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Social Media Best Practices for Senior Living and LTC

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7 Best Social Media Tools For Senior Living And Long-Term Care

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Social Media IconsAs we've seen from my Social Media Success interview series and related posts, innovative senior living and LTC companies are beginning to discover the many benefits of social media and online community. These early adopters are paving the way for everyone else as they discover what works, and what doesn't on the social Web. Based on these posts, I've compiled a list (not in any particular order) of the top seven social media tools for the industry, along with some descriptions of why they made the list and how they can help your organization. 

Social media is not a panacea. Your online presence and activities won't replace the relationships you build with residents and families and the great work you do in the physical world. However, used properly, these tools can accelerate your growth by helping you expand your online reach, attract and engage new customers, build relationships with prospects, and participate in the online conversations. Here's the list:

  1. Twitter. Noelle Kurth, Marketing Director for At Home Personal Care in Mesa, AZ showed us in this post that Twitter can be an easy, powerful, and free tool for networking with other professionals, broadcasting news and information about your company, recruiting, and building brand awareness. Twitter can help you build a community around your brand as well as keep you on top of important industry news and events in real time. By syndicating content from your blog or website to Twitter, you can build a following, enable sharing of your content, and drive traffic back to your website. 
  2. Facebook. If there is one place online that you can bet many of your customers and prospects are hanging out, it's Facebook. Building a Facebook Page is a smart move for companies in our industry because it allows you to tap into an existing popular online community of boomers and seniors that's growing by the minute, literally. People who already have a Facebook account (and there's only about 300 million last I checked) can easily follow and engage with your company. The best part is that they can easily share their love for you with their friends. Like Twitter, Facebook Pages can be used to syndicate blog content, post news, information, and events, and share other multimedia content (like YouTube videos) with your followers. And like Twitter, Facebook can be used to help with employer branding and recruiting. 
  3. Linkedin. This is THE social network for professionals. If you're a senior living or LTC professional, you should have a free Linkedin account. Linkedin allows you to build a professional network, share content, post job openings, research prospects, join industry groups, participate in forums, scan industry news, and much more. 
  4. Blog. These days, a company blog is an essential tool in the online arsenal. I review the details of why you need a company blog in this post, but the bottom line is that a blog is a fantastic tool for building community, and for many companies, it can serve as a social media hub. Content and links are currency on the new social Web, and a blog allows you to publish content and distribute that content to your social media outposts like Twitter, Facebook, and Linkedin. From there, your community can share your content with their friends - driving traffic back to your blog and website organically. This is called inbound marketing and it's much more powerful these days than in-your-face interruptive marketing. Another creative way to use a blog is to build one for your customers to use, like Beacon Hill Retirement Community did. You can check out an example of that here
  5. YouTube. My friends over at Brookdale Senior Living do some good stuff with YouTube. Here's an example. YouTube makes it very easy to publish video content to your Website. If you have a blog, it's even easier to take your YouTube videos and embed them right into your posts. Video is an incredibly powerful medium, and with little or no money, you can create fantastic video content that your Twitter and Facebook fans will love (and share). 
  6. Branded Online Community. For a more comprehensive social media solution (and here's the shameless plug for my business), a branded online community like the ones built by Terrace Communities and Living Well Assisted Living At Home may be your best bet. Branded online communities have a distinct advantage over using, say, Facebook to build community in that you have much more control over the platform, the features, the branding, the ads, and the content. Most community platforms include a blog and discussion forums and some, like the ones mentioned above, come with community calendars, file cabinets, and photo galleries - all of which can be syndicated to your social media outposts like Twitter, Linkedin, and Facebook. Learn more about branded online communities here.
  7. Email. Yes that's right, I said email. Email is actually the largest and most popular (by far) social media and online community platform in the world. If you think about it, anybody who uses email has an address book filled with the contact information of people in their various networks - and they connect, communicate, and share with their networks via email all the time. Tools like eNewsletters using platforms like MailChimp and ConstantContact can be a great way to stay in touch with your customers and provide them with interesting news and information (with linkbacks to your site or blog) that they can pass on to their email networks. 

