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Monthly Archives: June 2009

Micah Baldwin on Building Online Influence WordCamp Chicago

Micah BaldwinNotes taken during Micah Baldwin’s WordCamp Chicago presentation.

Read all of my WordCamp Chicago coverage on Wired PR Works or #wcchicago by @wiredprworks.

Lightly edited – check out twitter for more #wcchicago coverage.

Micah Baldwin started #followfriday on twitter.

Here’s Micah’s presentation – along with my notes. You probably won’t be able to pick up how funny he was/is – his presentation lightened up the room.

How does one build online influence? 3 steps: define, identify components

Influence is the implicit of explicit effect of one thing [or person] on another thing or person.

To be influential, you just have to convince somebody to do something.

Three Parts: Trust, Expertise and Brand

Trust is the creation of an expectation that person A will ALWAYS act as person B expects them to act.

You cannot be trustworthy unless you provide feedback.

Do what people expect you to do.

Branding: an original is always worth more than a copy.

Personal branding, unlike corporate branding, is designed to create expectations about you and your actions. Develop trust with people around you.

The hardest thing in this world is not being yourself. You can’t be that different than who you are.

His thing is succeeding by failure. Company is lijit.

Your personal brand is: Everything You Do Online.

Expertise is the easiest one out of all of them. Knowledge is gained and Expertise is given. You can’t be an expert until somebody tells you you are.

Influence = Reach [Brand*Expertise*Trust]

* reach is a multiplier of influence

All reach is: is a bigger megaphone. If you truly want to be influential online, just influence one person.

How to build online Influence

Make your blog the center of your online universe

Three Rules of Blogging

1. Write like no one is reading.

2. Write when you want to write.

3. The moment you think “that would be a good post,” that’s when you become a blogger.

Become Involved

#BlameDrewsCancer – building a community that is willing to talk about cancer

Be active online – if you’re more active online, you’re more active offline.

True online in become conduits for content filtering and discover, driving positive community growth.

Word Press Tools

lijit

Aggregating knowledge – pulls up information that

Content recommendation – out brain

Become a conduit

So . . . what are you conducting?

Liz Strauss WordCamp Chicago

liz-strauss-sobcon09

Notes taken during Liz Strauss’ WordCamp Chicago presentation.

Lightly edited – check out twitter for more #wccamp coverage.

Image: Liz Strauss, founder of SOBCon, May 2009 by Barbara Rozgonyi

When people Google your name what are they finding – be the person they’re looking for.

How to make your blog stand out so that people don’t just accidentally find you, but they start looking for your.

Don’t write for print – the first thing you can do is to come down off of the podium, which changes you from being the sage on stage to the guide alongside.

Everybody wants to learn, but how many people want to be taught?

Web went from presentation to conversation.

When you come down from the podium – that gives you a good chance to come out from behind the screen.

Liz started blogging in 2005 with a writing blog. When you go to a website and you don’t know who’s behind it, it’s hard to open up and participate.

Being authentic – not the same thing as being naked – I don’t need all of your information. Bright Meadow’s blogger, Cass, doesn’t use her real name, but she is authentic.

Find out why people read your blog. Blog your experience.

The movie critic story – if they only blogged information, they would all be the same.

Reasons blog readers don’t leave comments . . . .

- you don’t leave me any room to comment, conversation must be two-way and nobody is in control

- write one idea – you’re not supposed to be writing a lot, talk in a more open-ended sense

- lists – leave space for readers to add more

- be complete, but not thorough – that puts you on the ground, which is where you want to, sooner or later you’re not going to live up to expectations of being a blog star – people will knock you down

- keep breaking ideas down into subsequent posts – one post could fill up a week – much more thoughtful writing that leads to better flow

- if you want people to visit you, go visit them – this is where twitter comes in, twitter has given her old blog posts new life – “actually I wrote about that in 2007 and I still feel the same way”

If you’re still thinking about what you’re going to blog about . . .  choose something that will attract people who look like you who will think you’re really smart. 

People come to generations in different levels. New people coming in want to read where you started,

Your raging fans will think a lot like you, but they don’t have the information you have  – crosses over from beginners to experts.

Half the show is in the blog comments – lots of theories about what to do. If someone is respectful enough to respond, by responding back you make a personal connection and you can tell them a little more about your story. If you’re in business, you can say do you need help with that? This is what I do: be helpful, not hype-full.

Be more interested than interesting and ask about them. What kind of blog post would you like me to write next?

Thanks to Liz for mentioning me and a term I created “splotchy blog.”

What experience can you share with others?

Twitter Tactics Auto DMs and Closing the Follower Gap

Twitter transcript . . . .

wiredprworks: if you’re following me and I’m not following you, please send me a message @wiredprworks-trying to close the following/followers gap

DaveTaylor: @wiredprworks but *why* are you trying to close that gap?

wiredprworks: @DaveTaylor – don’t want to miss out any great folks – speaking of great people hope to see you @blogworld

doylealbee: @wiredprworks I’ve been blogging quite a bit about Twitter following. Would like your opinion, including gap closing. www.metzgerblog.com.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

When I got to Doyle’s post about unfollowing on twitter, I realized I’d typed more of a rambling answer than a concise opinion. So, rather than be a heavy-weight commenter, I’m going full-length here.

