Tagged: social networking

March 27th, 2009

Oodles and Oodles of Fun (and Craziness), Oh My!

Sheesh! This has been a whirlwind week. Lots and lots and lots going on. All of them awesome. But none of them allowing me to sit down and think and write even though all of them are blog, Twitter, web development related. What a catch 22. Let me share a few of them, so you know what’s going on.

SGFblogs.com

As many of you know, I’ve sort of dove in with the Springfield Bloggers Association. Mostly ball picking upping, which I’m happy to do. I love blogging. I love bloggers. You all know this. I hope that’s one of the reasons you read me nearly every day. Anyway, I’ve been at work on the SBA’s blog for a week or so, and I met with Andy Cline last night to discuss the blogroll and other possibilities for the group. The site is ready for visitors (but be patient, we’re still tweaking a few of the features/design elements), and if you’re in the Springfield area, I encourage you to submit your blog to our blogroll. If other local bloggers help promote SGFblogs.com and help it grow, it could quickly become a hub for bloggers in Springfield. We don’t know what that exactly looks like yet, but that’s why we need lots of bloggers to participate and help shape the group and site.

Project Hawk

Linden and I finally wrapped up our Twitter help guide (code name: Hawk) this week, and it will be published on our blogs starting Monday. A bulk of today will be spent getting my posts ready. We decided to split the four posts between us, Sarah, Linden, Sarah, Linden, so we can share the traffic. Once we’re done publishing, we’re having my husband design a little ebook for us. Chris is helping me with another top-secret project next week that has to roll out on Thursday, so he’ll do the ebook after that. Truly, this has been one of my favorite collaborative writing projects. I really haven’t done any outside of school, and group school projects are always rough when you’re the overachiever. I always got the fuzzy side of the lollipop, so to speak. Anyway, collaborating with Linden has been super fun, and this project counts as my first international writing project.

Continuing Ed Classes

The third project that’s been crazy consuming is completing applications and proposals for a few continuing education classes I’d like to teach at our local community college. Of course, they’re blogging related. I have three blogging classes–beginning, intermediate, and advanced–outlined, and I have a few social networking classes outlined, too. The classes are for the summer, and I need to get on the ball and get them out the door, so they can be reviewed before the summer schedule is wrapped up and mailed to the community. I hope there’s some interest in them. I love helping bloggers work on their blogs. (And I could use some extra cash.)

So my blogging may be a little scarce for the next two weeks or so. I’ll try to get in a few updates here and there, but don’t worry if I’m not around. I’m here. I’m checking in. Just not writing too much. Oh, yeah, and then there’s Easter and I’m going home to hang out with my folks for a few days, and there’s not much in the way of Internet speed there. I just stay up with my mother until 2 AM talking every night.

Anyway, have a great weekend! And if you’re in Springfield, stay warm. Snow is coming. (But that’s a blog post for another day.)

July 8th, 2008

3 Lessons I Learned from Network Marketers

Have you ever walked into a room and felt like you were wearing a sign that said, “I Don’t Belong Here.”? Has your stomach ever knotted up because you know someone will figure out you’re faking it? This happened to me last weekend when my mom and I attended a retreat sponsored by the network marketing company she’s a part of. She loves The Product, and I love The Product, too, but I am adamantly against network marketing as a career for myself.

Which is funny because I’m a blogger, and I hope that blogging will supplement my household income someday. More on that later…

Even though I’m not interested in a career with this company, I attended on the promise that this retreat would be less about The Product and more about The Power of the Dream. Mom paid $50 for my ticket (plus my hotel room, meals, and gas), but I still had to force myself to go. For those of you who don’t know me, let me paint you a picture: I am an introvert, I hate crowds, I hate loud noises, I hate surprises, and if everyone is doing something, that’s one more reason for me to not do it. You can imagine my attitude as I walked into an estrogen-filled room filled with 2,000 Type-A, extroverted women.

Here’s where the plot thickens: Remember how I said it’s funny that I’m against network marketing as a career? Besides the fact that I actually learned something (and halfway enjoyed myself) on this retreat, I also figured out that many of the principles behind succeeding in network marketing are the principles behind succeeding in blogging! I really put my foot in my mouth this time, but while I’m still pulling toenails out from between my teeth, let me share three lessons I learned from these network marketers.

1. Apply the Parado Principle (aka The 80/20 Principle)
I had heard this before, but perhaps you haven’t: 80% of all the wealth in the world is held by 20% of the people. That’s the Parado Principle, and it applies to more than just wealth. In network marketing, 80% of all profits are brought in by 20% of the products; likewise, 20% of the consultants are making 80% of the money. More than likely, 20% of your blog posts are bringing in 80% of your traffic, which means something you did on those top posts connected with your audience while you’ve failed to make that same connection with your readers on the other 80% of your posts.

Take Action
Spend some time looking at your site statistics. Do the math, and calculate the top 20% of your blog posts. You already know something you did worked on those posts. Figure it out. More than likely, you’ve solved some sort of problem and become a resource for your audience. Can you continue to address those problems with other posts? What other problems does your audience struggle with? How can you solve those problems on your blog? Figure out what works for your blog and keep doing it.

