The author of this article has a Twitter handle of @20tuari and would limit the hashtags really to a max of 2. Would take out that "@" within a quote, it really looks manipulated. 



On Mon, Mar 23, 2015 at 2:09 PM, Fabrice Florin <fflorin@wikimedia.org> wrote:

On Mar 23, 2015, at 1:51 PM, Andrew Sherman <asherman@wikimedia.org> wrote:

Hello Everyone,

Michael and I created some social messages for this story.


Below are some proposed messages. Thanks for reviewing.

Tweet structure:

Account: @wikipedia

I’m trying to help close the gender gap on @Wikipedia.” --  #MaiaWeinstock #legaljusticeleague #IWD2015


Might be worth it to try to identify the author of the quote, to provide some context. For example:

‘#MaiaWeinstock, MIT News editor’

Facebook structure:

Account: Wikipedia

Everything is awesome -- when you’re apart of a team. Join #Legaljusticeleague for #wmnhist month. ‪#‎SupremeCourt‬‬ ‪#‎women‬ ‪#‎LegalJusticeLeague‬ ‪#‎InternationalWomensDay‬ ‪#‎MaiaWeinstock‬


I would avoid statements like 'Everything is awesome’, which are hard to back up with factual evidence — unless we’re citing someone saying it.


Google+ structure:

Account: Wikipedia

“It’s kind of fun that there’s a celebration of being smart and of being interested in cerebral topics and in bettering our country.” -- #MaiaWeinstock

We think so too Maia :)
‪#‎LegalJusticeLeague‬ ‪#‎InternationalWomensDay‬ #IWD2015



Same comment as above about identifying who the author is. Not everyone has heard of Maia Weinstock :)

Thanks,

--
Andrew Sherman
Digital Communications | Wikimedia Foundation
_______________________________________________
Social-media mailing list
Social-media@lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/social-media


_______________________________________________
Social-media mailing list
Social-media@lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/social-media




--
Michael Guss
Research Analyst
Wikimediafoundation.org
mguss@wikimedia.org