The Art of social media influencer outreach
In my 8-week online course on social media marketing for higher ed, I’ve always emphasized the importance of identifying your social media influencers. Whether they are current students (your social media ambassadors), famous alums, popular faculty members or even regular university employees, influencers can amplify your social media campaigns and even help you win the fight against the social media algorithms ready to bury your content.
If your social media influencers have a good number of followers, a mere tweet can lead to a lot of exposure – on Twitter, but also elsewhere.
Yesterday, when I first heard about UT Knowville’s success story with a simple mention of Dolly Parton’s Twitter account, I immediately asked Cassandra Sproles, Senior Editor & Executive Editor, Torchbearer magazine at UT Knoxville, if I could save this great example for my current (and future) students.
Cassandra agreed to share her story in this guest post I’m publishing below – the 1st in a new series focusing on higher ed social media success stories (Got one? Email me at karine@higheredexperts.com).
Start with the right story
We love Dolly Parton at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. She’s a favorite daughter of East Tennessee—born in Sevierville, just about an hour away from campus—who left the mountains and made it big but never forgot her roots or her people. So, when I heard about a class on campus looking at Appalachian history through the lens of Dolly, I knew it would be a good choice for a feature in the university’s Torchbearer magazine.
When the print version of the magazine hit mailboxes in early April, we immediately began to see organic mentions of the story on social media—alumni wanting to come back to take the class, current students asking how they could sign up, and Dolly fans tweeting things like, “Shut up and take my money!â€
Share with a mention, but don’t ask
As we usually do with most of the magazine’s content, I put the story out on social media, tagging Dolly on Twitter but never really expecting a reply. Our social team had tagged Dolly in the past since she is one of our honorary degree recipients and sometimes appears in fundraising videos for the university, but we had never gotten a reply. Within three days, Dolly’s account (with 4.55 million followers) had quoted our tweet, replying, “From the girl voted in High School ‘least likely to succeed’ this sure is a blessing!â€
Social media might open several doors
Dolly’s website then posted a short article about the course, and from there the story went viral. It received mentions from multiple news and entertainment outlets—most notably the New York Times, which did a full story on the class for their print and digital editions and shared the story on several of their Twitter accounts.
Other outlets included NPR, Rolling Stone, Southern Living, Mental Floss, New York Magazine, BBC, Wall Street Journal, and local media. One of my personal favorites, was a mention from Broadway star Kristen Chenoweth who obviously adores Dolly. We replied that we would save her a seat in the class! On top of media mentions, the professor who wrote the course has also been offered a couple of book deals from the likes of Penguin and Random House.
Here’s a quick look at the stats for our original tweet:
A quick scan of Dolly’s Twitter shows that her retweet performed remarkably well, garnering about three times more likes, and, on average, double the retweets compared to her other tweets.
Be thankful and learn!
We can only guess why Dolly’s account decided to retweet our story. We know she likes to give East Tennessee a leg up whenever she can. Or maybe it was because Dolly is such an advocate for education—more than one million children (birth to five years old) in four countries receive a free book every month from Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library. Whatever the reason, we know the story helped strengthen our brand as well as Dolly’s.
In the everyday hustle of social media, our team has a kind of a hierarchy of topics that we know always do well when we push them out. It goes: Pat Summitt, Peyton Manning, our mascot Smokey, and the Rock (a huge rock that anyone can paint). I think we’re now going to have to add Dolly to that list.