While all of these tools take proper strategy, resources, and time, the potential benefits to your organization, your customers, your staff, and your prospects are clear. Social networks and social media are fundamentally changing the way your customers and prospects learn, evaluate and ultimately make decisions. Social tools like the ones mentioned above are increasingly influential in marketing and sales practices. Customers seek evidence online to validate decisions and get instant feedback from their peers through social networks. By joining the conversation and giving people an opportunity to connect with you online, you have the ability to educate, inform, support and engage your audience in new ways never before possible. Are you using social media? 

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Brian Geyser, APRN-BC, MSN is a clinician, consultant, educator, blogger, online community manager and the founder of Carenetworks, LLC. He blogs regularly here at Carenetworks.com and would love to connect with you on Twitter, Linkedin, and/or Facebook.    


Beacon Hill Retirement Community Launches Resident Blog - Smart Move

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Here's a great example of a senior living company building an online community using a blog as their platform. Beacon Hill Retirement Community, located in Lombard, Illinois, recently set up and launched a resident-owned "online magazine" called "Let's Talk" built on the popular blogging platform WordPress. The blog allows residents (average age of 86) to publish multimedia content to the site including articles, videos, photos, menus, polls, and more.

According to the marketing firm that helped Beacon Hill set up the blog, nearly 1500 visitors have visited the site to date. Fresh content is added to the site over 50 times per month with an average of 23 feature stories designed to appeal to seniors and their adult children along with other items geared to resident's interests. A Beacon Hill resident committee helps steer and develop content by telling management what they want to read, link to, write themselves; and also how to promote the site to other residents, peers and family members. 

Management is also helping to promote the use of the site. They have installed two computers in common areas that are dedicated to Let's Talk; they've added special suggestion boxes in the dining areas; they promote the site in the monthly newsletter; and local TV stations have apparently picked up on the story. 

Beacon Hill's marketing firm created the site and assists with community engagement, content creation, site management, evaluation metrics and strategy. According to the firm, Let's Talk is becoming as popular with the resident's as Nintendo Wii and the site is helping with marketing to prospects. 

This is just another example of what the future holds for senior living and eldercare as more and more seniors take to the social web and social media marketing moves into the mainstream. 

To learn more about how online community and social media can benefit your senior living, homecare, or eldercare company, visit CareNetworks.com. To ensure you continue to get great articles and news like this delivered as it's published, subcribe to our blog. 

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Brian Geyser, APRN-BC, MSN is a clinician, consultant, educator, blogger, online community manager and the founder of Carenetworks, LLC. He blogs regularly here at Carenetworks.com and would love to connect with you on Twitter, Linkedin, and/or Facebook.   


How Senior Living & Eldercare Companies Can Build A Winning Social Media Team

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social media team imageSenior living and eldercare service providers who dabble in social media quickly realize that, in order to do it right, they need a small internal crew of Web savvy staffers who can manage and be responsible for the organization's social media efforts. Just check out any of my recent interviews with industry organizations using social media to prove my point. Even if you decide to hire a pro to do some of the work for you, people inside the organization still need to be involved. Here are a few ways to build your internal social media team without breaking the bank:

