Finally a comic devoted to our true superheroes – entrepreneurs.
To follow the strip -and few past adventures – go to http://www.inthestartup.biz/
Finally a comic devoted to our true superheroes – entrepreneurs.
To follow the strip -and few past adventures – go to http://www.inthestartup.biz/
In The Impact Equation, Chris Brogan and Julien Smith say that everyone needs a channel in social media: “developing a channel is about more than expression… it’s an important step for your personal life, your business, and your career. It is not something you need to be doing not when you are working on your new project, but much earlier…”
I made a similar note when I talked about the benefit of my online community in creating a new course in Social Media Marketing.
But for most of us there is an ongoing value from the community that is even more important than help in a future project. Whatever our area of expertise or passion, it is hard to stay current in a fast paced world. Our online community, sharing our passion, is an aid to lifelong learning, a Personal Learning Network or PLN.
PLNs are mostly discussed in educational literature, but in a knowledge economy, nearly all of us need to continuously keep up-to-speed on changing developments. So build your “community” or your “channel”, maybe they will help you with a major project some day, but in the meantime they will support and enhance you as your PLN!
Along with my wife, Laurel, I presented a workshop on using social media to develop and nurture a PLN at the Virginia Tech Annual Conference on Pedagogy. I recommend the conference to all. Our slides are posted on slideshare, embedded below:
The social media class played a major role in a new recruiting video for RU!
I had an interesting conversation on Twitter and LinkedIn with Sander Biehn (@sanderbiehn), who is an an evangelist for Social Selling at AT&T. The conversation was prompted by an article on the importance of creating good corporate content that I had tweeted.
During our discussion, I mentioned my sales approach during my earlier career as a salesperson and sales manager, and belatedly realized that there is nothing new about a content focus for B2B Sales! When I was selling bonds and fixed income derivatives and later online platforms and services for derivatives trading I used content to sell for me.
I suggest that my new social media marketing class start following some blogs immediately. Below is my current list – any suggestions for improvement?
I want to keep the list to a manageable size but want them to get information they needs to be social media savvy. Again suggestions solicited!!
I teach undergraduate and MBA courses in social media management. In the courses I stress experiential learning, especially projects such as a campaign for a personal passion, self-branding, or consulting with an organization. I tell my students that the only way to learn social media is hands-on.
I personally started blogging and then tweeting and benefited from mentoring with Mark Schaefer and Kent Huffman and learning together with Cheryl Burgess. However, on reflection I have also benefited from reading some wonderful books on social media.
Take a look at the books I list and most importantly let me know ones that you think I omitted!
THE THREE GREATEST BOOKS ABOUT THE SM Phenomenon
Three other Great Books about the phenomenon
Other really good books about SM and specialized topics in social media (alpha by author)
Can you remember when “sports news” used to be about games and matches and such?
A current sports quiz (4 quick questions):
1. Is Notre Dame’s star linebacker:
a. A cynical self-promoter who used a tragic story to finish runner-up for the Heisman?
b. Dumber than a hoe handle?
c. Both a & b
2. Are the “journalists” at Sports Illustrated, NY Times and AP:
a. Cynical promoters who liked a story with legs
b. Dumber than hoe handles
c. Lazy, really lazy and unprofessional
3. Will future Heisman candidates have to campaign on the field of play?
4. Bonus: How can you tell when Lance Armstrong is lying?
I have already publicized my personal new years resolutions – to lose weight and produce a lot of pages on some major projects that I committed to (and to tweet a report of my weekly pages typed and weight lost every Weds morning…)
Every blogger should have resolutions also. My blogging resolutions for 2013 are:
I signed up for Reddit two weeks ago and installed the button on my blog, but really haven’t explored it yet. My typical daily hits pattern on this blog (which still lags the older one) is to have 150-250 hits on the day of a new post and the following two days and then go down to 10 per day or less on Sunday and Monday before a new post. Sunday night, with only 5 hits for the day, I experimented with hitting the Reddit button on two recent posts – A presentation lasts FOREVER and Would you trust your daughter’s beach pics to Zuck. I had over 200 hits in 24 hours. No new comments, but presumably new readers. Reddit has my attention.
I have noticed my two favorite bloggers, Mark Schaefer and Cheryl Burgess are using Triberr. I couple weeks ago I read and interesting article describing Triberr as the bloggers best kept secret. Triberr would also seem to merit attention!
The need to post at minimum weekly is obvious. As is the need to figure out what to do with my two blogs (and another I have been considering). I may be back to my readers for suggestions on that…
Anything else that belongs on my blogging resolutions???
Today when you step up to the podium at a conference you must realize that your talk may well last FOREVER!
Last year at Mark Schaefer’s wonderful Social Slam, I gave a 15 minute talk about how I crowdsourced the whole process of creating a new course in social media marketing – from grant request to syllabus – using Twitter and my blog. At the time I wrote a post about the great conference and the novelty of talking while everyone else in the auditorium was tweeting.
Later in the summer my daughter text-ed me that my speech was on YouTube. I just checked and it now as more views on YouTube than the estimated crowd of 300 when I gave it live.
Fortunately I am fairly happy with the talk, but… I might have left out a somewhat snarky comment about the host (who is a WONDERFUL guy) cutting out when I started talking… and two or three other asides.
Something to keep in mind – All talks live forever. Will it affect your presentations?
I am a big believer in New Years Resolutions… And some of them have come to pass!
In the past couple years my social media network, especially twitter and this blog, have helped me keep up on social media trends and helped me develop SMM courses, acting as both a personal learning network and co-creation platform!
So I naturally got to thinking whether my social network could help with resolution execution.
Are you familiar with “Quitter’s Inc.?”, the short story of Stephen King (1978)? In it an organization spun-off from the Mafia claims 98% success in curing smoking. Once you sign on with Quitter’s Inc. you are expected to quit smoking cold turkey. You are under surveillance: if you backslide the organization kidnaps a loved one and tortures them with escalating electric shocks or worse.
I plan to use the same simple concept adapted to social media. Two of my primary resolutions are to (1) lose weight and (2) finish a couple of key projects. Each Wednesday morning I will tweet how much weight I have lost and how many pages I have typed from the previous Wednesday and whether I have met the minimum goals of 2 pounds and 5 pages.
Tens of thousands of tweeps are available to ridicule me if I give up, or consistently fall short of the weekly goals!
Not as macabre as Quitter’s Inc., but hopefully effective…we will see!