7 ways to socialize your marketing event

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From live tweeting and live streaming to social media integration on invitations and event pages, social media is an intrinsic part of how people experience almost every event now. If you’re a marketer, that means lots of new opportunities to get the word out and connect with your audience. We sponsor and attend quite a few conferences here at DemandGen throughout the year, and part of my responsibility on DemandGen’s Marketing Team is to prepare a social media strategy that helps create awareness, booth traffic, and engagement with us at the events. Here are seven key tips from my bag of tricks, to help you get ready to make the most fo social media for your next event. 1. USE those channels and hashtags. First, research relevant social media channels and hashtags, so you can have a good understanding of what’s out there now, what people are talking about, what terms they’re using, and what gaps are there for you to fill. If you’re hosting your own event, obviously you’ve got to come up with a short yet memorable hashtag. Some good examples of some the events we attended recently are #MKTNation (The Marketing Nation Summit) or #MME15 (The Modern Marketing World). Include the hashtag in all your messages across the different channels, on imagery, and in the event-related email campaigns. Be creative with it: get it on those T-shirts, candy wrappers, skywriting, whatever. Even if it’s not your event, you’re a part of it, so come up with a good hashtag for your part in it. At our last sponsored show, we had a prize wheel with some fabulous prizes, so all our tweets included the hashtag “#spintowin at #SDSummit”(#SDSummit was the official event hashtag). Pay attention to what others are talking about up to and during the event, so you and your team can participate in an informed way. QUICK TIP Providing pictures through social media channels make a much more interesting post than a paragraph full of text. AT A GLANCE Founded: 2007 Employees: 100+ Client Profile: 500+ clients in industries, including technology, SaaS, healthcare, business services, financial services Certifications: Eloqua, Marketo, Microsoft, Oracle, Salesforce.com blog.demandgen.com 7 Ways to “Socialize” Your Marketing Event May 26, 2015 | Heidi Heroldt

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From live tweeting and live streaming to social media integration on invitations and event pages, social media is an intrinsic part of how people experience almost every event now. If you’re a marketer, that means lots of new opportunities to get the word out and connect with your audience.

We sponsor and attend quite a few conferences here at DemandGen throughout the year, and part of my responsibility on DemandGen’s Marketing Team is to prepare a social media strategy that helps create awareness, booth traffic, and engagement with us at the events.

Here are seven key tips from my bag of tricks, to help you get ready to make the most fo social media for your next event. 1. USE those channels and hashtags. • First, research relevant social media channels and hashtags, so you can have a good understanding of what’s out there now, what people are talking about, what terms they’re using, and what gaps are there for you to fill. • If you’re hosting your own event, obviously you’ve got to come up with a short yet memorable hashtag. Some good examples of some the events we attended recently are #MKTNation (The Marketing Nation Summit) or #MME15 (The Modern Marketing World). Include the hashtag in all your messages across the different channels, on imagery, and in the event-related email campaigns. Be creative with it: get it on those T-shirts, candy wrappers, skywriting, whatever. • Even if it’s not your event, you’re a part of it, so come up with a good hashtag for your part in it. At our last sponsored show, we had a prize wheel with some fabulous prizes, so all our tweets included the hashtag “#spintowin at #SDSummit”(#SDSummit was the official event hashtag). • Pay attention to what others are talking about up to and during the event, so you and your team can participate in an informed way.

2. Cross-promote all channels. • Take advantage of social media to spread the word about everything you have going on at the event, and do it across channels. Promote sessions, parties, meetings, and activities at your booth like games, giveaways, and prizes. If you know someone from your team is a guest speaker or part of a session, promote the session information separately across your social channels and your blog. DemandGen also often hosts private after-parties at conferences, so we create separate email and social campaigns to create buzz and drive attendance.

3. Schedule posts ahead of time. • More often than not, event day leaves not a minute to spare for crafting clever tweets! So prepare your planned communications ahead of time. You can write tweets, LinkedIn/Facebook posts, etc., and schedule them using tools like HootSuite or GaggleAMP. You can’t do that with photos you don’t have yet — but, like a wedding photographer, you can plan ahead and make a list of photo opportunities to create (client A in front of booth, session in progress, award presentation, etc.).

4. Take pictures - lots of them! • A good candid picture beats a paragraph of text every time. Use social channels to share photos of event highlights: sessions, keynotes, presentations, the show floor, parties and more. (Use good judgment, and always ask permission to share photos of individuals.)