  1. Identify your crew. Look for people from different departments (admin., marketing, recreation, nursing, social services, food services, dementia care) who are already using social media in their daily lives (Twitter, Facebook, Linkedin, etc.) and who would be jazzed about helping your organization get into it, or get better at it.
  2. Recruit your best staff. Try to get your stars from each department involved, even if they're not all social media savvy. Include your company's social connectors, like your receptionist and your popular direct care staff, in the mix. 
  3. Promote a social culture. Let everyone from staff to customers to partners know about your social media strategy, empower them to get involved, and give them tools to do it.
  4. Participate yourself. Top managers and senior leaders of the organization must participate on a regular basis, even if just once a week. It's hard to get your staff involved, engaged and excited if you're not stepping up too. Plus, you want to have the perspective of senior leaders added to the mix. 
  5. Communicate expectations. Decide what you expect from each member of the team and put it in writing. Make sure each member is able to dedicate a little time each day or each week to meeting the expectations. 
  6. Identify a social media manager. One person within the organization should ultimately be responsible for all social media activity, including posting content, monitoring social media outposts, and responding to company-related activity. The marketing person may be a good choice. Sometimes it makes sense to have two co-managers. You can also hire an external pro to do some of this for you, but you will still need a point person within your company to work with the pro. To get a sense of what a social media manager does, check out this list
  7. Cover yourself first. Have policies and guidelines in place so everyone knows what they can and cannot do online. Make sure you address HIPAA in your policies. 
  8. Measure progress. Set goals with time lines and develop ways to ensure that you are achieving them. Here are a few resources for measuring social media success:

Getting Professional Help

For some organizations, it may make sense to hire a pro to do the heavy lifting. The benefits to having an outside seasoned professional on your team can far outweigh the costs. Their experience, objectivity, technical skill, and guidance can be invaluable in a social media world that just keeps changing. Just make sure the person has a verifiable social media and online community building track record. Ideally, the person would also have direct experience in the industry and segment your company belongs to. For more about professional social media services to our industry, visit carenetworks.com.

Oh, and you may want to aviod this guy:

 

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Brian Geyser, APRN-BC, MSN is a clinician, consultant, educator, blogger, online community manager and the founder of Carenetworks, LLC. He blogs regularly here at Carenetworks.com and would love to connect with you on Twitter, Linkedin, and/or Facebook.   


Senior Living Companies: You Must Blog Now!

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What? Why?

If there's one thing every senior living company needs to have on their Website right now, its a blog. Why? First, a blog allows you to easily post dynamic content to your site, broadcast it across the Web for free, and puts your company on the social media grid. Second, your competitors are doing it. Third, your customers are all over it. Forth, done right, your blog will supercharge your SEO, establish you as a trusted resource, and drive prospects, potential partners, and potential employees to your Website. If you want proof, check out this interview with SeniorsforLiving.com. And finally, without one, you will become invisible online. 

Explain.

Every day, boomers with elderly parents, caregivers seeking senior living or eldercare solutions, and skilled employees looking for a good company to work for use the social Web and new media to search for answers and opportunities. Your blog is the place that can (and should) provide them with the information, advice, tips, resources, knowledge, skills, help, support, and opportunities they need. Unless your Website has social components (like a blog), its basically an online brochure with nothing more than canned marketing messages, fancy photos, and information about you. These days, that's not enough. You need more, and a good place to start is a blog. 

How? 

Setting up a blog is fairly easy. For companies on a serious budget, I recommend using WordPress, a free blogging platform that has all the features a company needs to get started. The more challenging aspect of having a blog, of course, is the blogging itself. Blogging takes time and has to be done right. But in this new world of social media, you can't afford not to do it. 

Here are 14 tips to help you succeed with a company blog: 

