It still makes companies nervous to allow employees to use social media — at all — but particularly on behalf of the company. What helps, and is often the first stage to get through before a company is ready to engage on the social web, is for the company to draft and adopt a social media policy.
Personally, I don’t believe in social media policies – I think you can have employee codes of conduct in general and address specifically what your expectations are for employee conduct online as well as off, but I don’t believe a company should or can successfully dictate what an employee does online or even fully monitor the employee’s online activity (unless that’s how you want to spend all your time.) Read Five Reasons Why Your Company Doesn’t Need a Social Media Policy if that’s where you’re leaning — if not, read on!
Nevertheless, many industries, fields, practices, firms, companies, organizations, etc. require the social web and its staff members’ use of it addressed and I am here to help.
Five Elements of a Successful Social Media Policy
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