5. Keep the ball rolling on-site.• We love to come up with social campaigns during the events to engage with the attendees — they’re enjoyable and memorable. Last year, we created a DemandGen ‘step and repeat’ booth panel and asked conference attendees to take pictures in front of the wall. If they tweeted their “red carpet” shots to our Twitter handle @demandgen, they were automatically entered to win an iPad mini. When we do giveaways, we ask every winner for permission to tweet out a photo: it makes for a lot of fun at the booth!

6. Share the fun (and the burden) with your team.• When you make sharing as easy as possible for the rest of your team, you’ll ease the burden for yourself and improve the breadth of distribution of your content at the same time. Give your team members a list of the relevant social media channels and tags, and even a few sample tweets to get them started. 7. Follow up post-event. • A good candid picture beats a paragraph of text every time. Use social channels to share photos of event highlights: sessions, keynotes, presentations, the show floor, parties and more. (Use good judgment, and always ask permission to share photos of individuals.)

With just a little advance planning and enthusiasm, you can get social media buzzing at every event!

QUICK TIPProviding pictures through social media channels make a much more interesting post than a paragraph full of text.

AT A GLANCEFounded:2007

Employees: 100+

Client Profile: 500+ clients in industries, including technology, SaaS, healthcare, business services, financial services

Certifications:Eloqua, Marketo, Microsoft, Oracle, Salesforce.com

blog.demandgen.com

7 Ways to “Socialize” Your Marketing EventMay 26, 2015 | Heidi Heroldt

From live tweeting and live streaming to social media integration on invitations and event pages, social media is an intrinsic part of how people experience almost every event now. If you’re a marketer, that means lots of new opportunities to get the word out and connect with your audience.

We sponsor and attend quite a few conferences here at DemandGen throughout the year, and part of my responsibility on DemandGen’s Marketing Team is to prepare a social media strategy that helps create awareness, booth traffic, and engagement with us at the events.

Here are seven key tips from my bag of tricks, to help you get ready to make the most fo social media for your next event. 1. USE those channels and hashtags. • First, research relevant social media channels and hashtags, so you can have a good understanding of what’s out there now, what people are talking about, what terms they’re using, and what gaps are there for you to fill. • If you’re hosting your own event, obviously you’ve got to come up with a short yet memorable hashtag. Some good examples of some the events we attended recently are #MKTNation (The Marketing Nation Summit) or #MME15 (The Modern Marketing World). Include the hashtag in all your messages across the different channels, on imagery, and in the event-related email campaigns. Be creative with it: get it on those T-shirts, candy wrappers, skywriting, whatever. • Even if it’s not your event, you’re a part of it, so come up with a good hashtag for your part in it. At our last sponsored show, we had a prize wheel with some fabulous prizes, so all our tweets included the hashtag “#spintowin at #SDSummit”(#SDSummit was the official event hashtag). • Pay attention to what others are talking about up to and during the event, so you and your team can participate in an informed way.

2. Cross-promote all channels. • Take advantage of social media to spread the word about everything you have going on at the event, and do it across channels. Promote sessions, parties, meetings, and activities at your booth like games, giveaways, and prizes. If you know someone from your team is a guest speaker or part of a session, promote the session information separately across your social channels and your blog. DemandGen also often hosts private after-parties at conferences, so we create separate email and social campaigns to create buzz and drive attendance.

3. Schedule posts ahead of time. • More often than not, event day leaves not a minute to spare for crafting clever tweets! So prepare your planned communications ahead of time. You can write tweets, LinkedIn/Facebook posts, etc., and schedule them using tools like HootSuite or GaggleAMP. You can’t do that with photos you don’t have yet — but, like a wedding photographer, you can plan ahead and make a list of photo opportunities to create (client A in front of booth, session in progress, award presentation, etc.).

4. Take pictures - lots of them! • A good candid picture beats a paragraph of text every time. Use social channels to share photos of event highlights: sessions, keynotes, presentations, the show floor, parties and more. (Use good judgment, and always ask permission to share photos of individuals.)

5. Keep the ball rolling on-site.• We love to come up with social campaigns during the events to engage with the attendees — they’re enjoyable and memorable. Last year, we created a DemandGen ‘step and repeat’ booth panel and asked conference attendees to take pictures in front of the wall. If they tweeted their “red carpet” shots to our Twitter handle @demandgen, they were automatically entered to win an iPad mini. When we do giveaways, we ask every winner for permission to tweet out a photo: it makes for a lot of fun at the booth!

6. Share the fun (and the burden) with your team.• When you make sharing as easy as possible for the rest of your team, you’ll ease the burden for yourself and improve the breadth of distribution of your content at the same time. Give your team members a list of the relevant social media channels and tags, and even a few sample tweets to get them started. 7. Follow up post-event. • A good candid picture beats a paragraph of text every time. Use social channels to share photos of event highlights: sessions, keynotes, presentations, the show floor, parties and more. (Use good judgment, and always ask permission to share photos of individuals.)

