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Posts tagged: Social Media Club Chicago

Events: Social Media Club Chicago – The Future of Community Mangement

Every been to an SMC Chicago event? If not, you’re missing out.* Next week, SMC Chicago presents a panel discussion on “The Future of Community Management.”  Beginning at 5:30 on February 23, the event runs until 8:30 at Google’s Chicago offices located at 20 W. Kinzie. Purchase SMC Chicago tickets in advance for $10 or pay $20 at the door. Tickets include Domino’s pizza by Ramon DeLeon and beverages.

The following day, the first ever Community Manager Unconference takes place on Friday February 24 from 12:30-5:00. Plan to go if you’re a community manger or interested in learning how to develop your skills. Students are welcome, with a discounted rate. Purchase Community Manager Unconference tickets. Congrats to SMC Chicago board member, founding mentor of My Community Manager and Lake County Social Networking founder, Tim McDonald, for organizing this amazing event!

SMC Chicago Presents The Future of Community Management

Expect a lively panel discussion that will take you inside the inner workings of community management.

Tim McDonald, Astek senior community manager will moderate the discussion by these panelists:

Amy Ravit Korin, Google Chicago community manager

Jessica Murray, Social Media Club community manager

Sara Altier, EventBrite event evangelist

Sam Ogborn, Walgreen’s community manager

Google Chicago will be giving away a Samsung Galaxy Tab. Contest is open to Social Media Club Chicago and Community Manager UNconference participants who write Google Places reviews between Feb 8 – 24.

About the Social Media Club Chicago Chapter

Established in October 2008, Social Media Club’s primary mission is to expand digital media literacy, promote standard technologies, encourage ethical behavior and share best practices. We bring together journalists, publishers, communications professionals, artists, amateur media creators, citizen journalists, teachers, students, tool makers, and other interested collaborators. Essentially the people who create and consume media who have an interest in seeing the ‘media industry’ evolve for everyone’s benefit. We are more than just users, we are the reason the tools exist – we are the people who communicate our thoughts and ideas near and far. Join us and let’s shape the future together!

Disclosure: I, Barbara Rozgonyi, serve on the SMC Chicago board along with Jeff Willinger, Tim McDonald, Amy Ravit Korin, Jeannie Walters and Carolyn Martin. The video is from our September 2011 Social Media Week Chicago Icons event.

*If you’re not in Chicago, but would like to watch what’s going on around here, follow @smcchicago on twitter.com

How about you – when do you get involved in community management?

Erik Qualman Qualifies Digital Leadership

Erik-Qualman-Social-Media-Club-ChicagoHappy New Year! Social Media Club Chicago’s first event of the 2012 social season took place last night at House of Blues in Chicago. Thanks to Brickfish for the free book and for bringing Erik Qualman, author of Socialnomics and now Digital Leader: 5 Simple Keys to Success and Influence, to Chicago.

A brilliant thought leader, Erik’s the bright mind behind the Social Media Revolution videos. Here’s a quote from his new book.

“Digital footprints are what we post about ourselves. Digital shadows are what others upload about us. Collectively, they have changed the world forever. As leaders and future leaders we need to adapt to this new world.” 

What a strong way to frame up 2012.

Erik first spoke at an SMC Chicago event a few years ago when he was in town to talk at Search Engine Strategies. Here’s what Erik had to say about Social Media Optimization then. Last night, we learned more about Erik’s digital leader process, which is based on five powerful truths you can use to establish your leadership “stamp.”

Erik Qualman’s 5 Simple Keys to Success and Influence

Simple: success is the result of simplification and focus

True: be true to your passion

Act: nothing happens without action–take the first step

Map: goals and visions are needed to get where you want to be

People: success doesn’t happen alone

During the presentation, I took a few notes on my iPhone. Apologies to Erik for any inaccuracies. When I got home, I browsed the book and will finish it over the weekend. For now, here’s a quick recap of Erik’s presentation.

Simplifying your focus is the most important thing you can do

  • Write out in 140 characters or less what you want to be, what you want your stamp in life to be and what  you want your life to stand for. In the book, Erik quotes Dick Van Dyke [like me, also a Danville High School alum] as saying he wants his epitaph to be “Glad I could help.”
  • Focus more on output than on input; focus on shipping stuff out.
  • Pick only two things to do every day, look at what other leaders doing today to excel. Write them down and focus on knocking those two things out today.
  • When Erik was speaking in Africa with Tony Hawk, he found out that Tony loves to tweet. Tony waits 30 minutes before announcing an impromptu skate park drop in. More advanced notice than that, and the park will be jammed. Follow leaders to see where they’ll be next.
  • In life, most people will remember how you treated them.
  • People will empower you to get things done.