  1. Pick the "Main Blogger." Someone in the company has to be responsible for posting to and maintaining the blog. That person should be someone who you trust to be the online voice of your company or organization. Staff like your conceirge, activity director, or marketer may be a good choice. Senior executives should contribute to the blog at least monthly. If you can get your department heads to post one article a month, that would be ideal. 
  2. Be human. Write as though you're writing to a family member, not a faceless mass of people. Use your postings to connect with your audience through your own (or your company's) style and personality. Let YOU come through. Write in the first person, using "I" and write almost like you're having a conversation. Speak to your specific audience and always keep them in mind as you write. 
  3. Be Helpful. I hate to say it, but nobody really cares about the fancy messaging on your company Website. Every senior living company Website says pretty much the same thing. So on your company blog, you want to give people fresh, honest, unique content and actionable information they can use today to make informed decisions and get stuff done. 
  4. Break information into chunks. People typically don't like to read long drawn-out paragraphs.  Break up your paragraphs, use bullet points, use lists, and stay on topic.  If you want to cover other topics, it's better to write new posts covering those other topics. 
  5. Use a captivating title. Your title should prompt people to want to read the post.  Use calls to action like, "Three Must-Read Books On Healthy Aging For 2009" or lists like, "15 Ways To Stay Connected To Family In Assisted Living."  Use all caps in the title. 
  6. Post from experience. Boomers and seniors love stories and first-hand accounts. If you have personal experience in certain aspects of care giving for example, write about it. Use case studies; tell readers how you or your company solved a particular problem. This shows readers that you know what you're talking about and you're trust worthy. It can also begin to position you and your company as an authority on the subject. 
  7. Write well. This cannot be taken for granted. I don't care how salient your post is, if it's poorly written, you will not be taken seriously. In fact, you can even damage your online reputation.
  8. Use images. Always try to place an "intro image" at the beginning of a post. The image should have something to do with your content. Be mindful of copyright issues. Try to use images licensed under creative commons licensing. You can find a lot of these on Flikr
  9. Post regularly. Readers are more likely to read your blog if you have a regular posting schedule. Post at least once per week, and stick to it. 
  10. Market your blog. Syndicate your content out to other social media sites like LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter. Put a link to your blog in your email signature and on business cards. 
  11. Create a "sneeze page." A sneeze page is a blog post that reviews your previous blog posts and provides links to them. You can do this one a week or once a month, depending on how often you post. 
  12. Link out. Whenever you reference something or someone that can be found on the internet, make it a link. Always give others credit for their work and link to their sites. At the bottom of your post, add your name, title, and a link to your main Website. 
  13. Don't sell. People who read blogs don't want to be sold to.  They want interesting and informative content. Help your readers by providing them with this, not by trying to tell them on how great you your company is. If you provide great content, it will be a reflection of your company and will help you sell your brand organically. 
  14. Don't give up. Blogging requires commitment and focus. While most of the time it's great fun, it can get tedious and time consuming sometimes. Don't let that stop you. Just push through and keep blogging. Your audience will appreciate it.

For senior living companies that want to go beyond just a blog to fully tap into the social web, I recommend setting up a branded online community, which combines a blog with other social media tools like member profiles, discussion forums, event calendars, photo galleries, and much more. You can learn more about the benefits of blogs, social media, and online communities at http://carenetworks.com/benefits.

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Brian Geyser, APRN-BC, MSN is a clinician, consultant, educator, blogger, online community manager and the founder of Carenetworks, LLC. He blogs regularly here at Carenetworks.com and would love to connect with you on Twitter, Linkedin, and/or Facebook.   


Boomers Love Social Media. PS. These Are Your Customers [Video]

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Boomers are taking over online communities and social networks. Oh, and did I mention, these are the people you are trying to reach? Take a look at this:

 

 
Brian Geyser, APRN-BC, MSN is a clinician, consultant, educator, blogger, online community manager and the founder of Carenetworks, LLC. He blogs regularly here at Carenetworks.com and would love to connect with you on Twitter, Linkedin, and/or Facebook

 


California's Largest Retirment Community Kicks Butt Using Social Media

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This is the first post in our new Social Media Success Series, which features interviews with innovative senior living, eldercare, home care, and dementia care providers who are using social media as a business tool. If you would like to have your organization considered for inclusion, contact us

Today we talk with Heather Rasmussen, Public Relations Specialist for Laguna Woods Village, the largest retirement community in California. We will present the interview in full and then provide some analysis and a summary with take away points at the end.


Company Profile

Formerly known as Leisure World, Laguna Woods Village is the largest retirement community in California, featuring 12,736 homes privately owned by approximately 18,000 residents. Laguna Woods Village is a gated, age-restricted community for active seniors. Just ten minutes from the Laguna Beach coastline, the Village is located on 3.8 square miles (2,100 acres) of rolling hillsides in south Orange County, California.

