Last month, the Consumer Healthcare Products Association’s (CHPA) Up and Away campaign launched a cross-platform photo-sharing campaign called Share Your Place. The Share Your Place program asks parents to share a photo of the place they store medicines and vitamins at home to keep them out of reach of young children. Users and brands have begun to recognize the power of sharing photos across platforms. On average, Facebook users upload more than 300 million photos each day, and the advent of mobile applications and photo-sharing platforms, such as Instagram, have made it easier than ever for people to upload and share photos to many different platforms at the same time. For its Share Your Place program, CHPA wanted to capitalize on the growing trends of young parents beginning to experiement with different social media platforms for photo sharing. By encouraging parents of young children to “share their place” on whichever platform(s) were most convient for them, CHPA was able to spark conversation on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, and provide its audiences with concrete visual examples of how to store medicines and vitamins safely in their own homes. CHPA asked its network to take photos of safe storage places, tag the photos with the unique #MedsUpAway hashtag, and post to Facebook, Twitter, and/or Instagram. CHPA also provided its partners with sample promotional posts, so those organizations could help spread the word about the program. In the first week, the Share Your Place program generated 7 blog posts, 33 photos, 109 mentions of the #MedsUpAway hashtag, and more than 500,000 impressions, or potential views of posts with this hashtag. As social media evolves and new platforms gain traction, it is important to consider the ways organizations can engage their audiences across platforms, just as CHPA has done with Share Your Place. People use various platforms in their daily lives, and if organizations are flexible, they have the opportunity to increase awareness and engagement, and reduce barriers for user participation. The recent roll-out of hashtag functionality on Facebook, highlighted in the tips section below, is an example of how social media platforms are making it easier for people to post across platforms, as well. To learn more about the Share Your Place program, please visit the CHPA’s OTC safety website. |
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TIPS OF THE MONTH
Hashtags, common on Twitter and Instagram, are a
tagging functionality that allows users to tag their updates, search
for tagged posts by others, and connect to larger conversation around
one topic. In June, Facebook introduced hashtags
to its platform, so users can now click on a hashtag, such as
#substanceuse or #mentalillness, in a status update and see how others
are talking about these topics. Below, you will find tips on how
organizations can take advantage of this new Facebook functionality.
For more information, read the full blog post on Hubspot.
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