
4. Integrate
Now we’re talking about the on-site experience, which is where social media can really add impact and get people talking.
Pick a hashtag for your event, so attendees and remote watchers can monitor the event on Twitter. The shorter the better, please! Depending on the size of the event, host multiple meetups for attendees to gather for dinner and hold meet-and-greets.
When attendees register for the event, ask them specific questions about their industry or job title. This information can help pair them in a meetup group that is beneficial to them.
I’m not a big fan of the geek conference staple of having a live streaming Twitter wall behind speakers while they speak. It’s too distracting. But I love having a big Twitter wall in a central conference location. This requires very little effort now, using something like Tweetwally.
Create an event within the event by running contests on Twitter during the conference. You can use metricool to show how many people are using the event hashtag and identify top contributors during the event. Share the leaderboard throughout the event and award prizes to top contributors.
5. Inform
During the event, invite attendees to share their feedback about the sessions for real-time insights. You can use an app called Yapp, which allows attendees to take a poll in the app for the event. This is also a great tool for informing attendees about updates and contests throughout the event.
This is a far better approach than sending a survey a few days after the event asking them what they thought about the session. This way, attendees can vote right after their session ends right on their phone.
6. Propagate
Create your own media during the event. Use Facebook Live and Periscope to capture key moments during the event to engage people who couldn’t make it and create content you can repurpose later to promote future events.
As attendees create and share content using the event hashtag, compile their content and share it later to re-engage attendees after the event.
7. Aggregate
Take the conference content and spread it as widely as possible. Your goal is to get the doubters that didn’t come this year to view that content and decide to go the next year.
Take every conference presentation, and instead of just putting them on your website or emailing links to attendees, release them on SlideShare (one per day for maximum impact). Create content from key moments that happened during the event to share small pieces of content on social.
Reward good content. Invite attendees to share their best quote or photo from the conference for a chance to win a software subscription from a sponsor or free registration to the next event. This also is a great way to promote sponsors and encourage them to partner in upcoming events.
Here’s an example of Social Media Examiner awarding a year’s subscription to a sponsor’s service.
Why couldn’t you do that? Why can’t you do all of this?
https://ift.tt/2qhsidu
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mj-motivation-blog · 5 years
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Are you truly committed to your goals and dreams? #fridaywisdom #thursdaymotivation #motivation #realfollowers #lovememore #tuesdaymotivation  #motivation #tuesdaywisdom  #eveninginspiration #mondaymotivation #newblogpost #quote #oscarwilde #oscarwildequote  #realfollowers #tweetwally #business #followforfollowback #eveningmotivation #newblogpost #quotewilder #c #publicationa #saturdaywisdom #saturdaymotivation https://www.instagram.com/p/BydXc_yBfgJ/?igshid=2kajcnw5mux0
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christinesumpmg · 6 years
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7 Ways to Use Social Media to Create Buzz-Worthy Events
It used to be you spent five minutes registering for an event and then showed up on the big day, went to a few workshops, drank two free Coronas, and went home.
Social media changes all of that, enabling events and their planners to have long-term, nuanced, shifting interactions with attendees.
I gave a speech in suburban Cincinnati to the Mid-American chapter of Meeting Planners International, titled “7 Ways to Use Social Media to Create Buzz-Worthy Events.” My recommendations are based on my work with MarketingProfs and Salesforce to add social frosting to their already fabulous events, and my experiences speaking at several dozen conferences annually. There’s a total of 39 specific suggestions in the slides, but here are the highlights.
7 Ways To Use Social Media To Create Buzz-Worthy Events from Jay Baer
1. Engage
Get your potential attendees interacting with you early on by enabling some measure of feedback or crowdsourcing on the conference programming. South by Southwest has always led in this area, with its “panel picker” process that turns over 30 percent of the programming selection to potential attendees.
Another way you could simplify getting feedback from your audience is use tools like Twtpoll or PollDaddy (as I did when I asked you for feedback on potential new designs for this blog back in the day).
