By now, a whole lot of people are writing and blogging about Positive Psychology. There´s also a pretty active Twitter community (please read the post 7 Positive Psychology People and Institutions to follow on Twitter). But as far as I know, people have not (intuitively) agreed on a single Twitter hash tag for the topic. Some use #PositivePsychology (which is quite long), some #PosPsychology (still long and rather unusual), some use #PosPsych – and others do not use hash tags at all when sharing their content. Following my fellow German #PosPsy evangelist Michael Tomoff, I propose to use the hash tag #PosPsy (or #pospsy) from now on whenever talking about this magnificent topic. Using a single unified hash tag as a community has a couple of advantages:
- Content in general becomes more visible. Tweets with (more or less) popular tags profit from a higher interaction rate. Additionally, as people get accustomed to the expression, it´ll become the general search term for the topic – helping people to find all the good stuff that is out there on Twitter.
- For the same reason, it will help your content to become more visible.
- Ultimately, using #PosPsy as the unified hash tag will create a sense of community – just as e.g., all the tweets supporting a certain football team will display the same tag.
Of course, we should still use our more individualized tags like #Gratitude or #Happiness, but using #PosPsy in addition will create the additional attention our topics deserve. So, if you think that having a unified hash tag for all things Positive Psychology is a great idea, please share this post or the following picture! Would be cool to make it a trending topic on Twitter… 🙂
Update
- Yes, I´ve done some research. If PP hashtags were a market, I´d say it´s “absolutely not consolidated”. On some days, one tag is used more often than others, and on other days, it´s something else. In general, when comparing “our” tags to really popular ones, the result would be: they´re all insignificant. That´s why it´s a really good idea in the first place to start using a single one as a community – whatever it may be at the end of the day.
- My learning is: with hashtags, it´s all about brevity. You´d want a “minimum understandable solution” that is not occupied by another topic – that´s why I propose #PosPsy.
- I´m not sure if hash tags are really important in terms of “resonance”. People resonate with content, not with hash tags. The thing is: in most cases when there´s no predefined tag given out by a source with a considerable outreach, it´s a sort of “winner takes it all” dynamic (you can monitor that e.g. with large sports events). The one that is used most in the beginning (and/or is supported by someone with a large audience) tends to win. First, due to “social pressure”, and second due to the Twitter algorithm that magnifies this effect by suggesting the one that is mostly used anyway.
Update No. 2
The Positive Psychology Center at UPenn twittered that they support #PosPsy. That´s not like the Pope supporting us, but it´s not too far away either… 🙂
We tend to use #positivepsychology or #pospsych because we are also in the business of education people about what positive psychology is, and so we sacrifice shortness for clarity. Given that “we” are scientifically-based and research-oriented, maybe we should survey our constituents and intended audience members to see what resonates for everyone, providing both clarity and succinctness? 🙂
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I’d say: if we use the short one consistently over some time, the longer one will no longer be necessary without losing the educational value… 🙂
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I’ve been using #pospsych for years – it has a nice ring to it.
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I don’t think #pospsy will mean much to people who are new to positive psychology. I’d put in a vote for #pospsych – the extra two characters are worth it. Yes, people resonate with content, but they also need to know what the hashtag means. I see lots of twitter chats taking place with obscure hashtags, and it can alienate people who don’t know what the hashtag means – and it can be hard to derive or discover.
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We’ve been using the long #positivepsychology or #pospsych as well. Uniting the messaging of the field would be fantastic! Short is good but the more it resonates with the greater population the better. Psychology is abbreviated as psych quite often so that may resonate better – therefor have the greatest impact..
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The Positive Psychology Center an UPenn votes for #PosPsy. 🙂 https://twitter.com/PennPosPsychCtr/status/585791633314177025
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