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Archive for the ‘Social Media’ Category

Major League Baseball goes from strength to strength on Pinterest

When we last looked at Pinterest and how sports teams were using that space, you can probably recall that Major League Baseball were the stars of the show. They had a number of their pins and teams featuring in the article, like the New York Mets and the Milwaukee Brewers.

Well, the MLB are at it again. With Mother’s Day just around the corner, MLB have created a Mother’s Day Pinterest Contest, where fans can win MLB gear from their online shop by pinning items to custom made “MLB Mother’s Day” boards and repinning this image below onto the board.

Source: mlb.mlb.com via Dion on Pinterest

 

The creation of the Pinterest competition for Mother’s Day is a great initiative that engages fans, drives traffic to the online store and makes the MLB noteworthy within a growing social media space like Pinterest. Like the Boston Celtics, who are also utilising the Pinterest space for competitions, the MLB is starting to create a great image for itself on Pinterest and will be looked at as the world leader in sports utilising the Pinterest sphere.

Have you seen other teams and/or leagues using Pinterest for competitions? Tell us in the comments section below.

 

Dion Bennett

Dion is the current behind-the-scenes man for @SportsGeekHQ. Undertaking a Bachelor of Marketing at La Trobe University, Dion hopes to make a name for himself in the hectic world of sports marketing.

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10 athletes absolutely killing it on Instagram

If you hadn’t already heard of Instagram, you certainly would have after Facebook recently paid $1 billion for the purchase of it. Simply, Instagram is just a cool iPhone (and now Android) app that lets users snap a photo from their smartphone, chuck a quirky and hip filter over it, and then share it across any social network like Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare or Tumblr.

So, why did Facebook shell out so much money for such a simple app? One reason, folks; reach. With between 30 and 50 million users now having Instagram, the reach the app boasts is unbelievable for a mobile app, and will continue to grow as Facebook pushes it’s development.

Like Twitter and Facebook. athletes across the world are starting to integrate Instagram into their daily repertoires to connect with their fans and show their “human” side. Now, without any further ado, let’s look at ten athletes from around the world who are absolutely killing their Instagram connection with fans.

Kevin Durant (@trey5)

You know him on the NBA courts as the jump shooting, rim shaking, 3-time scoring champ of the Oklahoma City Thunder, but the 23-year old forward is just a regular, 23-year old guy off the court. For some fun behind-the-scenes kind of shots from one of the NBA’s best characters, you could do much worse than follow KD on Instagram.

Source: instagr.am via Dion on Pinterest

Rob Gronkowski (@robgronkowski)

Another young gun at the top of his game at the moment is New England Patriots tight end, Rob Gronkowski. At just 22 years of age, the man affectionately known as “Gronk” is well and truly part of the “iGeneration”. As a potential cover athlete for the Madden 13 game set to be released later this year, the “Gronk” took to Instagram to ask his fans to vote him on. Although he never won (that honour went to Detroit’s Calvin Johnson), Gronk obviously wasn’t too fazed about the infamous “Madden Curse”.

Source: web.stagram.com via Dion on Pinterest

LeBron James (@kingjames330)

King on the court and  marketing giant off it, Miami’s LeBron James has over 350,000 followers on Instagram. They’re often treated to pictures of his latest Nike kicks for their loyalty.

Source: instagr.am via Dion on Pinterest

Tony Hawk (@tonyhawk)

Skateboarders are often seen as outside-the-square thinkers, and legendary boarder Tony Hawk is no different. As a businessman, Mr. Hawk has proven himself to be as fearless as he was in a half pipe. Who else could pull off the business-presentation-in-a-half-pipe idea as well as Hawk? Brilliant stuff, Bird man.

Source: instagr.am via Dion on Pinterest

Kelly Slater (@kellyslater)

Like skateboarders, surfers are also seen as creative thinkers. Champion surfer Kelly Slater helps keep that belief alive with his Instagram shots, including this beauty from his last visit to Australia. Picturesque shot there, Kelly.