With just a little advance planning and enthusiasm, you can get social media buzzing at every event!

From live tweeting and live streaming to social media integration on invitations and event pages, social media is an intrinsic part of how people experience almost every event now. If you’re a marketer, that means lots of new opportunities to get the word out and connect with your audience.

We sponsor and attend quite a few conferences here at DemandGen throughout the year, and part of my responsibility on DemandGen’s Marketing Team is to prepare a social media strategy that helps create awareness, booth traffic, and engagement with us at the events.

Here are seven key tips from my bag of tricks, to help you get ready to make the most fo social media for your next event. 1. USE those channels and hashtags. • First, research relevant social media channels and hashtags, so you can have a good understanding of what’s out there now, what people are talking about, what terms they’re using, and what gaps are there for you to fill. • If you’re hosting your own event, obviously you’ve got to come up with a short yet memorable hashtag. Some good examples of some the events we attended recently are #MKTNation (The Marketing Nation Summit) or #MME15 (The Modern Marketing World). Include the hashtag in all your messages across the different channels, on imagery, and in the event-related email campaigns. Be creative with it: get it on those T-shirts, candy wrappers, skywriting, whatever. • Even if it’s not your event, you’re a part of it, so come up with a good hashtag for your part in it. At our last sponsored show, we had a prize wheel with some fabulous prizes, so all our tweets included the hashtag “#spintowin at #SDSummit”(#SDSummit was the official event hashtag). • Pay attention to what others are talking about up to and during the event, so you and your team can participate in an informed way.

2. Cross-promote all channels. • Take advantage of social media to spread the word about everything you have going on at the event, and do it across channels. Promote sessions, parties, meetings, and activities at your booth like games, giveaways, and prizes. If you know someone from your team is a guest speaker or part of a session, promote the session information separately across your social channels and your blog. DemandGen also often hosts private after-parties at conferences, so we create separate email and social campaigns to create buzz and drive attendance.

3. Schedule posts ahead of time. • More often than not, event day leaves not a minute to spare for crafting clever tweets! So prepare your planned communications ahead of time. You can write tweets, LinkedIn/Facebook posts, etc., and schedule them using tools like HootSuite or GaggleAMP. You can’t do that with photos you don’t have yet — but, like a wedding photographer, you can plan ahead and make a list of photo opportunities to create (client A in front of booth, session in progress, award presentation, etc.).

4. Take pictures - lots of them! • A good candid picture beats a paragraph of text every time. Use social channels to share photos of event highlights: sessions, keynotes, presentations, the show floor, parties and more. (Use good judgment, and always ask permission to share photos of individuals.)

5. Keep the ball rolling on-site.• We love to come up with social campaigns during the events to engage with the attendees — they’re enjoyable and memorable. Last year, we created a DemandGen ‘step and repeat’ booth panel and asked conference attendees to take pictures in front of the wall. If they tweeted their “red carpet” shots to our Twitter handle @demandgen, they were automatically entered to win an iPad mini. When we do giveaways, we ask every winner for permission to tweet out a photo: it makes for a lot of fun at the booth!

6. Share the fun (and the burden) with your team.• When you make sharing as easy as possible for the rest of your team, you’ll ease the burden for yourself and improve the breadth of distribution of your content at the same time. Give your team members a list of the relevant social media channels and tags, and even a few sample tweets to get them started. 7. Follow up post-event. • A good candid picture beats a paragraph of text every time. Use social channels to share photos of event highlights: sessions, keynotes, presentations, the show floor, parties and more. (Use good judgment, and always ask permission to share photos of individuals.)

With just a little advance planning and enthusiasm, you can get social media buzzing at every event!

About DemandGenDemandGen International, Inc. DemandGen helps high‐performance firms leverage digital sales and marketing technologies for demand generation and

lead management — driving engaged, sustainable customer relationships. The firm’s global team of technologists, strategists, and operations experts

empowers marketers with best‐practice consulting, proven and award-winning methodologies, professional services, and engineered solutions. With

keen insights and unparalleled skills, DemandGen doesn’t just advise: some of the world’s most successful businesses depend on DemandGen’s

execution services to support their most critical objectives and spur revenue growth. Please visit www.demandgen.com for more information.

Heidi Heroldt manages DemandGen’s social media campaigns and other marketing initiatives to

help grow DemandGen’s social reach and expand brand awareness.

© 2014 DemandGen. All rights reserved. DemandGen and the DemandGen logo are registered trademarks of DemandGen International, Inc. All other product and company names may be trademarks of their respective owners.