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Thursday
Mar222012

Ariel Hyatt's Social Media Food Pyramid

YOUR SOCIAL MEDIA FOOD PYRAMID

With social media growing at such a rapid pace, I decided it was a good idea to revisit my social media food pyramid and update it for 2012.

So…

Here’s Your Social Media Food Pyramid

It happens to me all of the time when I teach artists social media.The face goes blank, the frustration begins to settle in and then the artist says it:

“I just don’t have anything interesting to say.”

REALLY?

I’m shocked by this every time.  You are an artist; you do things we mere mortals are totally enamored by: you PLAY MUSIC, you write songs, you perform them in public!

So PUHLEEASE, do not tell me you have nothing interesting to say. I ain’t buying it.

All you are missing is a System for Social Media Success.

Luckily, unlike sheer god-given musical talent, social media is a learnable skill.

The inspiration for this hit me while I was teaching my system to a client in my kitchen…

THE FOOD PYRAMID!

Now, I’ve been told they don’t actually teach this in school anymore… but for those of you old enough to remember, do you remember that chart they brought out when we were in 2nd grade to show us how to eat well-rounded meals? I have re-tooled it for you so you can now participate on Social Media healthily! And you won’t even have to think about it – just follow along…

You wouldn’t eat only bagels all of the time.  They are a treat once in awhile, but they are not healthy to eat every day - and a diet of only bagels would be boring!

Most artists are only serving their audiences bagels all of the time. Plain bagels. Over and over again.

Uninteresting.

We want a burger, or a giant green healthy salad, we want some candy.

We want the protein, but you keep serving bagels, bagels, bagels!

These are five things that when used in concert with one another can help you ratchet up your social media effectively and manage it easily.

Use these as a guide to mix and match them to suit your comfort level (just like your diet, eat what feels right for you)

GROUP 1. DIRECT ENGAGEMENT

Like: BREAD, CEREAL, RICE & PASTA

Servings (Recommended Frequency): 3 - 4 out of every 10 posts

Make sure you’re in a two-way conversation with people consistently

Facebook: See something interesting on a fan, friend or band’s Facebook pages? Don’t just “like” it, write a true comment about it and get more involved.

Twitter: Send messages to people or mention you are with them by using the @ sign and their username (For Example: I’m @CyberPR). Retweet (RT) comments you like by others.

Blog Reading: Create a Google Profile and join communities of blog readers. Leave comments on blogs you like. Google Profiles are now attached to your Google+ account so make sure you get set up with a Google+ account as well!

Tumblr: Tumblr is a simple to use blogging platform that will allow you to comment on and re-blog others’ links, quotes, videos and songs with a click of a button.

Youtube: Bonus! Make custom video comments or greetings with a smartphone; post them as comments or contributions. Subscribe to other people’s channels, and comment on their videos. A brand new service called Viddy which allows you to capture quick, 15 second videos that can be posted to Facebook or Twitter. Jason wrote a Musician’s Arsenal Guide to Viddy that will better explain how it works.

Foursquare: Create fun spots that relate to your band/ music and check in, interact with others when you are out and about. Of course, Facebook now has Facebook Places which functions quite similarly, though it doesn’t have nearly as much functionality in terms of making lists and engaging as it’s own stand alone platform.

GROUP 2: SHINE A LIGHT ON OTHERS

Like: FRUITS & VEGETABLES

Servings (Recommended Frequency): 3 out of every 10 posts

All the best social media users know this and use it well. This takes all of the attention off of you and puts it onto others, and people will appreciate your kindness because you are recognizing them in front of new potential fans and followers and therefore helping them get known.

Quote people you like by sharing their profiles and videos on Facebook and re-post on your blog.  Link to articles and interesting things that catch your attention such as videos, photos etc.

#FF (Follow Friday), #MM (Music Monday) and RT’ing on Twitter - Reprint pieces of things that they’ve written, or link to music players. Review albums - talk about why and how those albums influenced you by using http://www.bit.ly to track the effectiveness and to shorten your tweets.

GROUP 3. CURATE CONTENT

Like: MEAT, POULTRY, FISH, BEANS, EGGS

Servings (Recommended Frequency): 2 - 3 out of every 10 posts

Content may be king, but content curation is queen!

The best part is you can set up an RSS reader to pull interesting content for you so you don’t have to come up with anything brilliant – just select what you like and share it. And if it’s interesting to you, it’s probably interesting to your community.

Ask yourself: How do I spend time online?  What do I read? Are there sites I visit daily?  Add them to the RSS reader (here is a brilliant Commoncraft video that will teach you how to set one up. Then all you have to do is grab the content you like and share (remember to always give credit where credit is due).

Music: Use Spotify to share songs, albums and playlists on Facebook.

Recipes: Post links to foods you like from Epicurious or TheFoodNetwork

Media: Post book reviews, music reviews or film reviews

Blogs: News, politics, celebrity gossip, parenting, fashion, art, sports – all make good topics for people to connect around

GROUP 4.  A PICTURE SAYS 1,000 WORDS

Like: MILK, CHEESE & YOGURT

Servings (Recommended Frequency): 2 out of every 10 posts

Visuals are extremely effective. And they mix up your strategy nicely.

Take photos using your mobile and post them to Facebook and Twitter. If you have an iPhone, the best way to do this is using the Instagram app.

I love Twitpic & YFrog because they are so easy to use and create instant Twitter integration.

Pinterest is a wonderful way to share photos of anything you are passionate about, and create some boards for your music and your merch too.

Post videos on your custom Youtube channel, embed them on your blog and link them to your Twitter. They don’t even have to be videos that you necessarily make on your own. They can be videos of artists you sound like or play with, videos that make you laugh, or subjects that are thematic to your music and important to you like a charity.

GROUP 5. SHINING A LIGHT ON YOURSELF (AKA SELF PROMOTION)

Like: FATS OILS & SWEETS (Use Sparingly!)

Servings (Recommended Frequency): 1 out of every 10 posts

Of course these are OK to do once in a while, not in an over-hypey, annoying way.  Just like treating yourself to a great pastry or some fries: it’s OK – but not too often!

It is after all, vital to tell people if you have an album coming out, a new track, a show, or anything that’s newsworthy, noteworthy, and important for your fans and followers to know about.

Don’t forget about your specific calls to actions or these won’t be fruitful.

So – Choose from Groups 1-5 and mix it up and soon you will be fully engaging people easily and naturally, without thinking. Just like eating!

Reader Comments (4)

This is great Ariel, thanks for organizing this.

March 22 | Unregistered CommenterJohn Pisciotta

This is one of the TOP most helpful articles I've read about how to get the most out of social media. It's so hard to know what to post and when. Or if something is really post-worthy or if I'll just annoy people.

One question: I'm in a band with 6 other people. Is it important to create a singular identity for band posts? Or should each band member sign their tweets & posts every time? -Devon http://www.facebook.com/lightsalive

March 22 | Unregistered CommenterLights Alive

this is such a helpful and well-organized article! I think it works for a lot of different industries well beyond music. We're sharing it on our blog! Thanks!

March 26 | Unregistered CommenterShirley

More bands out there definitely need to catch wind of this concept! Everything needs to be done in moderation, especially self-promotion! I would say that’s the most important to keep watch of posting. Nobody likes being around somebody who only talks about themselves all of the time, why would a fan like to establish a sort of relationship like that with a band that they could like?

April 15 | Unregistered CommenterAdrian Garza

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