Source: instagr.am via Dion on Pinterest

Scott Pendlebury (@sp_10)

Magpie superstar Scott Pendlebury is a leader amongst his AFL contemporaries on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. With nearly 2,500 followers, Pendles is giving his fans a great insight into his life away from football and what keeps him grounded when not tearing up the MCG.

Mick Fanning (@mfanno)

Like Slater above, surfing legend Mick Fanning is a lover of Instagram. As he does so much travelling throughout the year, Instagram is wonderful to not only let his fans know what he is up to, but also let them know where he is! Loved this shot of him flipping the coin at the MCG for the Hawthorn vs Geelong match in round two, just days after his triumph at Bells Beach.

Source: statigr.am via Dion on Pinterest

Kaka (@kaka)

Brazilian soccer superstar Kaka was one of the first sports stars to embrace Instagram. With nearly 150,000 followers, Kaka is one of the big players on Instagram, and posted this beauty for his followers just this morning, mere hours after Real Madrid clinched their first La Liga title since 2008. Hala, Madrid

Source: statigr.am via Dion on Pinterest

Mike Tyson (@miketyson

While he’s most well known for his headline grabbing boxing career, retired boxer (and star of one of the best scenes in “The Hangover”), Mike Tyson is a regular on Instagram. As an old school WWE fan, this one below, of Iron Mike being inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame, is especially good.

Source: web.stagram.com via Dion on Pinterest

Stephanie Rice (@itsstephrice)

Last but certainly not least is Australian swimming’s golden girl, Stephanie Rice. The three-time Olympic gold-medal winner is great to follow on Instagram as she gives some cool insight into all the training and preparation needed for the Olympics. With the London games coming up shortly, she is definitely worth a follow.

Source: web.stagram.com via Dion on Pinterest

 

There we have it, guys. Are you in Instagram yet? For more information on Instagram and it’s impact on the sports digital world, check out Sean’s #YouTube140 look into Instagram.

If you want to follow any of the stars featured here or any other sporting identities and teams, check out our Sports Geek Pinterest page, “Sports on Instagram”.

Dion Bennett

Dion is the current behind-the-scenes man for @SportsGeekHQ. Undertaking a Bachelor of Marketing at La Trobe University, Dion hopes to make a name for himself in the hectic world of sports marketing.

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Social Media for Good & Sports on @Pinterest from @abcgrandstand

In this ABC Grandstand sports digital segment we looked the positives in social media and how it can be used for good in sports.

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Using Social Media for Good

Too often the sports social media mistakes or bad boys are profiled but sometimes social media can be used for good.

#FindBensKit

Late Ben Hollioake’s cricket kit stolen from parents home in Perth but recovered after a rally of support via Twitter.

Started with former English Captain Michael Vaughan pleading for assistance from cricket fans, soon after #FindBensKit was born.

#GETWELLNODDY

Something closer to home the plight of former Wallabies captain Michael Lynagh who is in hospital after suffering a stroke, the Wallabies community rallied behind the man known as Noddy using digital.

#KONY2012

We did quickly discuss the Kony 2012 campaign that after great success has fallen flat.

Sports Geek Medals – Pinterest edition

We have discussed Pinterest on ABC Grandstand before, “the Jeremy Lin of Social Media” at the time.  Thanks to Dion Bennett‘s great post on sports teams using Pinterest we’ve decided to give out medals for Sports On Pinterest.

Bronze – Manchester City

They have a board for title “City Tattoos”, needs no other explanation.

Source: 3.bp.blogspot.com via Manchester on Pinterest

Silver - Anaheim Ducks

Doing a great job of pinning material from fans from other social networks like Facebook & Twitter.

Source: twitter.com via Anaheim on Pinterest

Gold – Boston Celtics

Doing a great job sharing pictures & promotions from the Celtics vast history.  Even running a Pin it to win it competition.

 

 

Source: nba.com via Boston on Pinterest

 

Until next week

Catch it live on Saturday mornings (at 7:40am) when Sean Callanan discuss sports digital with Francis Leach on ABC Grandstand.

Tune into ABC Grandstand Breakfast over the Friday through Monday on ABC Grandstand digital radio.


