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You Ask, I Answer: Social Media Technology Stack?

Heidi asks, “What are the major social media tools you use?”

My tools can be divided into three basic categories:
– Data science
– Social media management
– Content creation

For data science, I use:
– Crowdtangle from Facebook
Talkwalker monitoring
– The individual networks themselves
– Google GDELT for news
– R Studio and the R programming language
– Native platform APIs

For management, I use:
Agorapulse
– Custom code for creating content
– Various messaging
– Native platform apps

For content creation, I use:
– Adobe Creative Cloud
Techsmith Camtasia
Techsmith Snagit
– AIVA
Otter
– Joplin app
– Levelator app

You Ask, I Answer: Social Media Technology Stack?

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Machine-Generated Transcript

What follows is an AI-generated transcript. The transcript may contain errors and is not a substitute for watching the video.

In today’s episode, Heidi asks, What are the major social media tools you use? Gosh, that’s a big question.

I think probably the easiest way to roll this together, it would be looking at the tools by roll because there’s so many of them.

And with the understanding that I approach social media a little differently than, than most people, it’s, it’s a data source for me first, and then secondarily a platform for communication.

So I think that’s an important distinction to make.

For the data side of things, data science and data sources.

The big tools, there are going to be CrowdTangle from Facebook, which is still available if you were grandfathered into the council, but it’s a really rich data source allows you to download large quantities of data from Facebook, Instagram, and Reddit Talkwalker, which is a monitoring tool, but also just a really, really good source of data from all the major networks, blogs, forum, some stuff on the web, really, really powerful.

And very generous.

The amount of data can give you the individual social networks themselves, particularly their API’s, I use the Twitter API a ton.

And it is again, very robust gives you a lot of data.

I think I probably pulled guests by about 11, or 12% of every single Prime Day tweet, which is in the hundreds of thousands of tweets, from the Twitter API, the G delt project from Google, from the Google News initiative is a huge, massively huge database of news that gives you URLs gives you news impact and stuff, really terrific, very, very powerful.

Not really a great user interface.

But it doesn’t have to be, you get a Big Query database, and you have to know how to use it in order to get data out of it.

But if you want a comprehensive list of all the news happening in near real time, like in 15 minute intervals, you can’t beat it.

And then of course, for processing all this, I use the our programming language and our studio, which is a moderately friendly user interface, but really robust in terms of all the things it can do to help make processing all this data easier.

On the management side for managing my social media accounts.

Agorapulse is my tool of choice there.

Again, lets you connect everything lets us schedule stuff in bulk, which is very useful.

I wrote a lot of custom code to create content for, for social media, for publishing in particular.

So there’s a SQL database that I have that pulls in news and blogs and stuff and then scores them based on content that I want to be sharing on my accounts.

And then that spits out files, batch files for Agorapulse, that can then just load and then once a week, we fresh top up the accounts.

And then they have a week’s worth of content.

I did that because I got tired of spending hours a week curating content, when really, it’s a very repetitive task, that machines can do 80% as well.

90% as well as a person but you know, it’s it’s that’s more than good enough to trade hours a week for 15 minutes a week.

All the different messaging apps for managing your social media, Facebook, messenger, Instagram, all this stuff.

And all the native platform apps, particularly on mobile devices, because it’s just easiest to do one offs on those.

And those apps.

And then for content creation.

There’s a whole bunch of stuff there how you do use Adobe Creative Cloud, particularly Photoshop, an awful lot and Adobe Audition for editing audio.

So for things like podcasts, it’s it’s an invaluable tool.

I use TechSmith Camtasia I’m using right now to record these videos.

Because it’s, for me, it’s just the right balance of powerful and easy to use, right like iMovie it’s too easy to use not enough features too inflexible Adobe Premiere, is you know, it’s like taking a Harrier to the grocery store, you just not not a good fit.

Most of the time, it’s absolutely the gold standard for really big video projects, but not for a day to day stuff.

So Camtasia is sits right in the middle between those two.

Good enough nonlinear editor, good features, still can get in and get out and get done quickly.

Techsmith Snagit for screencaptures and for making animations, particularly Gif animations is super useful.

Ava is an AI tool for generating music.

So a lot of the intro and outro music in the content I create is machine generated because it’s really royalty free, you never have to pay for what you pay for the membership data, but then you don’t have to pay like royalties and things, which is always useful.

Make sure you never get sued.

otter otter.ai is a transcription service.

Again, we use it every single day with these posts, take these videos and turn them into transcripts and stuff.

The Joplin app, which is if you if you’re familiar with Evernote Joplin is an open source version of that.

And that is where I keep a lot of my notes.

A lot of my day to day publishing stuff gets stored in there are a lot of my writing for things like newsletters, and for longer social posts.

My daily pandemic newsletter I write in Joplin.

And finally, on the contents side, the Levelator app, which is a one click two clicks, leveling software that can fix a multitude of audio sins.

When you’re doing recordings, so especially for podcasts.

And that, Oh, I forgot a stream yard, we stream yard for live streaming for the Trust Insights, live show.

And all of these tools, they all have to work together in some fashion.

They all have to be you know, support data, import data export, be able to measure things well, for the content creation stuff has to support as many different formats as you know, feasible and reasonable.

So there’s a lot of tools I’ve looked at over the years that don’t fit into my workflow.

Just because I don’t use them doesn’t mean they’re bad.

It’s just that either they cost too much, or they they don’t work with how I like to work.

So I think it’s an important distinction when you’re building your social media technology stack.

It’s not a question necessarily of you know, the best in class software for every given job you’re trying to do.

It is more, making sure it works the way you work.

There’s there’s a lot of tools that are intuitive for some people, not intuitive for others.

Even something as silly as like when Facebook rolled out this new user interface, you know, a lot of people were like, What in the world is this thing.

And understandably, so it was a major change the new interface functions and more like a mobile app in a lot of ways.

And there’s some stuff from the old interface that I missed because it fit my workflow better.

This is not the case in in, in the new one.

So when you’re deciding about tools for your social media technology stack, make sure that they work with how you work, they work out how your team works.

That’s another important thing about a lot of the tools I mentioned here is many of them do support like teams and multiple users, some of them don’t.

Some of them are single user, things that you might have to share a login for and stuff.

So no, no your requirements before you start shopping, make sure you write them down.

Like it needs to do this, it needs to do this, this would be nice to have a nice to fit in this budget amount.

And that will give you a better sense of what works for you.

Regardless of what company you work for.

There will be some tools that you will just take with you from job to job that provide you a lot of power or just fit the way you personally work.

And don’t leave those behind.

If you change jobs change companies.

Don’t be afraid to take your stuff with you, even if it’s just managing your own personal social media accounts because some tools just work the way you work.

So you’ve got questions, leave them in the comments box below.

Subscribe to the YouTube channel and the newsletter.

I’ll talk to you soon.

Take care.

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