Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Season’s Tweetings: Santa Teaches Social Media Enrichment

Do you follow Santa on Twitter? I don’t, but I imagine him tweeting his way across a city’s rooftops on December 24th like so many metropolitan food trucks. He could use foursquare to check-in for valuable chimney-descending tips or to know what kinds of cookies to expect, but that might ruin the element of surprise.

Regardless, Santa is no different than most of us – save a red jumpsuit and diminutive slave labor – in that he has been changed by social media. If the millennium-old character can keep up with the times, clearly there’s an opportunity for most organizations’ communications to evolve. In fact, social media Santa – or, if you prefer, Rudolph (@RudolphHoHo) or the horrifying Krampus (@MisterKrampus) – can teach brands of any size an important lesson about enrichment through social media.

Enrichment, in this context, is a concept that organizations can add communications dimensions through providing entertainment, information, and other value-adding layers. Enrichment could entail a number of techniques, and @santaNORAD demonstrated how social media can be used in a unique way to enrich a folkloric figure.

Santa tweeted from the rooftops in 2010 with help from NORAD

Santa tweeted from the rooftops in 2010 with help from NORAD

Why is enrichment important? It’s an opportunity for brands, organizations, retail outlets, entrepreneurs, and others to flesh-out their digital presences. A website may have clever copy or colloquial terms of service agreements (browse around Moosejaw.com for a nice example), but they’re generally static and most often one-way expressions of “personality.” Social media can be two-way enrichment on a daily, hourly, or real-time basis.

Enrichment isn’t a complicated concept – in fact, it’s dead obvious – but it isn’t easy. Just as firms struggle to “add value” through social media, enrichment is no different and no less vague. It might be helpful to review a few diverse examples:

Backcountry.com (@backcountrycom) – the outdoor sports outfitter uses Facebook and Twitter accounts to give audiences updates on snow fall in mountain towns and promote fans’ photos of death-defying conquests. Promotional messages occur regularly, but only to the benefit of its customers:

Backcountry on Facebook

Comedian, actor, writer, and podcaster Paul F. Tompkins (@PFTompkins) – with nearly 100,000 followers on Twitter and more than 11,000 Facebook fans/friends, Tompkins uses social media channels as witty extensions of his profession, not simply for promoting his gigs or products:

PFT on Twitter

The ONE Campaign (@ONECampaign) – the “grassroots campaign” aims to galvanize more than 460,000 Twitter followers and 150,000+ Facebook fans by providing cause-related information to those interested in its mission. This includes info driven by those same fans and followers:

The ONE Campaign on Twitter

Of course, I will acknowledge that the use of colloquialisms and engagement is inherently more difficult for certain types of organizations (see: Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms), but value-adding through enrichment is never impossible. Think about it: Santa isn’t even real and yet he has more than 50,000 followers on Twitter – almost 50 times more than I do and I’m totally real! Yet, NORAD was able to tap into a notion that would enrich an audience member’s experience with its mission through the use of Santa.

That’s a pretty creative use of social media in my book. Can you think of other organizations that use social media for enrichment? Get back to me – I’m off see if NORAD can track down that mischievous New Year’s Baby so I can get a few more things done in 2010.

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