Interview

1. What online properties do you currently own/operate? (Website, Twitter, Facebook page, Linkedin, YouTube channel, etc.) Because we are such are large community, we have unique goals and challenges when it comes to using the Web and social media. Laguna Woods currently has a website, three marketing sites, and a Twitter account, which we started about a year ago.

Laguna Woods Main Website

 

Laguna Woods Marketing Site


 

Laguan Woods Village Twitter Site


 

2. Why did you choose these particular online properties?  The web 2.0 plan for Laguna Woods Village is centered upon distribution of information to members of the community first, and marketing second. These sites currenlty help us achieve our goals.

3. Who manages your online properties? Our websites and Twitter page are managed by Laguna Woods Village staff. Our PR person, along with our web master manages most of the content. Typically, news and information is updated on the community’s main webpage, lagunawoodsvillage.com and is fed by RSS feed to other marketing websites and to Twitter. LagunaWoodsVillage.com even has an option for offline community clubs (there are over 200!) to create and administer their own webpage on the Laguna Woods Village website. Examples include Astronomy Club, Concerned Citizens of Laguna Woods Village, Republican Club, Democratic Club, Clown Club, Shuffle Board Club, Baby Boomers Club, and Science Club. The clubs produce their own content which helps with SEO and visitor interest.

 Laguna Woods Village Club Pages


 

Laguan Woods Village Cat Club Page 


 

4. How are you using each property and who do want to reach? Our website is a clearing house of information for current and potential residents. Current residents can read community news, be notified about upcoming maintenance schedules, download forms, read Board agendas and minutes, and view a community calendar of governance, recreation, class, and sports events.  For new and potential residents, there is information about buying a home in Laguna Woods Village, resale and lease application forms, and over 80 downloadable floor plans.

 

Laguna Woods Village News Page


 

In terms of finding us online, our marketing pages are search-engine optimized. Visitors can request a brochure on Laguna Woods Village by filling out a simple form. Information on housing choices, amenities, and activities are included on the targeted marketing pages.

The Twitter account is targeted to community news and information that is of primary interest to current residents. The page is used like a “digest”, much like an RSS feed. Twitter followers are the first to know when news breaks in Laguna Woods Village. The Twitter account has also aided the Village’s search optimization efforts and has served as a good marketing tool. We weren't planning on Twitter becoming a marketing tool, but it has all on its own.

5. Do you have a social media strategy? If So, What is it?  Our social media policy is to consistently post and Tweet items that are interesting, informative, and relevant to our residents.

6. What is your primary goal for using social media? Our social media goal is currently evolving. In the beginning, Laguna Woods Village used Twitter just like an RSS feed.  We publicized it to residents, and received a few dozen resident followers. Then, local businesses began to follow us, then people from all over the country. We’ve realized that, when maintained properly, Twitter can be a very powerful marketing tool.

7. Are you planning to expand your social media reach?  Yes. YouTube is one consideration. Video is a very powerful medium. We can highlight community events and news better through video. We happen to have the luxury of having our own TV studio on the campus, so it's a bit easier for us.

8. What are your biggest challenges so far? Creating good content consistently. Maintaining the online communications of Laguna Woods Village is literally a full time job.

9. Did you have to try to convince someone at your organization to try social media? Being a homeowners association, the staff at Laguna Woods Village had to convince a Board of Directors that social media and heightened online communications was a good idea. The Board is made up of eleven resident volunteers. Although some may believe that residents of a senior community are not web savvy, our Board embraced the idea wholeheartedly!

10. Is ROI an issue? ROI is hard to quantify. We know our social media efforts have clearly increased and improved communications with and between residents. We've also seen an enormous increase in people requesting tours.  There's no doubt that overall interest in our community has dramatically increased since starting our social media efforts.

