HRE was consistently active on both Facebook and Instagram. Below are some examples of social content I created for them.
Photos (mostly shared by guides and guests) were organized into albums such as “Fun on the River” and “Hatch Behind the Scenes” on the HRE Facebook page. New photos added to the albums were automatically shared as new posts, but then were also saved in an organized archive that interested followers could easily browse. Guests curious about what a Hatch River Expeditions camp setup looks like can see at a glance a variety of images of Hatch campsites. The album description and individual photo descriptions give HRE further opportunities to solicit guest engagement, credit photo providers, and enhance their SEO.An album of wildlife photos got HRE guests engaged in discussions about what types of animals they saw on their own trips. When an event such as “World Wildlife Day” came up, it was easy to add photos to the wildlife album, share them as a post, and engage with the #worldwildlifeday hashtag.Facebook posts featuring photos of guests at popular stops with funny captions engaged both potential guests (suggesting they should book and “get [their] butt[s] on the river”) and past guests who commented about their memories from trips prior.As a very image driven platform, Instagram posts often were simply evocative photos with hashtags.On Instagram, HRE also engaged with the trend of posting striking images overlaid with quotes about nature, beauty, the outdoors, etc.One way of engaging past or long-time guests and reminding followers that HRE has been in business for a long time was by sharing photos of historical items like this stack of square photos of a trip of decades prior.