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.
http://www.newsweek.com/legal-justice-league-lego-maker-writing-women-histor... http://www.newsweek.com/legal-justice-league-lego-maker-writing-women-history-314674
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
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