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Retuning the Sour Notes: Managing Difficult Social Media Conversations

Retuning the Sour Notes: Managing Difficult Social Media Conversations. Matthew Rupert Penn State World Campus NACADA National Conference Session 141 October 6, 2012. Imagine…. You want to provide a great experience. You are building lasting relationships.

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Retuning the Sour Notes: Managing Difficult Social Media Conversations

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  1. Retuning the Sour Notes:Managing Difficult Social Media Conversations Matthew Rupert Penn State World Campus NACADA National Conference Session 141 October 6, 2012

  2. Imagine… • You want to provide a great experience. • You are building lasting relationships. • You have a strategy for managing your interactions. • You have a calendar and events to share. • You want a rich, meaningful interaction.

  3. …And you get this comment.

  4. Session Topics • Social Media Strategy and Planning • Team Building • Social Media Community Standards • Dealing with the Difficult Conversation • Triage • When do you keep or delete a post, and how? • FERPA considerations

  5. But first… • Difficult year for the University • Renewed commitment to responsibility • Social media proved to be a major point of contact for whole PSU community.

  6. Strategy and Planning • Why do you want use social media? • Will it align with university/unit strategy? • Who is your audience? • What platform(s) will you use? • Who will monitor and when, and what training is involved? • How will you manage any problems that arise?

  7. World Campus Platforms

  8. Cross-Unit Team Approach • To address questions, collaborate on strategies, and ensure communication flow

  9. Communication Strategy • Best Practice Summary from Benchmarking • Use codes of conduct to model engagement behaviors; clearly define “right to remove” policy • Always thank customers for feedback • Be transparent: Let customers know who is managing the account(s); sign posts and (for Twitter) tweets • Acknowledge errors and correct inaccuracies • Protect the confidentiality of customers • Allow subject experts to respond to negative posts • Connect to core brand; always remember your posts represent your brand

  10. Community Standards The World Campus is proud of Penn State and of what it means to be a Penn Stater -- to be honorable, respectful, and civil to other members of this incredible University family. We encourage active discussion and sharing of information in this space. We will always respect your rights to express your opinions, positive or negative, provided it is done in a way that is acceptable and honorable, in keeping with the Penn State Code of Conduct. We reserve the right to remove content that does not reflect the spirit of Penn State and this community, including profanity, personal attacks, commercial promotions, election campaign materials (excluding World Campus Blue & White Society election materials) or other content deemed inappropriate.

  11. Photo credit: animakitty, Flickr (Creative Commons)

  12. Managing Negative Comments • Triage • When do you keep or delete a post? • FERPA Considerations

  13. Triage—Diagnosis of the Post • Who is posting? • Prospective, current, or former student? • Outside or part of World Campus? • Outside party? • Why is he/she posting? • Positive/negative post? • Relevant to the audience? • On what platform is the post?

  14. Comment Samples • “Don’t bother transferring into PSU, virtually everything counts as an elective since PSU considers their courses superior to everyone else’s. No one told PSU they were nowhere even remotely close to Ivy League.” • “Penn State should redesign it's student-be-damned attitude before it worries about it's website.”

  15. Managing Negative Comments • Triage • When do you keep or delete a post? • FERPA Considerations

  16. Handling Complaints/Negativity • Mashable (How to Deal w/ Negative Feedback in Social Media) • Identify Feedback Type • Straight Problem • Constructive Criticism • Merited Attack • Trolling/Spam • Response Options • Never let yourself get pulled into a debate • Straight Problem: requires response • Constructive Criticism: requires response • Merited Attack: respond positively and promptly, mitigating problem if warranted • Trolling/Spam: ignore and remove immediately

  17. Triage--Response Mapping General Comment – No Action A&LS: Respond w/in 1 bus.day Other: A&LS contacts for answer; posts in X bus. day w/ staff name and unit Code of Conduct Stdt Q for WC If no stdt response in 1 bus. day: A&LS posts invite for stdts to respond Stdt Q for Stdts Accurate: Let stand Inaccurate: A&LS posts correction Stdt Response to Q Student Comment StdtFdbk to WC Positive: Thank student Negative: Thank stdt; share w/ unit; track patterns; if fdbk prompts change, post it Remove stdt and comment immediately; notify A&LS director; post CoC reminder A&LS Removes Immediately – No Action Troll/Spam Code of Conduct Yes Wall post; no comments StdtFdbk to WC Remove comment immediately; message stdt(s) privately about CoC; post CoC reminder Stdt already warned? Comment flame war No

  18. Never tolerate… • Threats • Obtain screen shot, remove post, block commenter, and report to appropriate authorities • Abusive, aggressive or discriminatory language • Obtain screen shot, remove post, warn/block commenter, post Community Standards reminder

  19. What would you do? “To whom should we address competency issues involved in group work? I am (again) required to work with a group of students for a large portion of my grade and the work they produce is elementary. I work very hard for my grades and am continually paired with people who can barely read or chose to ignore instructions from the professor.”

  20. What would you do? Uncouth humor is a challenge: • “If someone said that to my face, I’d punch him in the neck.” • “He’s acting like a liberal terrorist.” Try to make instances like this teaching moments about social media etiquette.

  21. What would you do?

  22. What would you do? Flame wars • While students connecting to one another and to us is great, there also needs to be room for disagreement. • Important to monitor closely, but cut in to “douse the heat” with public reminders of Community Standards, clarifications on inaccuracies, and private warnings.

  23. Managing Negative Comments • Triage • When do you keep or delete a post? • FERPA Considerations

  24. FERPA • Students will decide to self-disclose someinformation about course enrollment, GPA, financial obligations, and grades. • Encourage continued conversation in private forum (we use PSU e-mail), post general public answer • Provide public information and reminders about FERPA (blog post, university policy link) • If it meets Community Standards, keep post

  25. FERPA • Hide a post and reply privately if a lot of information is shared. • I had a lot of health challenges this semester and was forced to withdraw from several classes which placed me as a below half-time student. Only one of my professors granted deferment. At all times during this I stayed in contact with my professors and my academic adviser and provided a doctor’s note. As a result, I have lost part of my Pell Grant and I currently owe $1749. Can I appeal this and register next semester?

  26. FERPA • Remove any post that names other students, grades, or other confidential information. • “I’m getting an A+ in the course, but my group member Bobby is getting a C. I’m tired of doing all the work for him!” • When in doubt, take it out.

  27. Touchy Subjects • Class-related plagiarism and academic integrity • Students selling textbooks • Repeated posts on the same topic • Not hearing from instructor or staff member about an issue • “Wish list” complaints (more seats, different course offerings)

  28. Thank You! Credit: cybergedeon, Open Clip Art Library Matthew Rupert mcr9@psu.edu Twitter: @matt_rupert Facebook:PSUWC.Matt 814-863-2551

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