If you’ve ever wondered about the true value of social media, a class of Freeman School students has an answer for you. $18,000.
That’s how much a Twitter message—or, if you prefer, a tweet—the students posted on behalf of the Louisiana Museum Foundation generated for the foundation’s efforts to repair and restore music legend Fats Domino’s white Steinway piano, which was nearly destroyed by floodwaters in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.
“It was absolutely phenomenal,” says Susan Maclay, executive director of the foundation, which raises private grants and donations to support programs of the Louisiana State Museum. “Out of the clear blue sky, a perfect stranger saw their tweet, got in touch with us and said, ‘Look, whatever you need to finish the project, let me know.’”
The Twitter project was part of Professor of Practice Ashley Keller Nelson’s social media communications course, which puts undergraduate business students to work on social media campaigns for local nonprofits. Last spring, the Louisiana Museum Foundation reached out to Nelson for help on a number of fundraising projects, including one to repair Domino’s waterlogged piano for the museum’s upcoming Louisiana Music Experience exhibition.
Prior to the class’s involvement, the campaign had languished, with just a handful of donations that amounted to less than 25 percent of the funds needed to complete the project.
To help get the word out, the students created a Twitter account for the campaign, @Fats_Piano, and began tweeting regularly about Domino and the restoration project to a growing audience of followers in the New Orleans music community.
“It was more than simply posting messages about the project,” says Nelson. “The students had to create a personality for the piano and its Twitter account so the messages would grab the follower’s attention. For example, they tweeted, ‘You know Katrina done me wrong’ and linked a video of Fats singing ‘You Done Me Wrong.’ Another tweet said, ‘Hard to hate a Blue Monday on such a beautiful day!’”
The campaign captured the attention of some high-profile supporters, including the Tipitina’s Foundation, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and even Paul McCartney, who donated $1,000 toward the restoration effort.
Eventually, one of the students’ tweets found its way to a New Orleans music fan in Australia, who contacted the foundation and offered to provide the remaining funds needed to complete the project, which resulted in a donation of $18,000.
Domino’s piano is now in the hands of conservators, and Maclay says she expects it to be ready for the opening of the exhibition in 2014.
“I was very skeptical, but I will tell you I am now a believer in social media thanks to those students,” Maclay says. “The students were fantastic, and we loved working with them.”
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