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Social Media Sub-brand Account Use and Policy

Effective as of Dec 01, 2022 | Last updated on Aug 19, 2024


Who This Policy Applies To

This policy applies to faculty, staff, and supervised student-workers who create or oversee CCA sub-brand social media accounts. The flagship brand accounts, such as @cacollegeofarts on Instagram and @CCAofficial on TikTok, are the primary channels of the college and are managed by CCA's Marketing & Communications Office.

What is a sub-brand account?

Sub-brand accounts are staff- and faculty-administered accounts representing the college's academic programs, curricular services, and student support offices. Sub-brand accounts are intended to showcase an academic program or facet of campus life. These accounts support the understanding of the college’s mission by sharing limited/focused information about the work of a specific department or program, advancing public understanding of our campus's academic, social, and creative experience. Sub-brand account content should highlight and celebrate faculty and student work, promote on-campus events and happenings, and advance community-building for our current and future students.

Policy Statement

CCA’s Social Media Sub-brand Account Policy is a living set of expectations, requirements, and procedures for participating in our community on social media platforms. Initially approved by CCA’s Senior Cabinet in December 2022 and updated in April 2024, this document outlines how to administer a sub-brand social media account. Our policy ensures we maintain the integrity of the CCA brand and reputation through the ever-changing social media landscape, build community in digital space, share accurate information with the public, and protect our students, staff, and faculty. The purpose of this policy is to ensure consistency between our online and on-campus communication as welcoming and authentically representative of CCA, our programs, and our community

In an educational environment such as CCA, context matters. We believe in developing supportive spaces to discuss emotionally and socially challenging topics, and the college is committed to providing those spaces. However, social media is not a place for such discussions because the format does not support adherence to our principles. Specifically, discussions on social media lack proper support and context, the forum does not allow for an empathic exchange of ideas and feelings, its inherent brevity makes it difficult to address complex concepts fully, and it may not be moderated with the standards of accuracy and integrity to which we hold our scholarship at this institution.

While our students and faculty might grapple with complex issues and current events in their work and research, social media is not the place for these debates, as it is an inappropriate forum for a full and complete discussion. For complex issues or sensitive current events, posts may advertise or promote a plan and invitation to discuss the topic but should not articulate specific details or positions about the topic, and each sub-account must offer a place for that discussion, such as an in-person or digital event or the use of online tools (i.e. Padlet or Mural).

This policy was written to guide sub-brand social media accounts internally run by staff and faculty. There are specific policies for student organizations and personal social media accounts of our faculty, staff, and students.

The following social media sites are approved by the CCA Marketing and Communications Office for CCA sub-brand accounts:

  • Instagram
  • Facebook

Any platform outside of the above list is subject to review and approval by the Associate Vice President of Content and Creative Strategy or designee.

Requirements

Social media-posted content on a sub-brand account is not part of the classroom or course curriculum and, therefore, is not a space for discourse nor an extension of the classroom. CCA Sub-brand account content is not encompassed by the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) Statement on Academic Freedom, as noted in the Faculty Handbook. Any concerns regarding potential misconduct will be escalated to the Marketing and Communications Office and Human Resources. When in doubt, refrain from posting.

Sub-brand accounts must:

  • Be registered with a CCA departmental email address (not an individual’s email address) and have login credentials documented within their department and Marcom’s files (contact marcom@cca.edu).
  • Adhere to college policies and other laws related to collegiality and community conduct, as noted in Faculty, Employee, and Student Handbooks.
  • Respect copyright law and secure proper permission to feature people and their work. (Find our media release guidelines here.)
  • Be mindful of other laws and regulations, including FERPA, unpublished details, and financial information of the college.
  • Include @cacollegeofarts in their bio and indicate this profile is “student-run,” “division-run,” or “program-run”. Example: CCA Graphic Design The world of graphic design at CCA @cacollegeofarts. Account run by program chair E Roon Kang. Follow to get involved!

