Marketing, Communications & Volunteering for Prestonās 5K
On Saturday, April 2, it rained all day.
But nothing could deter the nearly 400 runners who came to run forĀ Prestonās Playground, my social media marketing classā nonprofit.Ā
While it was my first time at a 5K (Iām not exactly theĀ ārunningā type. Or jogging type. I speed walk sometimes), it was not my first time covering a large event. Iād brought with me my trusty work camera, Ava, a Canon EOS 7D Mark II, and had a rough plan for what I wanted to do: take photos, lots of them.
Thanks to my 5K inexperience, I wasnāt sure where to go first, but like many other things I do, I wandered around until I bumped into my classmates and we had a pre-race chat. After discussing what we wanted to do and where to go, we broke up and attacked the situation.
I covered our adaptive runners and took hundreds of photos/videos before and during the race, in addition to capturing at least the first 30 or so across the finish line.Ā
My major challenges were pressing the shutter button fast enough (this is one of the first times Iāve really used the DSLR to capture movement through photos) and trusting my classmates to do their part. Weāve struggled as a class to find our groove; some have more social media skills than others (or are finding it easier to pick up), while some struggle with the overall concept.
In addition, I know some of my classmates are the kind of people who need moreĀ direction than I do. Iām perfectly content to take a base assignment and run with it, making sure to ask questions to keep me on the right track. But not everyone can do that. (And thatās OK.)
While I didnāt learn anything new on how to cover a live event, it was another opportunity to challenge myself and push me out of my comfort zone. Even though Iām the one with the camera, Iām terrified Iāve annoying others and bothering them to take their photo. Iām always afraid theyāll say no!
Also, I learned that itās important to create a plan for coverage of live events, especiallyĀ if youāre working with other people. Doesnāt matter if they know how to use social media better or worse than you -- creating a plan unifies efforts and gives those who need more direction an outline for action, something to which they can refer back.
Total photo count: 913 Many apologies and thanks again to my classmates who sorted through those 913 for me.Ā šĀ š