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Podcast transcription

FRANK: Sean Callanan, our Digital Sports Guru, joins us every Saturday what his field of dreams might be. Good day, Sean, how are you?

SEAN: Good day, Frank. Well other than MCG, I mean that shows a bit of bias to Melbourne, but from a baseball perspective, I actually have been to Wrigley Field and it’s the stadium in the states that most reminds me of the MCG.

FRANK: What about it reminds you of the MCG?

SEAN: You pretty much just walk in there and you just, the history, and you can just feel it. It wraps you up.

FRANK: I think there’s two ways you can go with this. I think the really big venues are super impressive and they’re overwhelming in their size and their stature in the history. And the MCG certainly got that about it, but sometimes the smaller venues are the ones that capture your heart. I’m sure Fenway Park is like that for me because it’s a tiny, you know, it’s a tiny track. It’s a very small ballpark, really. It’d be like, you know, I’m going to ask a person ‘Do you like having the good fortune of going to Highbury a few times over the years,’ very small, compact ground, beautiful art deco grandstand.

SEAN: And it is something that all the special baseball stadiums, all the refurbs and, you know, getting the new stadiums built. Like last time I went to New York I went to both Yankee Stadium and the new Mets stadium. Both new stadiums, the Yankees went with a complete almost carbon copy of …..

FRANK: It’s unusual isn’t it?

SEAN: of the old stadium.

FRANK: Explain it. It’s not on the same side, is it?

SEAN: It’s across the road.

FRANK: It’s across the road.

SEAN: But it’s a physically carbon copy, and it looks a little bit like a Coliseum. There’s a lot of concrete and it really doesn’t have—they tried to replicate it, and they really couldn’t. Whereas the new Mets stadium they did it in that vintage style, and they used a lot of the pieces of the era, and so it looks like an old stadium but it’s got all the new amenities, and it does it have that old style ball park feel. So it’s sort of like, again, comparing MCG to the Docklands Stadium. You know, and amenities wise, it’s just a matter of getting it right.

FRANK: So since through your choice hashtag #grandstand, your field of dreams, the venue of the sports, I mean it doesn’t have to be a professional sportsman. There’s a lot of people have a very, very deep and affectionate ties to their local sports fields, whether they played there or their kids did or whatever it is, how should today’s grandstand let us know? Whereas the other one in the United States that I really love is AT&T Park or in San Francisco, the home of the Giant’s, is a venue I have a little bit of a soft spot for. It’s a magnificent vista when you’re sitting up in the stands there at across San Francisco Bay on a sunny day. It’s like the happiest place on earth.

SEAN: Yeah, definitely, definitely. It’s one of the ones I haven’t been to. It’s on my stadium bucket list.

FRANK: It’s a beauty. We’re talking to you about social media today, of course, in sport and sometimes we focus a lot on the negative and the trouble that people get themselves into using social media platforms, but sometimes it actually can be a really powerful tool for niceness instead of evil.

SEAN: Yes.

FRANK: As Maxwell Smart would say.

SEAN: Exactly, and we had a pretty good example of this earlier in the week when I saw, I think I actually saw your tweet initially, and re-tweeted it to Ben Hollioake who passed away and was an English cricketer, had his kit, these English kids stole it from his parent’s home in Perth. So someone broke in…

FRANK: Terrible.

SEAN: Whether they did it deliberately or it was just a break in and they’d stolen all his English gear.

FRANK: Because when Ben died , I think about, oh, ten years ago, I think it was in a car accident in Perth, and so his parents have kept his kit as, you know, as a keepsake, a very precious keepsake for his career as a…

SEAN: I think he played two tests in twenty or so one days…

FRANK: With his brother, as well, Adam.

