Oh the crazy life of a Community Manager! Somehow we are supposed to keep 12 different social channels active on 12 different schedules with custom content for each audience without losing our minds. If we are agency and not in-house, we are most likely running those twelve channels multiplied by several clients. There aren’t enough fingers on our hands or hours in the day.
So how do we do it?
Most of us take advantage of several great tools and services, many available for free, to schedule and automate the daily process of content production and distribution across our brand’s active social channels. But great tools can become a social media pit fall when not used properly.
Hashtag Spam
This is the stuff that will make any serious devotee of Twitter want to tear their hair out. For the last 4 years a colleague and I have hosted #SocialChat on Twitter. We have cultivated some amazing connections and valuable friendships over that period of time. We have also reported more than our fair share of Twitter spam; everything from generally crappy tone deaf posts in the middle of a heated chat to more porn accounts than anyone would ever want to come into contact with. We’ve also been able to help out more than a few accounts recover after being hacked. But this latest iteration of chat related twaddle has us screaming on a daily basis.
This is but a small sampling of the string of useless tweets we see posted multiple times a day. As you can see we aren’t the only chat hit with these strings of noise.
When we started seeing these tweets, always posted in bulk like this, we assumed that it was probably a bot running several accounts. We reported the lot as spam to Twitter. But the tweets just kept coming and coming and coming. Our whole #SocialChat community has been helping to report this stuff as spam for months, and we still can’t react fast enough.
At one point my co-host, Alan K’necht, decided to dig a little deeper into the accounts we were reporting. A good portion of these accounts, although small, seem to be legit when you take a look at the rest of the content they share. He reported that they didn’t seem as bot-like as we first though.
So, what’s the deal? None of us want to report legitimate accounts as spam and possibly shut them down, but this practices of tweeting nothing but lists of hashtags provides no value to the accounts posting them or the communities represented by the tags.
Then I made a discovery in TweetDeck.
Note after the time and date that TweetDeck lets us know what was used to generate the post, in this case SocialOomph. So we went clicking through a bunch of these posts for several days. Every one of them was posted via SocialOomph. So, we reached out to them. Since there has been no response, we started posting this.
Myself, @SocialMichelleR & others are starting to report all the hashtag spammers to Twitter. Pls @SocialOomph stop the spam. #socialchat
— Alan K’necht (@aknecht) April 21, 2015
Ranting and reporting is all well and good, but we would rather give you something useful.
Even though SocialOomph could do something about how their tool automates social content like this, the final responsibility rests with the account holder that signed up for the service and granted access to tools like this to post on the account holder’s behalf.
First of all, as a community manager I have my issues with any service that will automatically create spam like this. Social Oomph even touts the ability to “plan, set, and forget.”
NEVER set and forget anything on social media.
Not only do you set yourself up to post pablum as seen above, but you could set yourself up for far worse reputation damaging posts.
Don’t let an automation tool create content for your accounts, either. The whole point of having a social media account should be to connect with people. In order to do that you have to keep your hands on the content you share, so that your remain on point and hold the interest of the communities you’re building.
Is there a place for automation and efficiency?
Yes, so long as you understand that scheduling (a good thing) is not automation. By all means schedule content that you want to share so that it’s spread out across your day, week, month. It’s amazing how quickly one person can handle a bulk of outbound posting duties with a good scheduling tool and give themselves more time to spend engaging with the members of their communities. But that is not the same thing as allowing a service to go off on its on to post on your behalf at certain times of the day or in response to follows, mentions, or messages.
Some tools that are fabulous for scheduling and more:
- TweetDeck for scheduling tweets
- HootSuite for scheduling posts on several channels. They also provide tracking of shortened links and other engagement insights. Basic tools are free.
- Buffer enables you to schedule for several channels and can help you discover great content to share. Basic service is free
- SproutSocial is a paid service that does scheduling, reporting, discovery, and team workflow.
Michelle Stinson Ross
Latest posts by Michelle Stinson Ross (see all)
- Facebook’s Rainbow Filters and the Algorithmic Echo Chamber - July 2, 2015
- Hashtag Spam – How NOT to Automate Your Social Media - May 12, 2015