CONTACT
Seed World

Unlock the Power of Social Media to Communicate Science Literacy

Social media is a news source
More and more Americans are turning to social media for their news.

Learn how to use social media to promote science literacy and other important topics.
With so many social media platforms to explore, it can be difficult to know which is the right fit. Check out the different possibilities of these four major platforms to see what is the most personally appealing for talking about science.“Social media is used in two ways,” says Kevin Folta of the University of Florida.

“To publish content like podcasts, articles or video, and then to amplify the beautiful content of others. It’s a group effort. We share our work and then share others’ work through our networks.”

 

Social Media-News
Infogram

 

Each social media platform has advantages and disadvantages when it comes to reaching different audiences.

“If we’re not there [on each platform] as scientists and farmers, we’re letting someone else tell the science and farming story,” Folta says.

Social Platforms By the Numbers

Facebook

  • 2.79 billion users
  • Used almost exclusively on mobile
  • 36% of U.S. adults get their news from Facebook
  • 53% ‘often’ or ‘sometimes’ use social media for news

Source: SproutSocialLinkedIn

  • 660 million members
  • 30 million company members
  • Europe has the most members
  • U.S. provides 32% of the traffic

Source: Influencer Marketing HubTwitter

  • 192 million daily users
  • 4th most visited site in 2020 globally
  • 79% between 18 and 49 years old
  • U.S. is the largest market

Sources: Twitter, Hootsuite, Alexa/SimilarWebYouTube

  • 2.291 billion users
  • 2nd most visited site globally
  • 2nd most popular social platform
  • Nearly 41% of watch time happens on mobile

Source: Hootsuite

Learn more about how to communicate with others about complex topics here:

Want GMOs, Gene Editing and Access to New Science? Communication is Key

RELATED ARTICLES
ONLINE PARTNERS
GLOBAL NEWS