Accidentally landed on our Hawaii Marketing Tips blog while searching for Team Vision Marketing? Please visit our homepage, creative portfolio or client video testimonials. If you’re interested in learning more about the truth behind common social media myths, please continue reading below.
June 19, 2018
Busting Social Media Marketing Myths #1
Myth: Social Media only reaches Millennials and Gen Z
You should also consider investing in analytic tools to gain insightful information about your customer profile and to track important data.
If you’re feeling overwhelmed trying to keep up with the management of your businesses social media accounts, give Team Vision Marketing a call and let us help you out. In the meantime, check out some of our social media programs and promotions on our web site portfolio at www.www.teamvision.com/portfolio/#social-media.
Web: www.www.teamvision.com
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Hear from Dolly Moreno, Director of Sales & Marketing at Honua Kai Resort & Spa Maui, on her experience working with Team Vision Marketing.
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Landed on our Hawaii Marketing Tips blog by accident while searching for Team Vision Marketing? Please visit our homepage, creative portfolio or client video testimonials. If you’re interested in learning more about Event Social Media Marketing, please continue reading.
Hawaii Social Media Marketing During Events – Tips
Doing social media during an event can be challenging. Events are live, which means anything could happen no matter how meticulously planned your social media strategy is for that event. This article will give you tips and recommendations on how to have a smooth experience with social media marketing during an event.
1. Plan Ahead for Event Posts
Before heading out to cover social media for an event, it’s always ideal to plan on what kind of posts your social media management team will be making, develop a recommended shot list for your photographers, and decide which social media platforms you will be posting to. You never know what will happen at an event, so come prepared with a plan in hand to save time and prevent stress. It will also help you to see in hindsight, what did and didn’t work, and determine if your team needs to better coordinate with your client ahead of time for the next event.
Prepare anything you can in advance. Can some posts or content be written in advance? Do you need any graphics from your creative team that can be developed before the big social media event?
2. Stay Flexible
Anything can happen during an event. Maybe there’s a last-minute add-on to the program or one of the VIP guest speakers couldn’t come at the very last minute. Your team has to be flexible and think fast on their feet. You can plan alternative key shots or messages, just in case, but your team will have to go with the flow.
3. What is the Key Photo or “Hero Shot”?
Determine what the KEY PHOTO is in advance and make sure you don’t miss it. Will it be a speech by the CEO, will it be a check-signing, will it be a performance? Whatever it is, at that point of the event, make sure several members of your social media management team capture both photo and video of that moment from different angles (JUST TO MAKE SURE YOU GOT IT).
4. Know who the VIPs are
Review a list of VIP’s for the event and make sure all of your team members know their faces and their names. If there are many VIPS, assign each of your marketing team members to 2 or 3 VIPS each to make sure you get proper photos and coverage for all of them.
5. Have a Strong Social Media Team
Make sure your team members have specific assignments and areas that they will cover during the event (who will shoot which part of the marketing event, who will handle the interviews and live videos, who will respond to user comments, etc.)
Determine a key point person who will create all social media posts (to avoid two team members overlapping in post content or posting at the same time to the same media). You can also assign different team members to post to different social media channels (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram) to make sure there is no overlap.
Assign someone on your team to monitor social media during the event and to respond to people who tag or mention your event. Also, make sure to quickly respond to live video comments and live post comments during and after the event. This is very important as you don’t want to engage people only to leave them hanging.
6. Be Over-Prepared
In terms of equipment and planning, It’s always better to be over-prepared to cover social media management services at an event.
Batteries get drained and SD cards run out of memory. We suggest bringing portable phone chargers, extra SD cards and camera batteries, and charging your cameras and phones the night before.
It’s also handy to have extra lighting on hand, so you don’t have to use a flash. This can be a ring light or your phone’s flashlight. If you’re going to record audio or do on-camera interviews, you’ll also want to invest in a portable mic or lavalier.
If possible, request to get the event program in advance, so your social media team knows the timing of activities and can anticipate the key hero shots that need to be taken.
