By Published On: December 19, 20134.2 min readTotal Views: 181Daily Views: 1Categories: Historic Sites + MuseumsTags: , ,

Using Twitter hashtags to promote your event

Updated: September 27, 2015


Using hashtags to promote your event will raise awareness in advance, encourage attendance, and enable those who are there to track the event and those who aren’t able to attend to follow along.

Attracting people using a popular hashtag

To attract people to your event who may not be familiar with your event or your organization, use a hashtag that they might use to find events of interest to them, such as the topic, type of event, or location.

You can search for hashtags within Twitter and on Google, and within some of the other social services. (See the list of several social services that support hashtags below.) There are also free tools, such as Hashtagify, HashAtIt, hshtags, and others, as well as tools with a monthly fee, that help you research and analyze hashtags.

This example is from a search on Twitter and shows the hashtag that was popular for events, programs, and posts connected to the 250th anniversary of the Stamp Act: #StampAct250.

Raising awareness of your event with a unique event hashtag

To reinforce awareness of your own event, choose a hashtag for your event that’s short and that, ideally, makes it easy for someone to connect it back to your organization. One of the frustrating things about hashtags is that it’s often not easy to figure out the event behind a hashtag without doing a web search.  Embedding your organization’s name or the topic of the event helps convey some information without a search.

Using hashtags to promote your event

These screenshots from Twitter show the way that the New England Museum Association (NEMA) promoted and used a hashtag for their 2013 conference.  As you can see, they included it in their conference program (top), as well as other communications.  Attendees included it in their tweets; a search on #nema2013 on Twitter returns all of the tweets that included that hashtag.

Using Twitter hashtags to promote your event

The last screenshot shows the hashtag on the event page on The History List. We’ve added a box to the “Add event” form where you simply type it in.

In addition to Twitter, hashtags can be used in . . .

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Google+
  • Tumblr
  • YouTube
  • Vine
  • Flickr

Recommendations

  • Find one or more popular hashtags that are relevant to your target audience.  Something like #history is too broad and used in too many ways for it to be useful to you.
  • Create a hashtag for your event. Because anyone can create a hashtag, you have a better chance of activity focusing on your desired event hashtag if you get out in front and establish one early on.
  • Check the hashtag you’re thinking about using for your event to see if someone else has used it recently.  Ideally, your event hashtag should be unique.  It should also be short since every character counts against your maximum message length of 140 characters.
  • Include it in your site, e-mail messages about the event, press release announcing it, conference program, and tweets about the event.
  • Include it on your event page on The History List.
  • Encourage your speakers and attendees to include it in their tweets.
  • Include it on your signage at the event.
  • Post it in the session rooms and encourage your speakers to announce it as a reminder—Pictured at right, a sign with the #HistoryCamp hashtag in one of the session rooms at History Camp Boston in 2015.  This one-day event had about 100 tweets and nearly 100,000 impressions.
  • Your early tweets announcing your event and leading up to it might include both the topic hashtag and your event hashtag.

Results

Here’s one attendee’s reaction to using Twitter and a conference hashtag extensively:

Using hashtags to promote your events on The History List

This was the first conference I have devoted any real time to Twitter. The #nema2013 hashtag was lively without being overwhelmingly busy. I am sure that tweeting can be a distraction for some, but for me it’s no more distracting than taking notes (in which I sometimes go on tangents in the margins about something at school or work related to the presentation topic). I was using Twitter to connect with colleagues, but I was surprised to find that tweeting about sessions can be a very useful thought exercise. In coming up with concise restatements of a session’s biggest takeaways as it was going on, I was synthesizing and sorting information on a level and speed I rarely do. #youlearnsomethingneweveryday

— From a post by Phillippa Pitts on the Tufts University Museum Studies blog

 

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