Procedures

Sub-brand accounts are required to:

Sub-brand accounts are strongly encouraged to:

Sub-brand accounts are prohibited from:

• Have channel content held responsible by the most senior position in your program or department.

• Have content reviewed and approved by a designated account manager (i.e. department/program leadership such as a dean, chair, or assistant director) before it is published.*

Interact with the social media community in a way that is welcoming, respectful and reflects the college positively.

• Have a profile picture that adheres to CCA’s brand guidelines. Download a template below under 'Additional resources.'

• Receive annual account management training with the Assistant Director, Content + Marketing.

• Ensure that all content on sub-brand accounts is consistent with the stated purpose of such accounts, which is to serve as a display place for the activities and academic pursuits of the department.

• Consistently provide appropriate options for places, both in person and virtual, to have critical discussions (because it’s not here).

• Follow naming convention: @cca_name (ex: @cca_illustration)

• Follow CCA’s brand guidelines when developing content for their profile.

• Tag @cacollegeofarts in relevant posts for possible reposts and greater reach through primary channels

• Using CCA’s primary logo as their profile picture.

• Using any language stating or implying they are an “official program-run” channel of the college, under the umbrella of the flagship account.

• Using sub-brand accounts to promote personal views or perspectives on behalf of CCA.**

• Posting content that violates intellectual property rights or any terms and conditions of third-party sites.

• Posting content that incites animus, hatred, violence, harassment, bullying, discriminatory remarks, and any content that encourages harm against individuals or groups based on race, ethnicity, religion, gender, sexual orientation, disabilities, or any other characteristic.

• Publishing social media ads and creating boosted posts for sub-brand accounts.

• Doxxing, or publishing personal and confidential information online, is prohibited in alignment with the CCA Employee and Faculty Handbooks.

* However, inappropriate comments and content can lead to complaints and consideration of disciplinary action by CCA.

**Personal, professional, or political opinions should only be expressed in an individual capacity on one’s own social media accounts, and even then, avoid the appearance of speaking or acting for the college on any topic or event.

The AVP of Content & Creative Strategy and VP of Human Resources will regularly review the effectiveness and impact of this policy.

Additional Information

Support

The Marketing & Communications Office is here as a resource to shape healthy digital spaces for CCA. Reach out for guidance or to discuss case-by-case issues. We can provide:

  • Recommendations for de-escalating negative comments and questions.
  • Basic content review with Assistant Director, Content + Marketing.
  • Brand guidelines review and training with the Lead Designer.
  • Any press inquiries regarding programs or social media should be forwarded to the Director of Integrated Communications, who will liaise with media on behalf of the community.

The College and Marketing & Communications team reserves the right to:

  • Edit, hide, archive, or delete inappropriate and/or offensive posts or comments that violate the Social Media Sub-brand Account policy, or deactivate any profile that violates CCA policy or federal or state law.
  • Disable or enable commenting on posts at their discretion with regard to the safety of our community members.
  • Send any posts or comments we deem appropriate either to the college’s Human Resource Office for investigation or to law enforcement authorities for investigation as we feel necessary or is required by law.

Best practices

For a well-regulated sub-brand account:

  • Instagram should be your program’s primary social media account. We recommend maintaining it only if your program has the bandwidth to adhere to the policies listed above.
  • Carefully consider what you post. Before posting, consider how it relates to the college’s institutional values, how your followers will engage with it and what purpose it serves for your program and/or the college.
  • Remember that your profile represents your program and the college, not your own personal opinions.
  • Use visually strong, well-lit high quality images. Portrait (4:5) and Square (1:1) perform best for on-feed posts.
  • Proofread your captions to make sure spelling, grammar, and all written information is accurate.
  • Ask permission before featuring a student or faculty’s artwork.
  • When in doubt, refrain from posting.

Contacts

Policy Stewards

Update History

Jun 30, 2024

For the previous version of this policy, please contact Marketing & Communications.