2. Make Networking Your Lifestyle
Network marketers are excited about their products and their company, and they share that excitement with others by meeting new people, making contacts with potential customers, and following up with clients. Even though they’re constantly networking, they’re not consciously doing it; networking is second nature to them–it’s an extension of who they are. As bloggers, it’s easy to think that if we write great content, readers will naturally find us. To some extent that’s true, but we must put ourselves out there by responding to our own readers, contributing to conversations on other blogs, and sharing what excites us on social networks.

Take Action
In the next week or so, keep a tally sheet of how many emails and comments on your own blog you reply to, how many comments you leave on other blogs, and how much material you share on social networks. Once you’ve counted the results, ask yourself where you can step up your efforts. For you, maybe you networking is already second nature, and you just need to increase that end sum by 25 or 50%. For others, maybe networking isn’t yet second nature, so you need to develop a networking habit. For me, I must be very deliberate in my networking (remember, I’m an introvert–even on the Web), so I use a self-made point system where each networking activity has a point value, and I work toward a specific point total every day.

3. Go For No
Yes, this is the title of a book. No, I haven’t read it, but it was mentioned at this retreat, and the next time I stop by the library, I’m going to pick it up. Network marketers hear a lot of nos before they hear the yeses they desire; nevertheless, they learn to love no because it gives them opportunities to learn and improve. As bloggers, we might not hear a lot of verbal nos, but they’re there. We hear a no every time we write a post that doesn’t generate the buzz we expected. We hear a no every time our networking efforts don’t generate the traffic we hoped for. We hear a no every time a guest post suggestion isn’t as well received as we wanted. But we can learn and improve our blogging from all those nos.

Take Action
Think back over the last week or month of your blogging. If you can’t pinpoint a handful of specific nos, you’re not trying hard enough. You’re not taking enough chances. Use the following few weeks to try a new writing style, comment on blogs other than your regulars, and submit some guest posts to other like-minded blogs. The key is to experiment. If you fail, awesome! Learn from your “failure,” pick yourself up, and try again. Remember the old adage: If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.

Concluding Thoughts
I still can’t believe I let my mom hoodwink me into going to her silly retreat, but like I said, I actually learned quite a bit. BloggersGuide.net is growing, and I’m working to apply what I learned to my practices here. Do you have any experience with network marketing? What have you learned from them that you can apply to your blog?

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Photo Source

April 21st, 2008

Guest Post: How Twitter Made Me a Better Social Networker

Today’s post is by Linden, one of my best friends. She and I share the same love for the Internet, Google, and Web 2.0, so when she jumped on the Twitter train, I asked her to convince me to make the jump, too. Here’s what she had to say:

What are you doing right now?Almost every single blog post I’ve read about Twitter highlights the fact that it is made for “micro-blogging” by allowing users to use only 140 characters in which to write their answer to the question “What are you doing now?”

When Twitter was new, many people asked right back, “Why should I care about this, another new fad site? The frenzy will die out in a few months.” It was even called “the Seinfeld of the internet … a website about nothing.” Some have touted it as a marketing tool: Sign up, get people to “follow” you, they will see your “tweets,” and boom! Free advertising for your site or product. And with the ability to send (by texting to 40404) and receive tweets via SMS, it’s highly mobile: A connection to the Internet for those of us too cheap to pay for Internet on our non-iPhone, non-Blackberry, plain old cell phones.

But I don’t use Twitter in any of those ways. Well, I do use it for a little blog marketing, but mostly I use it for its seamless integration with Facebook, my preferred social networking site.

Free Blog Advertisement

I’ve got a blog. And I want readers. I can’t really explain why because I am not Penelope Trunk, who is an expert in her field and probably makes tons of money with her posts, and I’m not Half-Fast, who writes a funny blog dedicated to the topic of running and has even posted on the main Complete Running Network site. My blog is about my life in Germany, with some running, travel, and cool technology posts in the mix.

But I want readers because I like writing posts more when I know people are reading them. So every time I publish a new blog post, I tweet it. This sends it automatically to any followers I have, publishes it in the Twitter public timeline, and sends it off to my Facebook status.

Twitter–Facebook Integration

Once you’ve added the Twitter application and given it permission to update your Facebook status, you can update without logging into the Facebook website.

I love this. I have added twitter@twitter.com to my Gmail chat contacts, so right from inside Gmail I can simultaneously advertise my newest blog post on Twitter and Facebook. Oh, and I can update my Facebook status much more often than I ever did before. (FYI: I am currently using Digsby for all my IMing needs, so look forward to a corresponding Cool Technology post soon!)

“So what?” you ask. I personally like the Facebook status idea: a mini-snapshot of what my friends are thinking and doing. A great way to ask questions, interact with other people’s statuses, and have fun conversations between a group of friends. Hmmm. Sounds a lot like Twitter.

Twitter posts = highly mobile Facebook status updates

I have come to this conclusion about Twitter, even though I have not been using to to keep up with my friends (the only person I’m following that I know in person, Sarah, just joined Twitter about a week before I wrote this post): Twitter is the Facebook status, without the rest of Facebook. It is a great way to ask and answer questions posed by other Twits, interact with other tweets, and have a great conversation between a group of friends. Except that I don’t have a group of friends on the site. Yet. So head on over to Twitter.com, sign up, and add me at http://twitter.com/xgravity23!

(If you arrived at this post hoping for an explanation of Twitter, hopefully you understand it a little better now. If not, check out Common Craft’s video “Twitter in Plain English,” which explains Twitter better than I ever could.)

 

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