11. What's the one piece of advice you would give other senior living companies about getting into social media? Don’t be afraid to create a social media program. Websites like Facebook and Twitter make it very easy and cost effective to communicate to a large audience in a fun and fresh way. However, don’t create a social media program if you don’t have the resources to maintain it.  It looks very unprofessional to have a social media account that is neglected or poorly maintained.

Summary and Analysis

For a community this size, its not surprising that Laguna Woods Village (LWV) has multiple websites. Their main site is very sophisticated compared to many other senior living companies, especially ones that are much smaller by comparison. That said, their main site is impressive and incorporates an incredible amount of helpful and easily accessible information for prospects, residents, financial institutions, agents, and other companies. It also has a FAQ section, calender, integrated search, and Club Pages with resident-generated content. The LWV site is, in a sense, and online community - an extension of the offline community. 

What we don't see on the LWV website, which is standard for most online communities these days, is a blog, discussion forums and member profiles. However, one could argue that the entire site is a giant decentralized news and information blog. Discussion forums would add value by allowing for more two-way dialog on the site and could enhance resident/family participation and engagement. Member profiles could help residents connect and network more easily, as well as capture leads. 

One of the more intriguing features on the LWV site are the Club Pages, which allow community members who are part of a club to build a web page right on the LWV main site. There are more than 230 clubs, special interest groups and organizations at LWV and many of them have a unique Club Page. 

LWV's marketing sites are a smart adjunct to their main site as they provide an SEO boost (making it easier for prospects to find them on the web) as well as handy downloadable forms such as brochures, lease information sheets, and fact sheets - all designed make it simple for people visiting their sites to access helpful information. 

Finally, the LWV Twitter account (their one social media outpost) seems to be paying off as both a communications and marketing tool. 

Takeaway Points

  1. Your website is not enough. It's important to have more than just a website these days. Senior living companies need to consider, at the very least, having a blog and additional online outposts such as a Twitter and/or Facebook page. A centralized online community on your website with multiple social media outposts is the best option.
  2. Participation rules. Having the ability for residents and others to create content on your site improves SEO and elevates the perception of your community to those who visit the site as a place that encourages inclusion, engagement and participation.
  3. Social media requires resources. Managing an online community with various social media outposts can be very time consuming and at least one staff person needs to responsible for overseeing all social media efforts.
  4. Your site should be a resource. Your website should be a place where people can easily access and download up-to-date information and resources that help them make decisions.
  5. Twitter has pros and cons. If done right, Twitter can be a powerful tool to improve communications with existing residents/families, extend your online reach, and drive people to your website. While Twitter is currently free, there is a learning curve and it takes time to properly maintain your Twitter account; and time is money!
  6. Good management is a must. Online communities and social media outposts like Twitter and Facebook that are poorly managed and/or look like digital ghost towns can be damaging to your brand.
  7. Content creation will likely be your biggest challenge.
    The key is to provide consistent, relevant, and helpful content directed at your online audience and their needs.
  8. Don't get too focused on ROI. If your social media efforts are helping you to build better relationships with your prospects and customers, they are worth every penny. Oh, and by the way, as you can see from the successes of the Laguna Woods social media strategy, ROI means "Risk Of Ignoring." 

For more about senior living online communities and social media, visit carenetworks.com. To ensure you get more post like this delivered right to you as they are published, subscribe to our blog.

For more information about Laguna Woods Village, contact Heather Rasmussen at 949-268-2292.

Brian Geyser, APRN-BC, MSN is a clinician, consultant, educator, blogger, online community manager and the founder of Carenetworks, LLC. He blogs regularly here at Carenetworks.com and would love to connect with you on Twitter, Linkedin, and/or Facebook.   


