Would you like to donate your Facebook or Twitter profile for one day to help the fight against childhood malnutrition?
Ahead of this year’s World Food Day (Oct. 16), Doctors Without Borders launched an app that enabled supporters to donate their Facebook or Twitter profiles for
its initiative to “help rewrite the story of malnutrition.” The app
then shared messages about the Starved for Attention campaign on the
donated profiles over a period of 24 hours.
“I’m asking @USAID to send nutritious food to kids BEFORE they get severely malnourished. http://bit.ly/195mill #STRVD,” said one of the tweets the app shared to donors’ Twitter profiles.
Twitter, of course, has proven to be very helpful for the renowned
humanitarian group. In January 2010, a tweet from one U.S. television
host prompted the U.S. Air Force to allow Doctors Without Borders to
land its planes inside quake-hit Haiti. Twitter hailed it the most
powerful tweet of that year.
Doctors Without Borders and its sister chapter in Spain, Médicos Sin
Fronteras, rank among the most successful humanitarian organizations on
Facebook and Twitter, based on our research. They join several U.N.
agencies, Red Cross chapters and Samaritan’s Purse on our top 10 rankings for the two social media platforms.
Here’s the complete list:
*as of Oct. 27, 2011
Top 10 Humanitarian Agencies on Social Media
Facebook
likes* |
Twitter
followers* |
|||
1
|
1.2 million+
|
1.2 million+
|
||
2
|
431,000+
|
616,000+
|
||
3
|
384,000+
|
556,000+
|
||
4
|
380,000+
|
452,000+
|
||
5
|
151,000+
|
210,000+
|
||
7
|
109,000+
|
149,000+
|
||
6
|
106,000+
|
92,000+
|
||
8
|
73,000+
|
70,000+
|
||
9
|
54,000+
|
31,000+
|
||
10
|
40,000+
|
19,000+
|
Humanitarian groups — many of which also provide longer-term
development assistance — use Facebook and Twitter differently,
recognizing that these channels draw different types of audiences.
Samaritan’s Purse, for instance, finds that its fans on Facebook have
been supporters of the organization’s ministry for years. On Twitter,
many of its followers are interested in technical details of its relief
work.
“That highlights that one of the most important things to remember as
you’re engaging your audience on social media is to know who your
audience is, and to know what they care about, what they’re talking
about, what they want from you, and how you can add value to
conversations that they’re already having,” Hope Blaylock, integrated
marketing manager at Samaritan’s Purse, told Devex.
Doctors Without Borders, meanwhile, differentiates the use of
Facebook, Twitter and other social media channels based on its
communications objectives.
Jason Cone, communications director for the group, said when it comes
to rapidly building attention to a particular issue, Twitter is a much
better tool than Facebook, but Facebook is oftentimes more adapted to
making calls to action and engaging people.
“Facebook’s value is very different from that of Twitter,” Cone said.
“Understanding your objectives for any communication is fundamental to
evaluating the appropriate platforms to disseminate those messages and
the manner in which to engage supporters and influencers as well as the
types of content to disseminate.”
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