Choosing a social media platform to promote your farm
If you want to promote your farm on social media, do your research about your customers, stay genuinely yourself, and know where you should be.
If you want to promote your farm on social media, do your research about your customers, stay genuinely yourself, and know where you should be.
Across social media and the Sylvanaqua Farms website, Chris Newman, a young Black Indigenous farmer, types truth to power, in an honest, unapologetic tone.
Activists from a vegan group used a 4-H teen’s Facebook page as a platform to showcase common vegan negativity and anger toward animal agriculture.
When times are tough on the farm, you may want to share your feelings and images with others, but be careful with what you share and how you share it.
It’s recommended to allocate some time to consumer groups where you have an interest.
Google has been showing more questions and answers in its “People Also Ask” results section, and that means farming questions are being seen more.
If you take the time to Google your farm, you might be surprised at the kinds of results you find online.
Fear of activists targeting the farm is one of the top reasons that farmers mention when I ask why they aren’t using social media to connect with people.
Here are some great online tools to help you address misinformation about agriculture that you may come across.
While everyone’s grandparents are using Facebook, and the millennials dominate Instagram Stories, you might be wondering where the cool kids are hanging out. It’s probably TikTok. Started in China, TikTok is now a global sensation and network filled with short video content. The audience is mostly younger (under 30), and it is around the size […]