SEAN: And, so, yeah, the English cricket community, so Michael Vaughan and Alec Stewart and a lot of the guys that played with him started tweeting, “Hey guys find his, find Ben’s kit. Ask everyone to re-tweet it.” You know astray and cricket personality Vaughan, Damien Fleming and the like did the same. And so it was obviously trending on Twitter, but it did provide a little bit of an action, a bit of awareness for everybody because most people wouldn’t have known. It would have maybe made the England papers and maybe the Perth papers, and then luckily enough a couple of days later, because I really put the alert out, and said, “Hey, if you find this stuff on Ebay or someone’s trying to off load it,” and a couple of days later both they found the guys who did it and they found the kit and it was returned. So it was one of those good stories, too, you know, get awareness and also it’s about what we we’re talking about last week, getting a story that you want out in the press and getting a bit more publicity.

FRANK: What it shows is that communities coalesce really quickly around things that are of, if you got a likeminded cause or an interest with people, you can coalesce a community really quickly around that—incredible resource. I mean, in my gig, here working as a professional sports broadcaster, the connections you can make with other journalists and broadcasters and people of who can actually be part of the show or give you information and insight from a first person perspective of being at games and being at press conferences, and the like, it’s an extraordinary reach, and it really has changed the way broadcasting works, and in this instance it’s worked…

SEAN: And the thing is everyone can have their own niche show. You know, if you didn’t hear it from one of the players themselves, you might hear it from a follower who’s mad for cricket, and he’s always giving you your cricket information, so he’s my cricket expert. It’s not, I’m not waiting for the cricket segment on Grandstand. It’s this twitter follower that’s always giving me the best cricket advice. So, you know, people can develop niches and become these, you know, curators of content and pass it on.

FRANK: Well that it is very egalitarian, too, and as you said, you know, looking at the tweets, there was Adam Hollioake, Ben’s brother who was tweeting through Alec Stewart. I mean I’ve sent my re-tweet out. You did as well. We’re all having the same impact. You know having a conversation with these people who are professional sports people who you previously probably wouldn’t have access to, not only just to talk to them but also to, you know, to working inside with them, maybe if they’re, you know, not cognizant that you’re doing it, but it is really, really an egalitarian experience.

SEAN: And it gives them, you know, it goes back to that, you know, the ability that for athletes to be role models whether they’re pushing a charity or trying to push a cause or in this case, you know, just to find a mates kit because someone’s gone and broke into his parent’s house. So another one that I again caught by Twitter and the Wallabies did, I think, did a good job in, one, telling everyone about Michael  Lynagh who’s had a stroke and is still critical in the hospital at the moment. They sent out a tweet saying, “Hey, send Noddy,” which is Michael  Lynagh’s nickname, send a tweet, “Get well Noddy,” and we’ll pass it on to the family, and, you know, it’s not going to help him get better, but it is going to rally the rugby community, send their messages of support. I’m sure, you know, as the guys at the AOU handover pages and pages of tweets to the family, it will mean a lot to the Lynagh family just to see that he’s getting a lot of support, and, you know, we send out our best wishes to the family, but it’s just another way to, one, get the information out because you might check the newspapers and not find that information, so it’s a way for teams, in this case the AOU, makes sure that the rugby community knows that one of their own is in a bit of trouble.

FRANK: Yes, certainly, they did rally around Michael. We spoke with Andrew , his former teammate, yesterday on the program, and he’s recovering, but he’s got a long way to go after suffering that stroke earlier in the week. Have you got a podium for us today?

SEAN: Well just, actually, just one more on—we did speak about it a bit about four weeks ago, Kony 2012 “Cover the Night” was last night, and as I was driving in I did see obviously some kids had still rallied to the cause, and I did see a couple of Kony 2012 posters up around Melbourne, so I don’t know if anyone else joined in the fun of promoting the Kony 2012. We discussed that when they brought out the issue clips, so I need you to see if anyone else and how it goes in America.

FRANK: Just on that they’ve posted a second film, haven’t they, a follow-up to the original Kony 2012.

SEAN: Yes because there were some concerns and people worried about the funding and stuff, so they’ve sort of done that, and even the fan had a little bit of a crazy time there and they’re going to be caught up with the celebrity, but the cover of the night actually went through, you know last night here, and it’ll be in the states tomorrow, so it needs to be seen what good kind of coverage it gets in America tomorrow.

