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Jenny Li Fowler: Elevating MIT's Digital Presence

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Manage episode 508533091 series 3599905
Content provided by Jeff Dillon. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jeff Dillon or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Join host Jeff Dillon for a conversation with Jenny Li Fowler, the Director of Social Media Strategy at MIT. In this episode, Jenny pulls back the curtain on what it's really like to manage the social presence for one of the world's most innovative universities.

She discusses her journey from TV journalism to leading MIT's digital strategy, growing their following to over 6 million. Jenny gets real about the lack of a "secret sauce," the surprising misconceptions about her job, and the challenges of being a one-person team. They also dive into platform strategies, the evolving role of AI, and how to handle a social media crisis.

For anyone in higher ed marketing, this is a masterclass in intentionality, community building, and trusting your gut in the fast-paced world of social media.

Key Takeaways:

  1. There is No "Secret Sauce": Massive growth (like MIT's 6M+ followers) isn't achieved through a single trick. It's the result of being intensely intentional with every post, caption, and image, ensuring everything ties back to core goals.
  2. Social Media is Not a Side Hustle: A common misconception is that managing social media is simple and quick. In reality, it requires meticulous planning, strategy, and can take significant time for a single, well-crafted post.
  3. Platforms Are Not Created Equal: Audiences on different platforms expect different content. TikTok demands a different style than Instagram Reels. It's crucial to optimize content for how each specific audience prefers to consume it.
  4. Your Superpower is Listening, Not Just Talking: Especially during a crisis, the primary role of social media is to monitor, listen, and serve as a critical ear to the ground for leadership, providing them with real-time intelligence to inform decisions.
  5. Focus on Public Engagement Metrics: Relying on public metrics like engagements (likes, comments, shares) provides a consistent and reliable feedback loop that tells you what your community wants to see more of, without depending on proprietary platform analytics that could disappear.
  6. Paid vs. Organic is an Audience Decision: Paid media makes sense for competitive, specific goals (e.g., business school programs), but proven organic content is often the best foundation for a successful paid campaign.
  7. Embrace AI as a Tool, Not a Replacement: AI won't take your job, but someone using AI effectively might. Use it for analysis, tone adaptation, and brainstorming—not for copying and pasting content directly to your channels.
  8. Trust Your Gut and Don't Be Reactive: In a volatile, fast-moving medium, your intuition is a superpower. Avoid reactive posting; take a beat to assess situations and bring in the right people before responding.

Find Jenny Li Fowler here:

LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/jennylifowler/

Podcast - Confessions of a Higher Ed Social Media Manager

https://www.enrollify.org/podcasts/confessions-of-a-higher-ed-social-media-manager

MIT

https://mit.edu/

And find EdTech Connect here:

Web: https://edtechconnect.com/

  continue reading

55 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 508533091 series 3599905
Content provided by Jeff Dillon. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jeff Dillon or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Join host Jeff Dillon for a conversation with Jenny Li Fowler, the Director of Social Media Strategy at MIT. In this episode, Jenny pulls back the curtain on what it's really like to manage the social presence for one of the world's most innovative universities.

She discusses her journey from TV journalism to leading MIT's digital strategy, growing their following to over 6 million. Jenny gets real about the lack of a "secret sauce," the surprising misconceptions about her job, and the challenges of being a one-person team. They also dive into platform strategies, the evolving role of AI, and how to handle a social media crisis.

For anyone in higher ed marketing, this is a masterclass in intentionality, community building, and trusting your gut in the fast-paced world of social media.

Key Takeaways:

  1. There is No "Secret Sauce": Massive growth (like MIT's 6M+ followers) isn't achieved through a single trick. It's the result of being intensely intentional with every post, caption, and image, ensuring everything ties back to core goals.
  2. Social Media is Not a Side Hustle: A common misconception is that managing social media is simple and quick. In reality, it requires meticulous planning, strategy, and can take significant time for a single, well-crafted post.
  3. Platforms Are Not Created Equal: Audiences on different platforms expect different content. TikTok demands a different style than Instagram Reels. It's crucial to optimize content for how each specific audience prefers to consume it.
  4. Your Superpower is Listening, Not Just Talking: Especially during a crisis, the primary role of social media is to monitor, listen, and serve as a critical ear to the ground for leadership, providing them with real-time intelligence to inform decisions.
  5. Focus on Public Engagement Metrics: Relying on public metrics like engagements (likes, comments, shares) provides a consistent and reliable feedback loop that tells you what your community wants to see more of, without depending on proprietary platform analytics that could disappear.
  6. Paid vs. Organic is an Audience Decision: Paid media makes sense for competitive, specific goals (e.g., business school programs), but proven organic content is often the best foundation for a successful paid campaign.
  7. Embrace AI as a Tool, Not a Replacement: AI won't take your job, but someone using AI effectively might. Use it for analysis, tone adaptation, and brainstorming—not for copying and pasting content directly to your channels.
  8. Trust Your Gut and Don't Be Reactive: In a volatile, fast-moving medium, your intuition is a superpower. Avoid reactive posting; take a beat to assess situations and bring in the right people before responding.

Find Jenny Li Fowler here:

LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/jennylifowler/

Podcast - Confessions of a Higher Ed Social Media Manager

https://www.enrollify.org/podcasts/confessions-of-a-higher-ed-social-media-manager

MIT

https://mit.edu/

And find EdTech Connect here:

Web: https://edtechconnect.com/

  continue reading

55 episodes

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