Blog watchdog May 2008

Posted by Ben Martin under Uncategorized
Blog watchdog May 2008 is on the street. You can get this column and others from McKinley Marketing’s expert consultants by subscribing to their monthly newsletter. As always, the full disclosure: I’m a paid freelance writer for McKinley Marketing.

If you want your association’s social media efforts to last, don’t fake it. At least that’s what Chris Bailey says in a recent post on his blog, BaileyWorkplay. He reminds us that being a productive organizational citizen on the social web isn’t as simple as blasting out the same old messages with the shiny new tools. Associations need to cede control of the message (or more accurately, realize that it never really had control in the first place), to embrace authenticity and to expunge old ways of thinking. Using the social web effectively requires deep cultural change at all management levels. Here’s how to get started

With energy costs on the rise and the resulting increases in travel expense, conference organizers and marketers are expected to offer more bang for the buck. At your next conference, dispense with speakers who take their turn at the podium reading from a script. According to Seth Godin,  conferences must provide attendees with the levers and widgets that give attendees the opportunities to engage with the content and one another. If not, expect to see some variation of “I came all the way here for this?” all over your next conference evaluation. 
So what kinds of levers and widgets will do that? Andy Sernovitz cites a trade association that’s using a blog to foster new kinds of interactions between the association and its members as well as among the members themselves. How about press passes for bloggers and inviting a word of mouth “celebrity” to your convention? Sernovitz cites two lessons learned that are perfect for associations:     
1) Just do it. Word of mouth is easy and you don’t need a big budget or an expensive agency.     
2) Try lots of little things. You never know which will work and go big-time viral. 
Is your association’s blog or website accessible to those who are visually impaired? Is your site’s content available to iPod-toting joggers, commuters and stranded airport refugees? It can be if you use any of a large number of free text-to-speech conversion tools on the web. The Wild Apricot blog shows you how to use one, and even demonstrates it in this recent post
As always, if you have feedback or a tip, e-mail me at bkmcae at gmail.

Read & discuss at Ben Martin's blog.

Heard about Alltop?

Posted by Maddie Grant under Uncategorized

Alltop is a virtual magazine rack featuring the recent headlines for the “top blogs” on any given subject, created by Guy Kawasaki . About Alltop here.

Check out Nonprofit Alltop here. This is a great place to find some big association/nonprofit blogs to read, and to see what’s out there in the blogosphere on this and any other topic of interest to you.

I have decided I would love to get this blog on Alltop by the end of the year. Their system for listing blogs is based on recommendations, particularly from the Twitter community. If you think I deserve to be listed, please feel free to email Guy at info@alltop.com and let him know. If I make it, I will throw a big party for all of you. : )

Happy Friday!

Read & discuss at Maddie Grant's blog.

Quote of the day: Content is everything

Posted by Maddie Grant under Uncategorized

From Mitch Joel of the Six Pixels of Separation blog.

“Once you start these conversations, you have to keep them going. You have to be clever. You have to be engaging. Not too many brands have, what I call, the “intestinal fortitude” to deliver on that very real conversation. Brands tend to be great at busting out of the gates - engaging sites and some content to pique the interests of the consumers, but creating content is a marathon and not a sprint. It’s the ripples that the conversations start, and not the splash-effect of a campaign.”

Awesome.

Read & discuss at Maddie Grant's blog.

Psychology of Meeting Dates

Posted by CindyAE under Uncategorized

I’m a believerMeeting Wizard is a great, free program. I’ve only used it three times so far but saves tremendous time when trying to find a date for a meeting that can work for multiple people.

There’s one feature of the program that I think has a psychology to it: Whether or not to allow the ones invited to participate in the meeting to know who else is invited and displaying to all what dates/times each can do.

* If I show all the names, and later replacement name(s) needed, then everyone would know who was asked last;
* If everyone can see who can do what date(s), then the fact the first person rules out dates may make others rule out dates they really could do, so the first one to respond may have a real advantage;
* If I don’t show the names and dates then someone might not realize that there is a date that lots of others can do, and they may be more open to including a specific date as an option than they would otherwise.

So far, I’m not showing the list of names and displaying what days everyone can do. If you’ve used this or a similar program, what’s your meeting dates philosophy: display or in the dark?

Read & discuss at CindyAE's blog.

No dough?

Posted by AEM under Uncategorized

Sarah Sladek observes that GenY households volunteer at a greater rate than any before. Is that because they are too young to have enough money to donate?

Read & discuss at AEM's blog.

Something to Consider: Community, Collaboration and Social Media

Posted by Dave under Uncategorized

As many of us know explaining exactly what social media, community and online collaboration is and how/why it’s different from what existed previously is sometimes challenging and more often than not frustrating. I just learned about this video, of Clay Shirky at this years Web 2.0 expo where he really breaks it down and makes sense of it all. One of the key takeaways is that media (both current and future) is not uni-directional but rather bi-directional. It’s no longer about simply consuming it, it’s [read more]

Read & discuss at Dave's blog.

I Know We Can’t All Be Special…

Posted by Cynthia D'Amour under Uncategorized

   And they can do better.
Today James got a letter from the University of Michigan asking for a donation.
Given all the bragging done by UM grads, I was surprised at the letter.
Here’s how the letter started out…
It’s been a few years since you graduated from the University of Michigan. Whether you’re working full time, continuing to go to school or […]

Read & discuss at Cynthia D'Amour's blog.

What Mountains Do You Climb?

Posted by Dave under Uncategorized

Today is the 55th anniversary of the first ascent of Mt. Everest by Sir Edmund Hillary of New Zealand and Tenzing Norgay of Nepal. What a monumental accomplishment. Since 1955 over 2,972 men and women have climbed the 29,029 foot / 8848 meter mountain located n the border between Nepal and Tibet, where all of the worlds 14 Eight-thousand meter peaks are found. A few weeks ago PBS Frontline did an excellent program called the Storm Over Everest which recounts the May 1996 storm on [read more]

Read & discuss at Dave's blog.

The Facebook Effect

Posted by Matt Baehr under Uncategorized

Read & discuss at Matt Baehr's blog.

The Wisdom of Drucker

Posted by Wes Trochlil under Uncategorized

My favorite quote from Peter Drucker comes from The Effective Executive (written over 40 years ago!!). On page 5, Drucker writes: “The greatest wisdom not applied to action and behavior is meaningless data.”
Quite simply, what Drucker was saying is that any information that you have that doesn’t cause you to change how you behave is […]

Read & discuss at Wes Trochlil's blog.