Posts Tagged ‘Mass media’

New Media Photographer Podcast 73

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

This week Rosh interviews Washington D.C. photographer John Harrington.


Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

You like to hear yourself tweet

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

I received a tweet the other day from a follower letting me know I was a royal pain in his backside.

@newmediaphoto. you are an @ pain in the ass. you like to hear yourself tweet.

At first, I laughed out loud. Then I wondered: What was he talking about?  Was I self-promoting too much? Maybe.  I’ve been known to do that at times.

I checked my tweets; most of them were promoting others, sharing information and sharing the love fest at Photo Plus Expo.

Then I checked his profile.  It was locked but I noticed he was only following 30 people with 16 tweeters following him.

I wasn’t mad.  I clearly remember the early days of  Twitter and feeling the same way about someone when I was only following about 35 people.  One day Jay Berkowitz tweeted that he had a friend who was about to hit his 100th follower and would someone help him out.  I ended up being KeithBurtis’s 101st follower.

What I didn’t know was  that Keith tweeted and tweeted and tweeted all day long. He was really getting into social media and wanting to find new ways to promote his wood-turning business.  He tweeted so much that he eventually inspired me to write a post at Prosperous Artists titled,  Twitter is not for chatting.  Finally, I couldn’t take it anymore and unfollowed him.  It wasn’t personal.

About a year ago I gained a better understanding of the platform and started to pick up steam.  I offered more quality content.  I tweeted 10-20 times a day about social media and photography.

My numbers started to climb. Once I was following more than 100 people no one seemed to dominate my Twitter page anymore.  It was a flowing stream of content, opinion and information mostly about photography and social media-related issues.

Over the last summer, when I reached 3,000 followers, I started thinking of Keith Burtis and wondered what he was doing. Keith is now knocking on the door of 9,000 followers. These days he is not as concerned about how to promote his woodworking and is  helping others with social media.

Although many of us from the early days of Twitter have many thousands of followers — some close to a 100,000  – it still nags at me sometimes if I’m that guy dominating someone’s Twitter screen.

With new people jumping on the Twitter train everyday, the answer is obviously yes.

The average number of followers per account is around 70. I know that eventually the people who embrace Twitter for the incredible media stream it is will tend to have hundreds of followers. In most cases,  they will miss 90 percent of my tweets.

So, to the fellow photographer who finds my tweets overwhelming, I encourage you to tear down that wall.  Start connecting with more people in the Twittersphere and start offering valuable information.  You will be much more satisfied and I will not have to live with the guilt of being a pain in your rear.

Rosh

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

New media photographer podcast 63

Monday, August 24th, 2009

This week Rosh talks about your target market, social media – is it a waste of time and introduces Trevor current sharing the latest photography news.


Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Traditional media is still important to your business

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

Mass media still reaches millions of people each day.  Your local newspaper reaches thousands of readers.  Using traditional media to promote your business still is extremely effective.

Traditional media sources are not as personal as social media. You will need larger circulation numbers to cast your net to find, attract and develop new fans. TV, radio and newsprint still offer excellent channels to attract new members to your social media community.

Your social media community is populated with your most influential fans: people who like what you do, what you stand for, or what you say.  These people support your efforts and help spread the word about your work.

Being a convert to social media and a fan of its potential doesn’t mean you shouldn’t take advantage of all the avenues available.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Thirteen new sites for photographers to consider

Friday, June 19th, 2009

virl.com This site is a photo upload and link shortening Web site for social media.

Jotpix.com This site might be interesting for location scouting, if it takes off.

screentweet.com Share photographs, screen shots and videos on Twitter.

pubclip.com (paid service) Multi-media creation service for your web site or blog.

expono.com “Feature rich” social photography sharing service.

fotopedia.com Collaborative photography encyclopedia. (It has received a lot of press)

photoartgallery.com Photography art gallery to show, share, buy and sell photographs.

twitcaps.com Watch a continuous photography feed of  images being shared on Twitter.

http://picfog.com Watch a continuous photography feed from the internet (similar to twitcaps.com)

http://twitvid.io This is another Twitter video sharing platform.

aviary.com They are still launching excellent new Web based tools for photographers.  The newest is called Falcon.

fotomoto.com Sell you images online.  I’ve still not fully reviewed this site as intended. But, it is still worth another mention based photographers comments and reviews.

Glow Doodle: Create fun long exposures with your web cam.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]