2. Intrigue
Almost all events have an official website. But very few (except for the geek events) take full advantage of all the free event listing and event management opportunities. At a minimum, you should create event pages on:
Facebook Events
Eventbrite (where you can also sell tickets if you’re so inclined)
Linkedin (if it’s a business event)
Make sure to select the platform or registration software that fits with your audience.
Sure, its a bit of a hassle to oversee all of these event pages, but your attendees swim in different ponds. Plus, every conference has the same MVP attendee: some guy named Google. Why would you pass up a chance to double, triple, or quadruple your search engine listings?
These tools also serve as a way to message your attendees leading up to the event reminding them to invite their friends or what they can look forward to.
3. Invigorate
As the event draws closer, you have to pull potential attendees off of the fence with content hors-d’oeuvres.
Social Media Examiner does this well by consistently sharing what attendees can expect at their annual Social Media Marketing World conference leading up to the event. They share what speakers will be presenting and fun events to look forward to.
Collaborate with your speakers to produce teaser content. Most speakers are already creating short videos and content they are promoting to their audience. This can be a great opportunity to partner with them to align promotional calendars
Actively promote the event hashtag and invite users to share their content on Twitter and Instagram. Begin interacting with attendees before the event begins to build buzz and personal relationships with attendees. Social Media Marketing World has a healthy mix of attendees and speakers consistently adding content before and during their event using the hashtag #SMMW.
Use Pitchengine to create multi-media enabled press releases, and send the URL for the release to any and all “maybes” on your list. You should also gather social information from all registrants. Create a Twitter list of all attendees, and update it each time a new person registers.
4. Integrate
Now we’re talking about the on-site experience, which is where social media can really add impact and get people talking.
Pick a hashtag for your event, so attendees and remote watchers can monitor the event on Twitter. The shorter the better, please! Depending on the size of the event, host multiple meetups for attendees to gather for dinner and hold meet-and-greets.
When attendees register for the event, ask them specific questions about their industry or job title. This information can help pair them in a meetup group that is beneficial to them.
I’m not a big fan of the geek conference staple of having a live streaming Twitter wall behind speakers while they speak. It’s too distracting. But I love having a big Twitter wall in a central conference location. This requires very little effort now, using something like Tweetwally.
Create an event within the event by running contests on Twitter during the conference. You can use metricool to show how many people are using the event hashtag and identify top contributors during the event. Share the leaderboard throughout the event and award prizes to top contributors.
5. Inform
During the event, invite attendees to share their feedback about the sessions for real-time insights. You can use an app called Yapp, which allows attendees to take a poll in the app for the event. This is also a great tool for informing attendees about updates and contests throughout the event.
This is a far better approach than sending a survey a few days after the event asking them what they thought about the session. This way, attendees can vote right after their session ends right on their phone.
6. Propagate
Create your own media during the event. Use Facebook Live and Periscope to capture key moments during the event to engage people who couldn’t make it and create content you can repurpose later to promote future events.
As attendees create and share content using the event hashtag, compile their content and share it later to re-engage attendees after the event.
7. Aggregate
Take the conference content and spread it as widely as possible. Your goal is to get the doubters that didn’t come this year to view that content and decide to go the next year.
Take every conference presentation, and instead of just putting them on your website or emailing links to attendees, release them on SlideShare (one per day for maximum impact). Create content from key moments that happened during the event to share small pieces of content on social.
Reward good content. Invite attendees to share their best quote or photo from the conference for a chance to win a software subscription from a sponsor or free registration to the next event. This also is a great way to promote sponsors and encourage them to partner in upcoming events.
Here’s an example of Social Media Examiner awarding a year’s subscription to a sponsor’s service.
Why couldn’t you do that? Why can’t you do all of this?
https://ift.tt/2qhsidu
0 notes
fairchildlingpo1 · 6 years
Text
7 Ways to Use Social Media to Create Buzz-Worthy Events
It used to be you spent five minutes registering for an event and then showed up on the big day, went to a few workshops, drank two free Coronas, and went home.
Social media changes all of that, enabling events and their planners to have long-term, nuanced, shifting interactions with attendees.