FRANK: Sean Callanan with the say on Digital Sports Guru here on Grandstand Breakfast. We always have a podium of three, two and one for those in the digital space on Twitter and other social media who’ve done interesting things this week. What have you got for us?

SEAN: So, what I want to do is get away from Twitter and have a quick look at Pinterest Day invented to the really good article on Sports Geek on how sports names are using Pinterest. We talked about Pinterest as way to share photos and stuff, and so the bronze medal goes to Man City, and if you check out one of their boards, I have a board called “City Tattoos,” and there is one of the most gruesome tattoos you’ve ever seen in your life there, with effectively the Manchester City logo tattooed onto the guy’s heart.

FRANK: It’s pretty full on.

SEAN: It is pretty full on. The Anaheim Ducks have done a pretty good job on Pinterest, as well. They actually shared the tweets and Facebook posts and things that the fans are doing, but one of the ones that is leading the way and doing really well in the digital space is the Boston Celtics sharing stats and boards, and they’ve been running a Pin-It competition, so they’re instead in a game in cyber space and had a little bit of fun.

FRANK: Pin-It-To-Win-It.

SEAN: Pin-It-To-Win-It, yeah!

FRANK: They got to vote on that one first…It’s a beauty.

SEAN: Yeah, exactly, so everyone will be following them, but, yeah. Let’s check out sports on Pinterest and we’ve got the article on sportsgeek.com.au.

FRANK: Remind us what Pinterest is because it’s a bit different to Instagram, isn’t it?

SEAN: It’s a pin board, so as you find photos and things that you like you pin them to boards, and so like I said, Manchester City might have a City Tattoos. A lot of the teams are doing Pets Who Follow Us, and so they should pin pets, dogs and cats that are wearing their team’s colors. They do baking goods. They should share merchandise.

FRANK: So it’s more on the subject matter. You can direct to what subject matter.

SEAN: So it’s a real visual medium, so you pin pictures that you like to that fit your brand, and then people re-pin them to their boards because their fans of your team, so it’s a real, you know, you just surf along, look at all those pictures. They’re pretty. I liked that one. I re-pinned that one, so we’re having a lot of traffic back to websites, so on and so. The sportscenter is starting to delve into it.

FRANK: Get on you’re sure. Now get to make a little point today.

SEAN: Thank you very much, and good luck with maybe us…

FRANK: (laughter) I haven’t got this one quite yet. It’s New York 6, Boston 2, top of the 8th, no outs and a man on second for the Yankees at the moment, but dear, it hasn’t been a great start to the year for the Red Sox, but this game and over the next few days might be crucial to their season given it is the 100th anniversary of Fenway Park. You’ll have to get there one day.

SEAN: I will. I have to be there in August for a conference, so I’m looking forward to it.

FRANK: By then it could be ugly for bargaining if they keep playing the way they are. Remind people how they kind of find him: sportsgeek.com.au

SEAN: That’s it, sportsgeek.com.au, @sportsgeekhq or @SeanCallanan on Twitter.

FRANK: He’s everywhere. Sean Callanan our Digital Sports Guru here on Grandstand Breakfast.

Wildcats step up Twitter game

Following the lead of the @LAKings the @PerthWildcats have thrown down the challenge to an entire country!

Jump on board Australia & give it a retweet.

Trash talking on Twitter… @LAKings go hard in the playoffs

Those on Twitter know it sometimes can be a great place for some playful banter amongst friends but is it OK for sports teams?

Take a look at this tweet after Game 1 LA Kings offend Canada with a tweet after winning game 1 as 8 seed against Vancouver Canucks.  (Hat Tip to VancouverCanucks.com.au for tipping us this story)

We discussed it on Harftime, what do you think?  It’s a fine line but we’re OK with the Kings tweet as long as it fits with the brand of the team.

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Doc Turf & Ralphy share a joke but offend many

When Trash Talk goes wrong

What about personal brands?  When can you take trash talking or jokes too far?

Take a look at the problems that media personalities Doc Turf and Ralphy took on when they shared a poor joke during the Logies on Sunday.

Firstly Doc shouldn’t have tweeted the joke & Ralphy drew more attention by commenting & retweeting it.

