Posts tagged as:

Social network

Geolocation done right

by · November 10, 2010

There’s an old maxim in television newsrooms, that you’re not going to get the audience’s attention unless you clearly sell the WIIFM.

(What’s In It For Me.)

That’s been the failing of so many services within the social media space. It took Twitter more than three years to brand itself as a platform for news. For the longest time, it floundered as people stared at that “What are you doing?” prompt and still didn’t know what the service was about. Twitter is the exception, as most networks that don’t enunciate the WIIFM eventually die.

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26 Keys to Twitter Success

by · November 5, 2010

Have you ever wondered why some folks succeed on Twitter and others don’t? Rather than trying to convince individuals to give Twitter a whirl, I have had more luck just teaching them the lessons necessary for their success.

Here are a few key lessons that I share. Take a peek, and let me know what you are teaching to your community, business, or organization to ensure their success.

  1. Active – Many folks give up on Twitter way too early! Actively participating, even when you don’t fully get it, is the only way Twitter will make sense.This means being active both as a listener and as “Tweeter”.
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Five Ways Social Will Change Journalism

by · October 19, 2010

The tools of social media are disruptive, to say the least. But knowing where the landscape is shifting makes a big difference in finding the safe places to build your future business foundation.

Want to own a newspaper? A magazine? TV Guide sold for a dollar, but it might have been overvalued.

Here’s what to look for as journalism — both the outlets and the individuals working in the industry — go social.

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The Future Of The Social Web According To Forrester, Owyang

by · May 5, 2009

Jason Falls

Jason Falls

The ever-present and seemingly omniscient Jeremiah Owyang has authored another report from Forrester well worth reading. “The Future of the Social Web,” was released to Forrester clients on April 27. You can purchase the report or become a client on their website.

Owyang, along with editors and co-authors Josh Bernoff, Cynthia Pflaum and Emily Bowen, essentially cover the immediate future of the social web to which businesses need to focus with regard to OpenID. The report surmises, in essence, that today’s customer and business experience is frustrating because profile information varies from site to service and beyond. OpenID platforms like Facebook Connect offer data portability for individual identities. Essentially, you log in to one network and it carries your credentials through to other networks and unifies your social footprint.

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Persistence: The Key to Social Media Strategy

by · April 3, 2009

“After deciding on a course of action, stick to it. This gives your plan the strength of consistency of action.” Gerald Michaelson – Sun Tzu for Success

David Finch

David Finch

In my recent post, “How to Embrace the Process of Social Media” I communicated my ideas, “that the implementation of a social media strategy is a process more then just one or two events.” The engine that keeps that process moving forward is the discipline of being persistent.

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The Social Media Trap: What’s the Next Big Thing?

by · February 13, 2009

David Finch

David Finch

When I was in elementary school my father took me to the most amazing display of creativity that had I ever seen. I was completely mesmerized by the lights, the acting and the way stories were made to come alive. As a young boy, what intrigued me the most was watching what I thought was impossible become possible with a few words or gestures. What I had experienced was my first magic show.

That single event was so impacting that for twenty years I spent money, read books and articles by some of the greatest performers of all time. It motivated me to travel to obscure locations to meet magicians from this underground society to watch and learn as well as to be challenged all over again.

However, as I got older I noticed that instead of becoming a magician, even though I could do a simple routine, I was becoming a collector – A collector of tricks, secrets, books and videos. I was more addicted to finding the “new thing” instead of honing my craft and executing a few simple tricks with the performance of a master. I was afraid I would miss out and by missing out it would make me less of a performer. The end of the story is that while I was determined to find the new, I didn’t become a performer at all.

The Social Media Trap

I know you may be asking, “what does this have to do with social media,” but it has everything to do with it. Like many of you I’m connected everywhere, Twitter, Facebook, Friendfeed,
and the list goes on. I also subscribe and read over four hundred RSS
feeds and what I continue to hear is this question,
“What’s the next big thing?”

LONDON - JULY 10:  In this photo illustration ...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

Who’s going to unveil the next Twitter or Facebook? What new tool is going to take the web by storm that everyone is going to have to have? What’s going to explode on to the mobile scene?

I’m sure you’ve heard all of these and more. The real question is not what tool could be next, but can you execute with what you currently have?

The magicians that I had admired were not those that carried around shiny boxes and had to be twenty feet away from you to perform the magical illusion, but it was the individual who can master a simple trick with a coin or a dollar bill, or even something that he borrowed from someone else.

The challenge is how can I maximize not what’s coming, but how can I maximize what I already have.

Here are a few ways I’m combating the social media trap.

7 Ways to Avoid the Social Media Trap

1. Engage in conversations within the communities you are currently a part of.
2. Revisit social networks that you already have a profile in and see if the community has evolved or grown since you last visited.
3. Don’t run after the “next thing.” If it’s big you’ll find out about it, believe me.
4. Think execution before activation.
5. Simplify and go back to the basics of social media: people first, tools second.
6. See if you can unplug and connect with others face-to-face.
7. Add to your social media toolbox not what everyone has, but only what you will use.

If you find yourself already victim to the trap, pause and go back to what the heart of social media is all about – Connecting with people, one person at a time.

Note: While I was writing this post, Gary Vaynerchuk from winelibrarytv.com published a video that addresses the same topic. Check it out!

Have you found yourself prey to this trap? What methods are you using to get out? What have you learn in the process?

Leave a comment, I want to hear your story.

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