I gave a speech in suburban Cincinnati to the Mid-American chapter of Meeting Planners International, titled “7 Ways to Use Social Media to Create Buzz-Worthy Events.” My recommendations are based on my work with MarketingProfs and Salesforce to add social frosting to their already fabulous events, and my experiences speaking at several dozen conferences annually. There’s a total of 39 specific suggestions in the slides, but here are the highlights.
7 Ways To Use Social Media To Create Buzz-Worthy Events from Jay Baer
1. Engage
Get your potential attendees interacting with you early on by enabling some measure of feedback or crowdsourcing on the conference programming. South by Southwest has always led in this area, with its “panel picker” process that turns over 30 percent of the programming selection to potential attendees.
Another way you could simplify getting feedback from your audience is use tools like Twtpoll or PollDaddy (as I did when I asked you for feedback on potential new designs for this blog back in the day).
2. Intrigue
Almost all events have an official website. But very few (except for the geek events) take full advantage of all the free event listing and event management opportunities. At a minimum, you should create event pages on:
Facebook Events
Eventbrite (where you can also sell tickets if you’re so inclined)
Linkedin (if it’s a business event)
Make sure to select the platform or registration software that fits with your audience.
Sure, its a bit of a hassle to oversee all of these event pages, but your attendees swim in different ponds. Plus, every conference has the same MVP attendee: some guy named Google. Why would you pass up a chance to double, triple, or quadruple your search engine listings?
These tools also serve as a way to message your attendees leading up to the event reminding them to invite their friends or what they can look forward to.
3. Invigorate
As the event draws closer, you have to pull potential attendees off of the fence with content hors-d’oeuvres.
Social Media Examiner does this well by consistently sharing what attendees can expect at their annual Social Media Marketing World conference leading up to the event. They share what speakers will be presenting and fun events to look forward to.
Collaborate with your speakers to produce teaser content. Most speakers are already creating short videos and content they are promoting to their audience. This can be a great opportunity to partner with them to align promotional calendars
Actively promote the event hashtag and invite users to share their content on Twitter and Instagram. Begin interacting with attendees before the event begins to build buzz and personal relationships with attendees. Social Media Marketing World has a healthy mix of attendees and speakers consistently adding content before and during their event using the hashtag #SMMW.
Use Pitchengine to create multi-media enabled press releases, and send the URL for the release to any and all “maybes” on your list. You should also gather social information from all registrants. Create a Twitter list of all attendees, and update it each time a new person registers.
4. Integrate
Now we’re talking about the on-site experience, which is where social media can really add impact and get people talking.
Pick a hashtag for your event, so attendees and remote watchers can monitor the event on Twitter. The shorter the better, please! Depending on the size of the event, host multiple meetups for attendees to gather for dinner and hold meet-and-greets.
When attendees register for the event, ask them specific questions about their industry or job title. This information can help pair them in a meetup group that is beneficial to them.
I’m not a big fan of the geek conference staple of having a live streaming Twitter wall behind speakers while they speak. It’s too distracting. But I love having a big Twitter wall in a central conference location. This requires very little effort now, using something like Tweetwally.
Create an event within the event by running contests on Twitter during the conference. You can use metricool to show how many people are using the event hashtag and identify top contributors during the event. Share the leaderboard throughout the event and award prizes to top contributors.
5. Inform
During the event, invite attendees to share their feedback about the sessions for real-time insights. You can use an app called Yapp, which allows attendees to take a poll in the app for the event. This is also a great tool for informing attendees about updates and contests throughout the event.
This is a far better approach than sending a survey a few days after the event asking them what they thought about the session. This way, attendees can vote right after their session ends right on their phone.
6. Propagate
Create your own media during the event. Use Facebook Live and Periscope to capture key moments during the event to engage people who couldn’t make it and create content you can repurpose later to promote future events.
As attendees create and share content using the event hashtag, compile their content and share it later to re-engage attendees after the event.
7. Aggregate
Take the conference content and spread it as widely as possible. Your goal is to get the doubters that didn’t come this year to view that content and decide to go the next year.
