Social media is a vital part of marketing your business, giving you new ways to access people. As companies ponder what to post on social platforms and how to represent their brands, they might be overlooking something critical: a social media policy.
Has your company made a social media policy? If not, here are some answers to often asked questions about how that works — and why you need one.
All policies for your company are created to protect both the company and the employees; a social media policy is no different. It is an outline to explain what is acceptable to be posted on social media outlets to ensure that the appropriate information is shared with customers and team members. Your policy might outline your marketing team’s posts on your business accounts or what your employees can post on their personal pages — or both.
Social media is a tool that can be used to expand your brand awareness, and you want to make sure your employees are good brand ambassadors. One recent example during the Coronavirus pandemic is employees working from home who post joking images showing that they aren’t doing any work. Even if your team member has no mention of your page on his or her Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, or Snapchat account, this may come back and reflect poorly on your brand.
This is not legal advice. Depending on the situation, you may or may not be able to fire or discipline employees for things they do or say on social media. Speak to your attorney about this. However, your company could also be held liable for things employees say online.
So the short answer is no, you cannot control everything your team members will say. However, your policy should outline what employees can and cannot say about the company and can limit people from posting on personal accounts during working hours.
With new social outlets emerging constantly, it is important to make broad statements that can be applied to all social media accounts.
Your policy should spell out the roles of people who have access to the business accounts and what can and cannot be said there. Your rules here can be as strict as you want; they are the company’s accounts and you have control of those. In this section, you might include information about your company’s branding guide, such as colors, logos, and typefaces you use. Cite examples of good and bad wording and things to mention.
In the section about employee behavior, you need to tread more carefully. According to the Society for Human Resource Management, your policy should ask employees to:
A few other things to include:
Creating a policy can protect you later. If there ever is an issue involving social media, you will have a list of guidelines and rules that have been agreed upon. If an employee breaches this contract, you should have consequences put into place to ensure that it does not happen again. Contact us if you need help with your social media management.