Ralphy tried to backpedal by deleting the tweet (kindly captured by @nonsensiblekate assume all tweets will be captured by someone) & distancing himself from the Doc’s tweet.  Find more samples of #digisportfail on our Pinterest board

If you are tweeting on behalf of your employer or work in the media before you tweet you need to think “will this be newsworthy?”  It is the same advice we give to athletes, treat Twitter like a radio or TV interview.

 

But we can see you did tweet about it Ralphy, on Twitter much better to own up to your mistake & move on.

You do remember the Collingwood Twitter war?

Podcast Transcript

HARF: Twelve minutes to 3:00 p.m. Sean Callanan our Digital Media Sports Guru is with us at sportsgeekhq. You can find him on just about any platform. Good day, Seany.

SEAN: Good day, Harf, how are you doing?

HARF: I’m doing well. I see you there in your Rangers t-shirt. You’re in a real playoff mode, obviously.

SEAN: I am, yes, it’s fired up there and the thing that’s fired up in the Western Conference is the LA Kings versus the Vancouver Canucks.

HARF: Well, it’s been a messy upset—3 , zip.

SEAN: The 3, zip, yeah, well, the Kings are the eighth seed and the Canucks are the one seed, but what has caused a bit of controversy is the way that the LA Kings have been tweeting throughout the series, so they’ve won game one and they tweeted to everyone in Canada except British Columbia, “You’re welcome.” So it’s effectively tweeting in the same way as Nelson on the Simpson’s would with the **radio HA-HA NOISE*** There we go; very good Jumper. And it had 13,000 re-tweets.

HARF: That’s a lot.

SEAN: That is a lot of re-tweets.
HARF: That is very funny from them. That’s just an Australian version of suffering in your jocks.

SEAN: It is a bit, and it is something that I guess everyone who’s trying to drive, you know, whether it’s the L.A. Kings or any of the sports teams, they’re going to figure out how much damage that they could do to the brand if they went a little bit too far. Through mine it was a just a little bit edgy.

HARF: That’s good.

SEAN: After they won game two they said apologies in advance; Kings win game 2. You know, so, again, they really fired up the Canuck’s fans, but you’ve got to think about what is the effect of the brain. I was talking to the guys at the West Coast Eagles before their game against the Giants and I said, “Look, most likely you’re going to win, but you don’t want to come across as overbearing, arrogant, bully. You just want to be reporting the facts. The fans will be jumping up and down that you’re way out in front, but you’ve got to be respectful of the opposition. You don’t want to be seen as belittling this new comer to the game.

HARF: Yes, that’s rapport.

SEAN: But, you know, in the fierce battle of playoff hockey, the last time I went to a hockey game was at Madison Square Garden. Thirty seconds in and the guy stands up and says, “Hit him with your stick.” And they did. They started to fight 30 seconds in between the Rangers and the Lightening. I think there was a few square ups happening there.

HARF: So, what it leaves to us I suppose is whether or not we will see, obviously, a little bit from the Kings is trash talk on Twitter from club to club.

SEAN: There’s a bit of that from player to player to a certain degree, but you know, and sometimes with the Melbourne Storm and the Canterbury Bulldogs we did a bit of a digital battle where we got them fighting effectively and firing up their fans and tracking things, and I had that playful banter going backwards and forwards so it didn’t really get down to the point of the Kings, but it does come down to brand protection. And that is as much for teams as it is for athletics and people in the media.

So, I don’t know if you caught up with the Logies and Doc Turf and Ralphy got themselves in a little bit of strife.

HARF: Yeah, a soccer fan had a little bit of detail about that.

SEAN: And you’ve got to be very careful what you might just do as a little joke—you know, a bad joke that Doc Turf did. Then Ralphy made it worse by re-tweeting it to everybody and having his own little say, and then they started copying it from left, right and center, and quite rightly so. You know there were people offended by it. They’ve got to realize if they’ve gone and said it, they’ve got to own up to it.

HARF: You own it.