New Social Media Success Interview Series On CareNetworks.com

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New social media success series launching next week

In the coming weeks, we will be profiling innovative senior living, eldercare, home care, and dementia care companies around the country and abroad who are using social media in creative ways to attract, engage, connect, educate, and support prospects and customers. The profiles will include insightful interviews with industry executives, entrepreneurs, marketers, thought leaders and others who are on the front lines experimenting with social tools like Twitter, Facebook, Linkedin, YouTube, Slideshare, and more.

Gain valuable insights from industry insiders who are happy to share their experiences and wisdom.

Our first interview will be with Heather Rasmussen, Public Relations Specialist at Laguna Woods Village (formerly Leisure World), the largest retirement community in California. Laguna Woods has seen amazing results with social media over the past year. Find out how they are tapping into Twitter to increase communication among residents and how requests for tours have dramatically increased thanks to their social media activities. Learn how they use their website and three marketing sites to improve SEO and drive traffic. Finally, discover their innovative use of "online clubs" which allow real resident-run clubs to create and administer their own web pages on the Laguna Woods Village Website, enhancing the site and elevating the Laguna Woods brand. 

Don't miss out. This is going to be a good one! To ensure you get this and all future blog posts in this exciting series, subscribe to our blog using the "subscribe" form on this page in the left column near the top. You will get all future posts emailed to you automatically. Your email is kept completely secure and it just lets us know who's interested in what we have to say;-)

Finally, if you are a senior living, eldercare, home care, or dementia care provider (or other care-related organization) using social media and would like to be featured in this series, please contact Brian Geyser directly at brian.geyser@carenetworks.com. Thanks. 

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Brian Geyser, APRN-BC, MSN is a clinician, consultant, educator, online community manager and the founder of Carenetworks, LLC. He blogs regularly here at Carenetworks.com and would love to connect with you on Twitter, Linkedin, and/or Facebook.  


Web Savvy Senior Living Companies Are Making The Move To Social Media. Are You?

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In a recent blog post, Samir Balwani discussed the concept of the "Social Media Hub." Social media hubs are social websites where content creation, community building and social engagement takes place for companies and organizations. Some pioneering senior living companies are beginning to use their websites as social media hubs (see the list below). From the Hub, these companies can post informative and helpful social media content in the form of blogs, webinars, discussion forums, video and audio.  This content can then be syndicated to outposts like Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, Linkedin, Digg, etc. People who view the content on these outposts can then share it with friends, peers, and colleagues (social pollination).

Ultimately, this content drives people back to the hub (your website) where it originated. This creates organic traffic to your site and helps consumers discover you.  In this way, the Hub provides companies with a powerful inbound marketing tool and an expanded presence across the internet.

Here's a list of some senior living companies experimenting with social media to increase awareness, drive traffic, and boost sales:

Living Well Assisted Living at Home

Living Well is a start-up out of San Francisco that provides high end "at-home" assisted living services to seniors in the Bay Area. They have a full-featured branded online community (powered by carenetworks) complete with community blog, discussion forums, member profiles, calendar, subgroups, photo albums, videos, podcasts and more. They also have outposts with Twitter, Linkedin, and Facebook.

Terrace Assisted Living Communities

Terrace Communities, based out of Vermont, is a group of seven assisted living facilities located in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Florida. They also have a full-featured carenetworks powered online community, but no outposts. 

Ecumen

Ecumen operates a variety of senior housing options and services from senior independent living communities to assisted living and long- term care and at-home and community-based services. They also provide senior housing development, clinical consulting and senior housing management services for organizations outside of Ecumen. They have a blog, YouTube channel, Flikr photo stream, Twitter and Linkedin accounts. 

Redstone

Redstone is a retirement community located in Alhambra, CA. Currently, they only operate a Twitter account. 

Marietta Retirement Communities

I was unable to find out much about Marietta from several Google searches, except that they operate retirement communities in the Mid-Ohio Valley. However, they seem to have an online community with some videos and podcasts and an ability to for members to sign in. 

