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Speaking Speaking and and being heard being heard : : how advocacy organizations gain attention in how advocacy organizations gain attention in the social media world the social media world Chao Guo University of Pennsylvania Gregory D. Saxton University at Buffalo May 30, 2014

Speaking and being heard: How nonprofit advocacy organizations gain attention in the social media world

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Slides from presentation at ANSER/ARES Conference, Brock University, St Catharines, ON, May 30, 2014. ABSTRACT: Social media offer an alternative broadcast and communication medium for nonprofit advocacy organizations. Yet the social media era also ushers in an increasingly “noisy” information environment that renders it more difficult for any given organization to make its voice heard. How then can an organization gain attention on social media? We address this question by building and testing a model of the effectiveness of the Twitter use of advocacy organizations. Using number of retweets and number of favorites as proxies of attention, we test our hypotheses with a 12-month panel dataset that collapses by month and organization the 219,915 tweets sent by 145 organizations in 2013. We find that attention is strongly associated with the size of an organization’s network, its frequency of speech, and the number of conversations it joins. We also find a seemingly contradictory relationship between different measures of attention and an organization’s targeting and connecting strategy. For full copy of paper please contact the authors at http://social-metrics.org

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Page 1: Speaking and being heard: How nonprofit advocacy organizations gain attention in the social media world

Speaking Speaking and and being heardbeing heard: : how advocacy organizations gain attention in the how advocacy organizations gain attention in the social media worldsocial media world

Chao GuoUniversity of Pennsylvania

Gregory D. Saxton

University at Buffalo

May 30, 2014

Page 2: Speaking and being heard: How nonprofit advocacy organizations gain attention in the social media world

Causal Framework

Page 3: Speaking and being heard: How nonprofit advocacy organizations gain attention in the social media world

Data and Method Our sample comprises 145 “Civil Rights

and Advocacy” organizations rated by Charity Navigator in 2011.

We test our hypotheses with a 12-month panel dataset—this organization-month level dataset collapses by month and organization the 219,915 tweets that were sent by the 145 organizations over the entire 12 months of 2013.

Page 4: Speaking and being heard: How nonprofit advocacy organizations gain attention in the social media world

# of Tweets sent each month by the AARP Foundation

Page 5: Speaking and being heard: How nonprofit advocacy organizations gain attention in the social media world

Findings:Who Gets Attention?

Size of the network matters The average number of followers for the 250 tweets with no retweets:

5,160 The average number of followers for the 250 tweets with the most

retweets: 63,279 A small # of followers (then the amount you tweet does not matter)

Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) <900 followers, 4 friends, 0 retweets.

Page 6: Speaking and being heard: How nonprofit advocacy organizations gain attention in the social media world

Findings (cont’d):Who Gets Attention?

Volume (or frequency) of speech matters Speaking – Show your presence.

A lot of LGBT messages, e.g., gay marriage, GLAAD, The Trevor Project, etc.

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Findings (cont’d):Who Gets Attention?

Targeting & connecting strategy matters: Targeting

Public Reply Messages e.g., “@joeymygod Thanks for the RT!”

Connecting – build alliances. Retweeting other people’s messages. Hashtags (#anser2014) – connecting to topics

URLs (hyperlinks) User mentions

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Findings (cont’d):Who Gets Attention?

Visual content matters: Photos Link to photos Link to videos

Page 9: Speaking and being heard: How nonprofit advocacy organizations gain attention in the social media world

Expected Number of Retweets Received at Various Levels of Tweeting, Retweeting, and Tagging Activity