I’m finished! It was 10 of the toughest weeks of my life
trying to juggle my internship, my usual job and three other uni units – but it
was one of the most important and uplifting career experiences I’ve had.
Here are some of important nuggets of wisdom I’ve learnt
through my internship at LiveLighter that I’d like to pass on to you all:
1. By August this year, Facebook will make changes to reduce newsfeed "clutter" from organisation's pages. This will mean that organisations' posts will have next to no organic reach. This essentially means that
organisations (both businesses and not-for-profits) will have to pay to boost
almost all of the Facebook content they post, rather than relying on it being
organically shared to their followers and through likes and shares to
non-followers. This will mean that organisation’s Facebook posts will likely
become less frequent, but more professional. Social media managers will have to
consider the organisational benefits of each Facebook post (as they are putting
money behind it) and will have to be looking more closely at KPIs to make sure
their Facebook posts are worth the financial investment. These changes will
likely impact you just as you’re starting to get jobs at the end of this year –
so keep this in mind.
2. 2. A useful exercise to ‘sharpen’ an organisation’s
social media presence is to come up with a very specific profile of a
hypothetical person who fits into your target audience. For LiveLighter, the
Comms team came up with the hypothetical person “Tracey Turner.” Tracey is a
mum in her late forties, works as a part-time receptionist at her local tyre power,
likes Take 5 magazine and Today Tonight, and has tried a number of different
diet programs but keeps putting the weight back on. Before creating a Facebook
post we would have to think “how can I make this post appeal to Tracey?” which
helped us to make sure we were creating content that was actually engaging our
target audience.
3. 3. Pay attention to who’s liking your content on
different social media platforms. LiveLighter’s Facebook was mostly middle-aged
women who were looking to make lifestyle changes for themselves and their
family, whereas LiveLighter’s Twitter following was mostly health professional
looking for resources to share with their patients and clients. We had to
tailor different posts for each platform to cater for these specific audiences.
4. 4. Bring a notepad and pen with you everywhere! You
may think you can remember everything that’s discussed in a meeting, or all the
points your manager wants you to include in the media release, but I can assure
you that you won’t. Good note-taking will ensure you’re not annoying people by
asking them to repeat what they said.
5. 5. Blogging is still a thing. I’ve had many
blogging-based assignments for my Internet Communications degree and always
complained that nobody still reads blogs. But they actually do – LiveLighter’s
health advice blog is one of their most successful social media platforms.
6. 6. Only wear dresses and skirts you’d be
comfortable climbing up stairs in to your internship. If it’s going to shimmy
up your thighs as you’re climbing, leave it in the wardrobe.
7. 7. I’d also recommend getting your mentor and other
team members you worked closely with a small present to say thank-you for
taking you on as an intern. It leaves a positive lasting impression of you as a
worker and person. I got everyone in my team a bunch of flowers, and they got
me a tiny cactus (I know you were wondering how the cactus comes into it).
Thank you for reading my blog posts. I'll continue to follow your internship adventures.
All the best,
Bec
2 comments:
I really enjoyed reading this and found it very applicable to my own job as I manage social media accounts for some businesses.
How strange is it that social media like Facebook now has control over content reach. It is a clever business tactic on their side to capitalise on the reliability of earned media. I'm glad Instagram still has some organic reach but Instagram targets quite a broad- sometimes random audience.
I also really liked the idea of sharpening a social media presence! Thinking of a hypothetical person or profiling an audience gives great direction into curating content to generate more useful appeal. It is one thing to have a lot of likes or views but if you're not targeting the right person then it defeats the purpose to an extent. There is always so much information darting through the internet it is easy to over look a post despite reading it or watching a video.
Congratulations on reaching the end of your internship and juggling the rest of your life. I can totally relate as I have felt like I've been on over drive too!
Thanks for a great read,
Isabella
Hi Bec,
Thank you so much for sharing your advice! All of your nuggets of wisdom demonstrates how truly valuable completing an internship was for you.
I definitely understand what you mean by taking a notepad and pen with you everywhere. This was one piece of advice that my Managing Director gave me as well.
Another great piece of advice you have given is to do with appropriate clothing. In our office we have two sets of stairs. With my desk on the top floor it proves very difficult and unprofessional to wear heels that you cannot walk in up and down stairs as well as inappropriate dresses and skirts like you said.
I hope you have enjoyed your internship as much as I have! Thank you again for your advice!
Dennielle
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