SEAN: And, yeah, Ralphy just tried the sneaky ‘I’m going to delete the tweet and then distance myself and throw Doc Turf under the bus,’ when he really should have just said apologies, ‘I made an error,’ and move on, and to a certain degree, it would have just, you know, the twitter would have float on. But by not owning it and by not apologizing, there’s a few of the tweets out there that are holding onto it like a dog with a bone and you’ve just got to own up to it and move on.

HARF: But it can be used in a really positive fashion, and I mean the Kings have done a classy example here because, particularly in playoffs and the finals in other sports, it is a game of doggy-dog and it’s really not a civilized game so it’s not exactly a run off, but there is a chance for the banter to flow back and forth should the Canucks come out and win game two, say, or then all of a sudden there’s terrific interaction between the fans.

SEAN: Exactly, and the guys who are running it, social media kids, are trying to gauge that emotionality of the fans and build it up for the next game. So the guys of the Perth Wildcats have got a bit long layaway between game one and game two. The next game is game two on Friday.

HARF: Sold out in four minutes.

SEAN: Sold out in four minutes and they’ve just been outside for another 200 tickets that’s going to happen next door. But you know what they’re doing today, tomorrow and the next day is to get the fans super excited for Friday. And so they’re going to be running some stuff on Instagram and getting them engaged on Facebook and Twitter, and the idea is to get that backwards and forwards going. So you know it’s just something to be mindful of. You want to be getting all the fans excited.

HARF: Having worked in this space for a little while yourself and looking after a few of the clubs in this space would you encourage them to get a bit more edgy with some of this communication.

SEAN: Well it’s got to compete with your team and your brand. You know, so for potentially for Collingwood, they’re running this whole “us” against “them” campaign. So it fits for them to say now currently, you know, they’re not in a position to be bold and arrogant because they don’t travel that well. There’re enough things, but potentially they could start up a Twitter storm to maybe distract everybody from everything else that’s happening is another way of looking at it. But, yes, you’ve got to make sure it’s consistent with what your team represents. You can’t go out and do a bold claim like that like the Kings did if it doesn’t fit with your brand and what your message is.

If you have to apologize for it well then it’s going to get you in strife.

HARF: Not enough strife for mine in this. It’s good fun—strife.

SEAN: Well, we just had a text there. People are saying that Ralphy hasn’t gotten in trouble and one thing I did tweet if brand in Fevola or maybe a football or tweet at what those guys have tweeted might have got a bit of coverage in the Herald Sun.

HARF: Definitely would have.

SEAN: So, yeah, he has been lucky to get off, in this case. Maybe there should be a Twitter Match Review panel , and, you know, is it intentional, medium contact, low impact. We mentioned the re-tweets and then maybe he gets suspended for a week and doesn’t tweet. Maybe we should bring that in next week, Harf.

HARF: Who’s on the panel? Is KB on that committee?
SEAN: Oh, he’s on every committee. He has to be, and he’d spend the whole time sending—what it is his Twitter? What are his tweets?

HARF: But we know that’s never going to be as topical as it should—let’s use a current player—whose tweets are a bit, should Jack Riewoldt have tweeted that it would have been a whole different story.

SEAN: Exactly…exactly, and the thing is it doesn’t matter how many. I guess it shows the power of the re-tweet. It doesn’t mean how many people who are following you. If people either had re-tweeted because they agree or re-tweeted because they think it’s wrong more people see it, so a doctor was treating an Australian during the Logies because of that one tweet.

HARF: Was he really?

SEAN: And he probably thinks ‘Oh, I don’t have that many followers. I’ll just sign this to my mates, and, you know, he’s going to get himself a little bit of strife. So the thing is if you’re going to make a joke make a joke that you would make on radio. If you’re not going to make it on radio or if you’re not going to put it in print I wouldn’t be tweeting it.

HARF: That’s pretty sound advice. Sean thanks for coming in, mate.

SEAN: No worries mate.

HARF: You can check him out at @sportsgeekhq on pretty much everywhere. Just type it in. You’ll find Sean and the work he does—the great work he does—apparently for us here and 1116 at SEN and for some of the big sports clubs across the globe.

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