Posts Tagged ‘social networking’

New discoveries

Friday, May 8th, 2009

pandora.com You can thank Chris Brogan for this.  He tweeted about this personalized Internet radio service and its advertising system. Check it out for yourself. Pandora learns what music you like by having you rate individual songs within categories. Based on your ratings, it develops play lists of your favorites.

Pandoraboy Launch Pandora from this Mac application.  I like it.  Thanks to @phillipresuggan for the suggestion.

Blellow.com I wrote about the site last week.  It’s still holding up.  I enjoy the Twitter-like platform and opportunity to communicate with fellow freelancers.

peoplepond.com I caught this one while listening to Jay Berkowitz podcast Ten Golden Rules.  This helps you control your online identity.

imgspark.com This Web site inspires you with imagery. Tag a few images and ideas for future assignments.  This suggestion comes from the  Light source podcast at studiolighting.net

Pitch engine I’ve not used this Web site yet, but I bookmarked it because it looks like a valuable future resource.

socialcast.com Twitter-like application for internal communications. Did they beat Twitter to the punch?

foneshow.com Listen to podcasts on your phone. I found the icon for this service on the front page of C. C. Chapman’s Managing the Gray.  It’s now available on New Media Photographer.  Listen here.

web.shootq.com Online studio manager.  I’ve not used it, but it looks like it might be worth consideration.

pocketmeeting.com Desktop meetings for $5  a day. This is another one I’m waiting for the right opportunity to use.

Feel free to share anything  – good or bad — about the sites on this list or add your own suggestions.

Rosh

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Automating your relationships

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

money

I find it tempting to sign up for those automated social media programs that claim to free you from the time and energy wasted on repetitive social tasks. But, before I press that button, I remind myself that my hard-earned followers and relationships are too important to automate and abuse.

Moneymaking through social relationships doesn’t run on autopilot. I recently replied to an automated DM (direct message) about a “great opportunity” to make money on Twitter. My return message read:  “Sorry, not interested. My Twitter relationships are too valuable.”

Sadly, the person I responded to most likely doesn’t care. This is precisely the problem and why I don’t follow that person anymore.  You can make money with hard marketing techniques in social media. I figure 1 to 2 percent of the people following you on Twitter will see and act upon each “call to action” Tweet. If you have 1,000 people following you,  about 20 people might react. If you have a great pitch, maybe one to four followers might convert.

Gaining 1,000 people in any social media platform is not easy. It usually takes time and trust. If you abuse that relationship, you will lose that trust and your effort will have been a waste of time.

Yes, you can manipulate your way to 10,000 people, but they are not people who care about you or what you have to offer. Often,  accounts responding easily to manipulation are automated themselves, so all you have are robots responding to other robots.

The best ROI (usually meaning Return on Investment)  in social media is best stated as Return on Influence: building the trust of your followers and friends. That influence, like any power,  can be long lasting and will offer greater rewards.

The next time you consider the easy money, think about the worth of the people you influence. What is the value of trust?  How much more will it cost you to gain it back?

Rosh

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Twitter Search Optimization (TSO)

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

twittersearch1

Are you trying to build a Twitter community following?

Twitter is an excellent place to discover content, content providers, and to be discovered. Twitter truly is micro-blogging and the rules are the same.

Good content attracts followers.

When people search for new community members to follow, they often look for common areas of interest.  Photographers will look through the logs of people they trust.  They will search the tweets and the public display of the content providers the photographer follows, just like a blogroll.

Like standard blogs, micro-blog posts are found through searching. Searching depends on key words.

Optimizing your tweets will help people find you.  Tweets with “Yeah, I agree” and “Me too” are not helpful.  Only about 1 percent to 2 percent of the people who follow you actually see your tweets — unless they are very loyal followers. Few followers are that loyal.

With so few of your followers viewing each tweet, it’s important to make every one count.  Rather than “Yeah, I agree” a better response would be: “Yeah, I agree. Nikon has very sharp lenses.”  The more detail the better.

The more common key words you can use the better.  In the example above, Nikon is the obvious key word. But, other key words such as photography, photo, photographer, camera and picture, to name a few,  are also very useful for the photographer.

Another method searchers use to find information of interest is the hashtag.  A hashtag is a tagging method used to by tweeters to signal or tag an area of interest to other tweeters.  A hashtag is easily created by placing a “#” in front of the key word.

Hashtags may represent topics, themes, groups or events. If your tweets are about camera equipment, then  #camera would be valuable. If you want to follow the chatter at the recent South by Southwest conference all you would do is place #sxsw in twitter search.

I added about 15 followers in 20 minutes just by participating with thoughts and comments within a #sxsw presentation for artists.

The more interesting, funny or valuable your tweets are, the more likely your tweets will be RT (retweeted).  Retweets are extremely valuable.  They will introduce your content to a new set of followers.  You could gain followers in large numbers if a major figure in the Twitter community retweets your content.

Givers gain is always a good rule to follow.  If you retweet content, others are more likely to retweet your quality content.  Of course there is nothing wrong with asking for the sale.  You may ask followers to retweet your content, but don’t abuse the request and make sure it’s your best.

The bottom line is great content offers great rewards and quality optimization increases the odds your valuable content will be found.

Rosh

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Facebook is looking to you for policy changes

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

Within the last hour,  Mark Zuckerberg posted on the Facebook blog that he wishes to include the facebook community in the development of the new terms of service policy.  Check it out.

http://is.gd/l0fn

Rosh

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Social media made easy

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

Time is often an issue when it comes to social media.  Listed below are a few quick and simple platforms to share your thoughts, your content,  and improve productivity. 

Remember,  Twitter is one of the simplest tools of all, but it can take up your entire day if you let it.  I recommend you devise a plan and stick to it.

The goal of using social media is to build community, trust and relationships with people who care about you and what you do. At the same time  you need to be productive and get the work done that pays the bills immediately.  I hope you find some of these solutions effective:

Posterous:  Blogging via e-mail.  Write an e-mail (blog post), attach a photo, hit send and you’re a blogger.

Twitter: Simple micro-blogging. Share a thought in 140 characters. Reply to a couple interesting posts or questions. In five minutes, your work is done. Visit a few times a day.

Tumblr: Share your feeds, thoughts, and found content from the Web all in one location. It has been called a cross between blogging and Twitter.

Elements: Share images and quotes.  Review other people’s content by selecting “I like it” or “cast it.”  Follow content providers and be followed. Easy.

Castblaster: For podcasters. Castblaster is a popular podcast production tool.  Maybe not easy, but it can simplify the production.

Gmail: E-mail is still important.  Gmail is one of the best Web-based e-mail systems.

Jott: Hit speed-dial and leave yourself an e-mail message via voice mail.

K7.net : Simple Internet voice mail message and fax system.  You will receive your own phone number, too. I use this service for my comment line.

Picnik: Easy-to-use photo editing.

Flock: Web browser designed for social media.

Ping.fm  Update your social networks from one location.

Evernote: Popular content capture platform.  Excellent application for smart phones.

Pixelpipe:  Send images to multiple locations with one upload.

Open ID:  One digital identity for many of your favorite Web sites.

What Web tools have made your social media life easier?

Rosh

 

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