Here’s my answer to Doyle. . .

Who I Unfollow on Twitter

I don’t unfollow – very often.

Why?

I know too many people who mean well, but don’t have a clue that they’re offending me by sending a direct message.

Yes, there are spammers. We all know who they are. We can tell by the auto-message. I do unfollow those folks.

And, I confess: I used to send an auto-direct message to every new follower that said something like:

Thanks so much for following me! If you’re new to twitter, check out www.thetwitterguide.com or feel free to ask me. Barbara

Surprisingly, many people thanked me for the resource, which linked to a blog post guide and now goes to my twitter category. My intention was to be helpful from the very first point of contact. Call me ignorant, and you’d be right. But, I’m not alone.

I’m thinking of a highly professional and respected national speaker who didn’t know any better and was mortified to find out he was doing something wrong by sending out auto message to new followers.

The next time an auto-DM comes in, why not send a message to the person and let them know that you prefer to be greeted personally instead of unfollowing them right away?

How the Follower Following Gap Got Wider

In another life, I must have been a golden retriever. I really could greet people and be friendly all day [and maybe fetch and chase] if I had enough time and space. With three teens and clients to keep happy, I’m gently folding social media into what can be a blurry, but beautifully mushy messy life.

I find it challenging to make the time to check out every single new follower. The gap grows wider and wider between who’s following me and who I’m following.

Why? I like to know about people. So, I want to read their tweets, visit their site, find a personal connection and then welcome them. It’s not that I’m super popular and get hundreds of new followers every day, it’s just that I’d like to give every new connection more time than I have.

[I'm happy to say that I've met Doyle now twice in person – it is easier, for me anyway, to follow and tweet with people I know. But, not knowing someone personally doesn’t stop me from connecting with them online. And, I find it odd, yet comforting to know my teens won't friend or follow anyone they haven't met in real life. Sometimes they challenge me to tell them how many people I really know online.]

Instead, every so often I ask people to let me know if I’m not following them. Usually one or two people respond, I check out their profiles and then connect on a personal basis. Tonight one of those people was another professional writer I’ve known for years. She sent back a direct message thanking me for modeling how to live tweet.

Closing the Twitter Follower Following Gap

When I see people with tens of thousands of followers, I wonder how they can realistically connect with so many people. Do they set up tweet deck to manage their closer connections and then monitor replies so that can respond to everyone else? Do they have a massive amount of followers because they follow so many people?

Right now, more than twice as many people are following me than I’m following [1700 to 3800]. Every month, I meet another 40 to 200 people. Even a year ago, I would have thought it was impossible to have a network that spanned over a few thousand people.

I’m not completely sure why people follow me. I do know that when I stray away from business chat into more personal stuff, I lose followers. People seem to want @wiredprworks to be a marketing-pr-social media news update resource, not the voice of a zany mom with three wacky teens, the owner of a perpetually shedding $5438 stray cat or the wife of a guy who climbs every mountain and runs every race within a few hours’ driving distance.

While I’m not really trying to tighten the gap to within a few followers, I am trying to reach out to anyone who wants to connect with me. If you’re reading this and I’m not following you, just @wiredprworks so we can fix that.

How do you feel about balancing the number of follows with followers?

Video Interview How Dominos Delivers Social Media Pizzaz to Chicago

On Thursday, May 28 Social Media Club Chicago showed up to celebrate crowdSPRING’s first anniversary. For the second month in a row Ramon DeLeon, also known as @dpzramon on twitter.com, delivered the Domino’s pizza. This time, he also brought his camera guy, Andres De Leon – @needgraphics on twitter.com. Last month Ramon and Andres posted a video apologizing to Amy Korin – @interactiveamy – that now has over 50,000 embeds according to Ramon.

At my recent social media sampler presentation in Naperville, I showed a picture of Ramon and Amy at the April SMC Chicago event. One of Andres’ friends was in the audience. She’d heard the story before and couldn’t believe I was talking about it in a town so far out of Ramon’s delivery zone.

Although I don’t often do video interviews, I had my camera with me and decided to ask Ramon about his social media advice for small business owners. If I sound like I’m excited, I am: SMC Chicago has that effect on you and talking to Ramon, well that’s an energizing experience that can pick you up for days. Here’s my video, taken with my Canon Powershot Si5 and edited with Windows Movie Maker. It’s the first time I’ve ever used this program. After I uploaded this video, I installed Sony Vegas Studio and will test it out next time.

 

 

Here’s Andres’ video – much better production value.

 

How was the pizza? Let’s just say a few former Chicago gourmet pizza snobs admitted to chowing down on not one, not two, but four pieces of Domino’s pizza! The lesson here? Back up your social media with a high-quality product that keeps them coming back for more in real life.

How do you twitter and Facebook to deliver your business?