Social Media Asks Questions, Erik Answers

After Erik talked about the book, he read comments via social media on his phone. As an author, he’s interested following conversations and in checking out what people are highlighting on their Kindle. I like this “answer questions in the moment” approach. Questions and comments via social media included:

Love the LIFO method

Borrowed from the accounting term LIFO, Last in first out, is a kind of arbitrage. It’s better to respond to the last ones in, then go back and reply to old messages sitting around in email and on social media. You may surprise and delight the person who gets a reply in 30 seconds.

Complain = digital pain

If you want to stand out, stop complaining. Be proactively positive, use social media emoticons apps, and dig in and find out about someone’s hobbies when you chat with them online.

Multitasking is worse for your brain than marijuana

While Erik was not suggesting smoking marijuana [this line got a big laugh], he was serious about doing only one thing well at a time. Multi-tasking drops IQ scores by 10 points and is the worst thing you can do to get things done. Who else is guilty of trying to accomplish more than two things at once?

Interruptions take you off track; avoid them.

In the book, Erik suggests wearing headphones and getting away to work on your work.

Out of office suggestion

When you go on vacation, ask people to resend an email on the day you return. Erik tried this. Only 9/1100 resent the email and no one complained about him not responding. Yes, he did delete all the email that came in while he was away – without reading it. Who would be brave enough to try this?

When to fire your customers

People want partnerships with companies, only work with people who value you.

Set audacious, laughable goals

Then, find people to help you. They’re the ones that don’t laugh and take you seriously.

Success is a choice

The only way we can do it is to simplify our lives. No matter how successful you are you, can never reach the mountaintop if you surround yourself with the wrong kind of people who will bring you down.

Big trend for 2012 is technology and education

Two examples: teachers assign videos produced by Khan Academy and MIT offers free courses you can get  online.

Erik’s goal is to break a world’s record for the most one-sentence reviews on Amazon.

After hearing Erik speak, and browsing the book briefly last night, it would be a challenge for me to compress my review into one slim sentence, but I’ll try: To live the best of your life, read this book to find out how to simplify, share and lead with your passion.

Image: Jeff Willinger, SMC Chicago president; Tim Mc Donald, SMC Chicago Community Manager; Amy Hesser SMC Chicago member; Barbara Rozgonyi, SMC Chicago founder and Erik Qualman.

Need help discovering how to share your passion? Here’s how to borrow my brain.

SMC Chicago Turns 3 with Sushi and Improv

chicago-social-media-1008-5

Hard to believe, but October is SMC Chicago’s third anniversary. Three years, 30 meetings, thousands of attendees – not to mention hundreds of slices of Ramon DeLeon’s pizza later, here’s a look back at our first event and an invitation to join us October 19. Thanks to everyone who’s ever attended, tweeted or watched one of our events. The passion and energy that springs out of this group is astounding!

Read More…

Playing the Games of Sports and Social Media

Yes, that is me with Southpaw, who represents the Chicago White Sox on twitter, at games and community events. Taken at the Eat.Drink.Tweet. event at US Cellular Field in June 2010, this picture is one of many from my Chicago White Sox Tweetup Album. Thanks so much to Amy Jensen Martin of Digital Royalty for inviting me to represent Social Media Club Chicago on this panel and to Alana Golob, also of Digital Royalty, for being the event coordinator.

What an honor to sit alongside Brad Boron of NHL Chicago Blackhawks; Amy Jensen Martin of Digital Royalty; Sarah Evans of Sevans Strategy and Mark Teahan of Chicago White Sox. Scott Reifert, vice president of Chicago White Sox communications, moderated the panel discussion. In this video, we talk about how we got into social media.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hXMWAyNLOs0

Another question was about a social media success story. As the other speakers before me quoted numbers and great success – you would expect that from @nhlblackhawks – right?, I wondered what I could add. After all, the numbers from my client’s success stories didn’t add up that high and SMC Chicago’s members spill over into the 2100s, not into five or six digits. So, I brought the numbers down, way down into the smallest, most personal interaction: one to one. Because, to me, it’s the smallest of interactions that can have the biggest effects.

When I traced how I wound up sitting between Brad and Amy, the source came back to an invitation on Facebook from Sarah to attend a party at The Wit on a rainy January Saturday night in Chicago. I wasn’t planning on going. I emailed the invitation to a friend and suggested she go. It sounded like fun, but I had other plans. She called me right away – what time do you want me to pick you up? I went. I met Amy and two other moms from my town, which is 22 miles west of Chicago. The image I’m using now on my social networks is from that night. Five months later, Amy called. Six months later I was on the Eat.Drink.Tweet. panel. Today I’m writing a post about it.

How can the next social media interaction you take lead to a success story for everyone? Where do you get your social media inspiration?

Image gallery: Southpaw with Barbara Rozgonyi; social media moms including Xan Pearson and Amy Hesser at The Wit tweetup – and Barbara Rozgonyi, Amy Jensen Martin, Sarah Evans and Duong Sheahan – also at The Wit.

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