Take every conference presentation, and instead of just putting them on your website or emailing links to attendees, release them on SlideShare (one per day for maximum impact). Create content from key moments that happened during the event to share small pieces of content on social.
Reward good content. Invite attendees to share their best quote or photo from the conference for a chance to win a software subscription from a sponsor or free registration to the next event. This also is a great way to promote sponsors and encourage them to partner in upcoming events.
Here’s an example of Social Media Examiner awarding a year’s subscription to a sponsor’s service.
Why couldn’t you do that? Why can’t you do all of this?
https://ift.tt/2qhsidu
0 notes
kraussoutene · 6 years
Text
7 Ways to Use Social Media to Create Buzz-Worthy Events
It used to be you spent five minutes registering for an event and then showed up on the big day, went to a few workshops, drank two free Coronas, and went home.
Social media changes all of that, enabling events and their planners to have long-term, nuanced, shifting interactions with attendees.
I gave a speech in suburban Cincinnati to the Mid-American chapter of Meeting Planners International, titled “7 Ways to Use Social Media to Create Buzz-Worthy Events.” My recommendations are based on my work with MarketingProfs and Salesforce to add social frosting to their already fabulous events, and my experiences speaking at several dozen conferences annually. There’s a total of 39 specific suggestions in the slides, but here are the highlights.
7 Ways To Use Social Media To Create Buzz-Worthy Events from Jay Baer
1. Engage
Get your potential attendees interacting with you early on by enabling some measure of feedback or crowdsourcing on the conference programming. South by Southwest has always led in this area, with its “panel picker” process that turns over 30 percent of the programming selection to potential attendees.
Another way you could simplify getting feedback from your audience is use tools like Twtpoll or PollDaddy (as I did when I asked you for feedback on potential new designs for this blog back in the day).
2. Intrigue
Almost all events have an official website. But very few (except for the geek events) take full advantage of all the free event listing and event management opportunities. At a minimum, you should create event pages on:
Facebook Events
Eventbrite (where you can also sell tickets if you’re so inclined)
Linkedin (if it’s a business event)
Make sure to select the platform or registration software that fits with your audience.
Sure, its a bit of a hassle to oversee all of these event pages, but your attendees swim in different ponds. Plus, every conference has the same MVP attendee: some guy named Google. Why would you pass up a chance to double, triple, or quadruple your search engine listings?
These tools also serve as a way to message your attendees leading up to the event reminding them to invite their friends or what they can look forward to.
3. Invigorate
As the event draws closer, you have to pull potential attendees off of the fence with content hors-d’oeuvres.
Social Media Examiner does this well by consistently sharing what attendees can expect at their annual Social Media Marketing World conference leading up to the event. They share what speakers will be presenting and fun events to look forward to.
Collaborate with your speakers to produce teaser content. Most speakers are already creating short videos and content they are promoting to their audience. This can be a great opportunity to partner with them to align promotional calendars
Actively promote the event hashtag and invite users to share their content on Twitter and Instagram. Begin interacting with attendees before the event begins to build buzz and personal relationships with attendees. Social Media Marketing World has a healthy mix of attendees and speakers consistently adding content before and during their event using the hashtag #SMMW.
Use Pitchengine to create multi-media enabled press releases, and send the URL for the release to any and all “maybes” on your list. You should also gather social information from all registrants. Create a Twitter list of all attendees, and update it each time a new person registers.
4. Integrate
Now we’re talking about the on-site experience, which is where social media can really add impact and get people talking.
Pick a hashtag for your event, so attendees and remote watchers can monitor the event on Twitter. The shorter the better, please! Depending on the size of the event, host multiple meetups for attendees to gather for dinner and hold meet-and-greets.
When attendees register for the event, ask them specific questions about their industry or job title. This information can help pair them in a meetup group that is beneficial to them.
I’m not a big fan of the geek conference staple of having a live streaming Twitter wall behind speakers while they speak. It’s too distracting. But I love having a big Twitter wall in a central conference location. This requires very little effort now, using something like Tweetwally.
