How leading companies use LinkedIn to promote sustainability messages -  iWONDER

  03 February 2020    Read: 1671
  How leading companies use LinkedIn to promote sustainability messages -   iWONDER

The first Sustainability Social Media Ranking from sustainability communications agency Context looked at how 100 companies use Twitter to communicate sustainability messages. In a new report, Context analyzes how companies use LinkedIn for sustainability communications.

Context found that LinkedIn generates significantly more engagement than Twitter, and that some companies are successfully using the personal account of their sustainability leader, in addition to a main corporate account.

How companies use LinkedIn

On LinkedIn, as on Twitter, companies potentially can employ three types of accounts:

  1. Main corporate
  2. Dedicated sustainability
  3. Personal account of a sustainability leader

Of the 100 companies in the survey, 99 made at least one sustainability post on their main corporate account, 47 sustainability leaders posted on their personal account, and only three companies used a dedicated sustainability account.

Methodology: how companies were ranked

Context collected data from 100 companies, identifying their main corporate and sustainability leader LinkedIn accounts (dedicated sustainability accounts were not included due to the small number).

Using a broad definition of sustainability — from climate strategy to volunteering — Context counted the frequency of posts and recorded the engagement they generated.

Success was measured by:

  1. Posting frequency — the number of posts with sustainability content
  2. Engagement — the number of likes and comments received
  3. Active listening — the number of times they liked or commented on other member posts (sustainability leader accounts only) 

Which companies did it best?

BP heads the overall ranking with a regular posting rate of 1.3 posts a day on its main corporate account, achieving an average of 640 engagements per post. BP was first without using a personal sustainability leader account.

Unilever is second with a posting rate of 0.78 per day and an impressive average of 1,061 engagements per post. Like BP, Unilever did not use a personal sustainability leader account for its communications.

Third place Marks & Spencer adopted a very different strategy, relying mainly on the personal account of Mike Barry, its former sustainability director. Barry made an impressive 4.3 posts per day while the Marks & Spencer corporate account made only five sustainability posts in three months. Overall Marks & Spencer achieved an average of 120 engagements per post. 

Here are the sector leaders

The 100-company survey contains nine sectors plus a group of five young companies, a.k.a. "newcomers." The overall sector leaders in social engagement on LinkedIn are:

Apparel : Nike

Beverages : Diageo

Extractives : BP

FMCG : Unilever

Food : Mars

Pharma and healthcare : Merck

Retail : M&S

Soft commodities : Olam International

Technology and communications : Google

Newcomers : WeWork

The importance of being a good listener

Sustainability social media has the potential to be a two-way conversation — think of it as a digital dinner party. Boring guests at dinner parties brag about their achievements without showing any interest in others. So, if you want to make friends on social media, make a point of taking an interest in other people’s posts, especially influencers. This means liking, commenting on and reposting their content. Context call this "active listening."

The most active listener was Barry, with a total of 1,053 responses to other people’s posts — an average of 12 a day. Not far behind was Simon Boas Hoffmeyer, sustainability director at Carlsberg, with 832 responses, averaging nine a day.

LinkedIn versus Twitter, which works best?

We had a hunch about this, but until we crunched the numbers, we had no idea of the margin. LinkedIn generates three to five times more engagement for sustainability posts than Twitter. Despite this, many teams are putting as much — or more — effort into their Twitter feed than their LinkedIn one.

10 tips for sustainability communications teams

Sustainability teams and their communications colleagues recognize their only option is to connect with their stakeholders on social media or not connect at all.

While websites and reports are the foundation for publishing detailed information on sustainability plans and programs, companies can’t expect these to attract high readership figures. If they want to move the needle on awareness, companies must tap the potential of social media.

One key tactical question arising from the survey is whether businesses should use a personal account of the sustainability leader and other team members to share their messages. The power of this was clearly demonstrated by several companies, notably M&S, Google and Coca-Cola.

A social media-savvy CSO will come across as an authentic voice, more readily accepted by influencers, who tire of corporate PR. The downside is that the influence they establish is owned by the individual who may leave the company.
That said, it could be better for the company to benefit from the personality while it can, rather than miss out. Social media influence is just one talent a person brings to a company. Why view an employee’s social media contribution differently from their other work roles?

The survey revealed how companies are approaching sustainability on social media and what they find challenging. Common questions were: How can we create short compelling messages? What’s the best way of dealing with negative issues? How do we engage with sustainability influencers?

The following 10 simple tips help establish an effective sustainability campaign on LinkedIn and other platforms:

1. Balance messaging and listening

The primary goal may be to get content noticed. But this is only half the job. By engaging with another user’s post your team can open a dialogue: "active listening." Use both messaging and listening for better engagement.

2. Tailor content to platform and audience

LinkedIn is more focused on the professional community than other platforms. The audience includes current employees, potential recruits, business partners and influencers. Create thought-provoking posts to spark conversation among these groups.

3. Focus on relevant topics

Participate in conversations that are timely and relevant to your work. Follow people, companies, topics and hashtags to ensure you don’t miss a beat and your posts are relevant to broader conversation.

4. Repurpose content

Tremendous effort goes into your sustainability reports, media campaigns, press releases and events. Adapt this content for LinkedIn, expanding your audience and improving your ROI.

5. Create a community

Ask your colleagues to post their content and to share yours. Being generous by sharing and commenting on other people’s posts makes it more likely they will return the favor.

6. Use pictures and video

Every post should feature a visual element relating to the text, such as videos, photos, or branded graphics. Videos should be 30 seconds or less and uploaded directly to the platform — this means they will play automatically.

7. Include a link

Include a hyperlink to learn more through a LinkedIn article or external website. Use link-shortening sites such as bit.ly.

8. Optimize timing

LinkedIn users are most active during the weekdays. Research shows the best times to post are between 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays.

9. React, in real time

Monitor LinkedIn activity regularly so you can react quickly. This helps conversations feel more authentic and drives engagement. If your team is asked a question, make sure someone responds quickly.

10. Measure progress

Set yourself simple LinkedIn goals, and track your progress. Look to build followers and even more important, engagement. LinkedIn Analytics is the tool for company pages.

For sustainability managers and communicators, it’s no longer a question of whether to use social media, it's how to use social media. Context’s surveys have revealed the approaches that work best on Twitter and LinkedIn. Its forthcoming research will focus on the big consumer social media platforms.

 

Read the original article on greenbiz.com.


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