Another key tip is to research your social media hashtags and mentions in advance. You don’t want to have to research hashtags on location which can really slow things down, and you never want to be caught using the wrong hashtag or excluding a key person or company from posts.
7. Incorporate Live Videos
We discussed the benefits of trendy live videos in our Social Trends blog, which still rings true for events. Shooting a live video is a great way to connect with people who couldn’t attend the event. We recommend hosting a live video during entertainment or other key points of the event’s program.
8. Centralize the Content
Determine a central location (i.e. a dropbox account or similar) where all social media content will be uploaded and reviewed immediately after the event. This will make it easier for team members to review all the content in one area and speed up the process of creating post event videos and posts.
9. Plan Ahead for Post-Event Social Media Posting
Just like our #1 tip above, it pays to plan out what and where to post to maintain the buzz after the event. Your social media marketing team will have accumulated a load of content that you can use as an event wrap up, a #TBT post, or a highlight reel for the next event.
- A nice conclusion and a way to maintain the buzz after an event is to have a wrap-up post. It could be a collage of the best shots from the evening with copy that sums up how successful the event was. This type of post is perfect for fundraisers and launch parties.
- #TBT posts can give your team the opportunity to post the great images you acquired during the event that you didn’t previously get a chance to post.
- A highlight reel is also a great tool to allow people to relive or see how exciting and successful a past event was. Also, it makes great promotional content because it gets people buzzing about how you or your client will top the last event.
If you’re looking for help with your Hawaii Social Media Marketing Management, give Team Vision a call at (808) 536-0416, or check out samples of our social media work in our extensive online marketing portfolio at www.www.teamvision.com/portfolio.
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Hear from Bruce Barrett, VP of Sales & Marketing at Castle & Cooke Hawaii, on his experience working with Team Vision Marketing.
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May 14, 2018
SSL IS NO LONGER OPTIONAL
HTTPS IS NO LONGER OPTIONAL FOR YOUR WEB SITE
At Team Vision Marketing, we have been building web sites for Hawaii clients for over 20 years. Up until just a few years ago, many client sites that didn’t include ecommerce, or that didn’t request or store confidential information, didn’t require HTTPS encryption installed on the site. An SSL (Secure Socket Layer) Security Certificate was an added annual recurring expense that many clients didn’t feel they needed, and quite frankly, best practices didn’t yet call for.
What is an SSL Certificate? And How Does It Work?
SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) is the standard security technology for establishing an encrypted link between a web server and a browser. This link ensures that all data passed between the web server and browsers remain private and integral. After July 2018, Your Site Will Show as “Not Secure.”
Image: Beginning July 2018, your non-HTTPS web site will show as “Not Secure” as shown above.
For the past several years, Google has been moving customers toward a more secure web by strongly advocating that ALL web sites adopt HTTPS encryption. Within the last year, Google has been labeling more and more HTTP (Non-HTTPS) web sites as “NOT SECURE” in order to help users understand that they could be at risk by using a particular site.
Google has now announced that beginning in July 2018, it will mark ALL HTTP pages as “NOT SECURE.” If you’re still operating a non-secure web site, this warning message will more than likely deter users from proceeding to your site (just imagine users seeing the following warning before entering your site: “NOT SECURE. Would you still like to proceed to this web site?”). It will also have a negative effect on your search engine rankings as Google’s algorithms will place a preference on secure web sites for search engine result rankings. The adoption of SSL/TLS encryption for online organizations has become a security best practice.
Moving to HTTPS is now easier than ever and the cost of annual SSL certificates has also dropped significantly in recent years. And, if you used a third-party CMS such as WordPress, you may be able to set up the SSL yourself using one of WordPress’ popular SSL plugins like Really Simple SSL.
If you need help setting up HTTPS security on your web before the July 2018 deadline, or if you just want to learn more, please give us a call at (808) 536-0416, or send us an inquiry via our web site.
For more information, check out Googles Security Blog.