Create an event within the event by running contests on Twitter during the conference. You can use metricool to show how many people are using the event hashtag and identify top contributors during the event. Share the leaderboard throughout the event and award prizes to top contributors.
5. Inform
During the event, invite attendees to share their feedback about the sessions for real-time insights. You can use an app called Yapp, which allows attendees to take a poll in the app for the event. This is also a great tool for informing attendees about updates and contests throughout the event.
This is a far better approach than sending a survey a few days after the event asking them what they thought about the session. This way, attendees can vote right after their session ends right on their phone.
6. Propagate
Create your own media during the event. Use Facebook Live and Periscope to capture key moments during the event to engage people who couldn’t make it and create content you can repurpose later to promote future events.
As attendees create and share content using the event hashtag, compile their content and share it later to re-engage attendees after the event.
7. Aggregate
Take the conference content and spread it as widely as possible. Your goal is to get the doubters that didn’t come this year to view that content and decide to go the next year.
Take every conference presentation, and instead of just putting them on your website or emailing links to attendees, release them on SlideShare (one per day for maximum impact). Create content from key moments that happened during the event to share small pieces of content on social.
Reward good content. Invite attendees to share their best quote or photo from the conference for a chance to win a software subscription from a sponsor or free registration to the next event. This also is a great way to promote sponsors and encourage them to partner in upcoming events.
Here’s an example of Social Media Examiner awarding a year’s subscription to a sponsor’s service.
Why couldn’t you do that? Why can’t you do all of this?
https://ift.tt/2qhsidu
0 notes
cstesttaken · 7 years
Text
How to Use Social Media Walls for Events to Engage Attendees Online
Your attendees are your event’s best marketers. But despite your best efforts, it can be difficult to get attendees posting in the heat of the moment — and even harder to get them to tag your event if they do.
Luckily, there’s an easy investment you can make to encourage attendees to share their experience online: a social media wall for your event. Here’s all you need to know to get started with social media walls for events.
What is a social media or Twitter wall?
A social media wall is one or multiple screens at your event that display posts and photos that are tagged with your on social networks like Twitter. Most social media walls display new posts in real time, but if you’re concerned about any tweet getting on the big screen, you can moderate which posts are shown or highlight your favorite tweets.
Events usually use social media walls on screens behind or to the sides of the stage, in the lobby as guests enter, or around the venue itself. They’re a great way to display questions for speakers and reactions or highlights from the event in real-time. Plus, they encourage attendees to post so that everyone who’s not at the event knows what they’re missing.
How to properly showcase a social media wall at your event
Attendees love to see themselves on the big screen, and a social media wall is great encouragement to post in real-time. (That’s good news for you, since the more people who are posting your event at once, the better your shot at trending.)
The only catch? The social media wall will only display posts and pictures tagged with your event’s hashtag — which of attendees usually remember to use when posting at an event.
That means your number one priority should be to have very visible and fun signage around the event that includes your branded hashtag (and ideally your social media handles too). First of all, the should be catchy and prominent throughout the event. It’s a reminder for attendees to post, and to include your brand if they were already planning on using social media.
You likely already have a team member or volunteer at the event , so ensure they use your event’s hashtag in every single post as well. This is also a great way for sponsors to get more facetime with attendees, so be sure to encourage them to use your hashtag as well.
Which social media wall platform is right for you?
There is a huge range of platforms to will help you collect and display tweets about your event in real time. Some platforms are free and some cost money. Keep in mind that each platform has a different visual display style for posts. And the more professional the platform, the more likely you will be able to pull posts from multiple social networks, and see engagement analytics after the event.
Here are some of the most popular social media wall vendors:
by Hootsuite: If you already use Hootsuite to manage your social media, it likely makes sense to use their social media wall product, Hootfeed. This displays tweets in real time, and also lets you capture audience questions over Twitter.
: One of the first social media walls, Tweetwall gets posts on displays less than a second after they’re posted. They also have extensive moderation and advertising options.