Laguna Woods Village

Laguna Woods Village is a 55+ age-restricted gated community for the active lifestyle. It is located on 2,100 acres of rolling hillsides just minutes from the Laguna Beach coastline in Orange County, CA. The community is comprised of 12,736 dwellings and is considered to be one of the largest of its type on the West Coast. Laguna Woods Village is home to 18,000 residents averaging 78 years of age. They have a pretty sophisticated website and an active Twitter account, which drives traffic back to their site. 

These companies are pioneering the use of social media in the senior living and eldercare markets. Some have taken the social media hub approach, while others are testing the waters with a simple Twitter outpost. In the coming months, we hope to connect with some of these forward thinking companies and learn from them what is working and what is not. We will be posting our findings here. Stay tuned.  


 



Can Social Media Convert Senior Living Prospects To Customers?

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Senior Living Prospects Have Big Problems

People seeking out information on senior living, retirement communities, assisted living residences and long-term care facilities have big problems. These people, usually elders or (more likely) their family members, face huge challenges as they make life-changing decisions while trying to navigate the complex world of senior living and eldercare options. These people (your prospects) are increasingly using the internet to do their research, and while they are seeking information online, what they are really doing is trying to find solutions to their problems. Your website should be a resource that helps them do just that.

If you provide helpful information, resources, knowledge, expertise, and the ability to connect with you on your website, prospects are 1. more likely to find you, 2. more likely to trust you, and 3. more likely to be interested in your organization as an option. Done well and executed properly, social media tools like blogs, online communitiesTwitter, webinars, white papers, and eBooks can magnetically attract prospects to your website and give you an opportunity to engage them further, nurture relationships, build trust, and ultimately convert them into customers.

Social Media Helps Your Prospects Solve Problems

The key to using social media successfully in business is to use social media tools to attract, engage, and help people. With social media, you create useful and timely content that your customers want and need. As David Meerman Scott suggests, when your prospects visit your website (or your facility), they don't care about your facility or services so much, they care more about their own problems and if you can solve them. If your social media content helps them begin to solve their problems, you're much more likely to engage those prospects and get them to visit your physical community. If they come to visit, you can then keep them engaged using social media tools.

What are the top five problems facing your senior living prospects? Here's a likely list from the perspective of an elderly woman and her daughter:

  1. Elder: I don't want to move. I want to stay in my home. Adult Child: I'm not sure if moving Mom out of her house is a good idea. I don't know what to do.
  2. Elder: I don't want to be a burden on my kids. Adult Child: I feel obligated to take on this challenge, but I'm afraid of how it's going to impact my own family.
  3. Elder: I'm not ready to move yet. I don't need all that help. Adult Child: I'm not sure if now is the right time. I don't know when the right time to move my Mom is.
  4. Elder: I don't want to leave my friends and community. Adult Child: How can I take Mom away from everything she knows and loves?
  5. Elder: I can't afford to move into a senior living residence. I should just stay home, it's cheaper. Adult Child: I don't know what would cost more, keeping Mom home or moving her into a facility. Where do I even begin?
If you're a senior living company, these are the problems your website should be helping to solve for your prospects. These are the things important to them. There are many others, but these are very common problems among people trying to decide if a senior living community is right for them. Having information on your website about your business, your services, and your facility is important, but what's much more important, is having information and resources on your website that help prospects begin to solve their problems.   

What are you doing online to help your senior living prospects solve their problems?


CHAMP Offers New Geriatric Med Management Course

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The Collaboration for Homecare Advances in Management and Practice (CHAMP) is offering a new online geriatric medication management course for nurses and other care providers with the goal of improving patient outcomes. According to CHAMP, most older homecare patients are taking over five medications and medication-related problems are a leading cause of avoidable rehospitalizations. The course costs $149 per person and offers CEU's to nurses. 

Another cool thing about CHAMP is that they have an online community! In the community, homecare professionals can post questions, connect with others, and share experiences. The CHAMP community also offers access to industry experts who share their knowledge and expertise about homecare best practices. Definitely an organization worth checking out.   


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