: Tagboard is a great tool to use before your event as well, since it helps you collect all social posts about your event.
(formerly Postano): One of the most popular social media wall suppliers, Postano lets you aggregate, moderate, and analyze engagement with posts.
: More than just a social media wall, Tint also lets you aggregate social media posts for display not just at the event, but also on your website or in online ads.
: This social media wall collects content from all the top social networks, and makes it easy to use that content for reuse after the event.
To figure out which platform is best for you, experiment on their websites. Try entering the hashtag of a different event happening while you’re doing research, and see if the results look like what you’re imagining.
Also, don’t rule out alternatives to a social media wall like photo booths. These are another great way to get attendees posting at the event, on Instagram specifically. You can either have a physical photobooth that uploads photos directly to attendees’ Instagrams (complete with your branding in the caption, of course), or have a Polaroid-style printer that prints all shots uploaded to Instagram with your hashtag. Both will delight attendees and get your brand far and wide online.
Source
https://www.eventbrite.com/blog/social-media-walls-for-events-ds00/
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aislingfoley · 8 years
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Free Twitter tools
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Here is a short list of some of the free Twitter tools available to help you manage your Twitter account. My personal favourites are 1, 2 and 5.
Hootsuite – schedule and manage your Twitter account (best use is with Twitter lists)
Statusbrew (formerly) Unfollowers.com –  lists those you are following and not following you
Storify.com – find, collect, and share what people are saying (type of search)
Sopularity.com/ – hashtag suggestions
Tweriod – best time to tweet
Klear – Listening, analytics, influencer search
Events – Tweetbeam and Tweetwall – Displays tweets or hashtags for events
Pocket – saves articles for reading later
BuzzSumo – identify most shared links and key influencers for any topic
Tweetreach.com – how far your tweets reach
Refollow – helps find accounts with commonalities
Tweetdelete – deletes tweets before specified date
TweetEraser – web tool filter and delete bulk tweets
Social Crawlytics – identify influencers and your competitors most shared content
Piktochart – infographic maker (not just for Twitter)
Do you have any favourite free Twitter tools?
https://aislingfoley.com/free-twitter-tools/
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niinakesamaa · 13 years
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A tweetwall lets you display only the tweets you’re interested in from everywhere on Twitter, use it to track hashtags, usernames, and keywords. The possibilities are up to you.
Penkkiurheilusta en juurikaan piittaa, mutta sosiaalinen media tekee jääkiekon maailmanmestaruuskisojenkin seuraamisesta miltei siedettävää. Reaaliaikaista Twitter-virtaa voi seurata muun muassa Tweetwallyn avulla. 
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mj-motivation-blog · 5 years
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Success is not final, Failure is not Fatal, it is the courage to continue that counts. followmemore #wednesdaywisdom #lovememore #fridaymotivation #fridayThoughts  #motivation #fridaywisdom #tweetwally #eveninginspiration #eveningmotivation #newblogpost #quote #oscarwilde #oscarwildequote #wilder #citation #morningmotivation #publisher #publication #publicational #inspirationalquotes #relationshipquotes #photooftheday  #sucessquotes #saturdaywisdom💡 #makeithappen #saturdaywisdom #sundaywisdom #mondaythought #QUOTE https://www.instagram.com/p/By9iNJahSHX/?igshid=qjjcfqhx12wk
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mj-motivation-blog · 5 years
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Make every thought, every fact, that comes into your mind pay you a profit. #aftrrnoonquote #followmemore #wednesdaywisdom #lovememore #fridaymotivation #fridayThoughts  #motivation #fridaywisdom #tweetwally #eveninginspiration #eveningmotivation #newblogpost #quote #oscarwilde #oscarwildequote #wilder #citation #mjmotivation #publisher #publication #publicational #inspirationalquotes #relationshipquotes #photooftheday  #sucessquotes #saturdaywisdom💡 #makeithappen #saturdaywisdom #sundaywisdom #mondaythought #QUOTE https://www.instagram.com/p/By0EwcyBss2/?igshid=12i98lt3dpdrx
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