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Blog Potomac & 140Conf: If You Had 10 Min to Talk What Point Would You Make?

June 23, 2009 by Liz

Just as my blog decided I could work again, I left town for a road show. I had the pleasure of speaking at Blog Potomac in DC. Then I drove north with my son to the 140 Characters Conference in NYC. The week was filled with opportunities to talk at length with dynamic and interesting folks.

liz-strauss-225x300-2-via-mahdi-gharavi

Words and phrases that kept coming up — beyond the names of applications — culture, cultural, news, tools, relationships, crowdsourcing, barriers and boundaries, branding, the importance of story, unplugging and taking time off …

Blog Potomac

The first conference was Blog Potomac in Falls Church, VA.
Liveblogging BlogPotomac in Falls Church, VA, and this photo were provided by Mahdi Gharavi.

And here are The Ten Best Ideas from BlogPotomac

140 Characters Conference

A few days later I was in NYC for the 140 Characters Conference.
Becky McCray (@BeckyMccray) did a great recap called Overheard at the 140 Character Conference

As Jeff Pulver says, the panel on News Gathering Stands Out. What follows is my own ten minutes.

Short Format Conferences

Truly remarkable conversations and questions happened at two conferences that held to a short-speaking format … Blog Potomac rules were speaker had 10 minutes to present and 30 minutes for Q&A. 140 Characters offered speaking times of 5, 10, 15, and 20 minutes. Most Q&A was in the hallways. The between-session questions at both events fell seemed to fall into two categories:

  • How are you using social media tools to gather information, implement ideas, and build relationships?
  • What’s next after Twitter?

The most tweeted phrases from my talks included …

  • If you want to use social media well, Don’t lead with the tools, lead with relationships.
  • Good companies have always been doing this.
  • Was there ever a conference as this about the telephone – are we getting to precious about our tools?
  • Twitter is the world’s lagest networking room. Get a friend to introduce you
  • Was there ever a conference as this about the telephone – are we getting to precious about our tools?
  • Blogs let me go deep – Twitter lets me go wide

If you had 10 minutes to talk on social media, what point would YOU make?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz!!

Buy the ebook. Learn the art of online conversation.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: 140 Characters Conference, bc, Blog Potomac, social-media, Twitter

Open Mic 7pm Chgo Time: Internet Heroes

June 23, 2009 by Liz

Join Us Tonight

JOIN US TONIGHT AT 7PM

With Guest Host Joe Hauckes
and his Alien Friend

Which Internet People Have Changed Your Life?

The best part of being part of the social web is the people. Let’s celebrate them with a few words of how great they are. Bring a link a story or just a comment to tell us who on the Internet has made a difference to you.

Online life can be the best. Let’s talk about it.

Oh, and bring example links.

The rules are simple — be nice.

Do be nice. 🙂

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Related article
What is Tuesday Open Comment Night?

Filed Under: SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, discussion, living-social-media, Open-Comment-Night

Read-Only Web 1.0 Blog: What I Learned Outside the Signal and the Noise

June 22, 2009 by Liz


The Story

liz-at-blogpotomac3by-eastcoastblogging

It started with server downtime, a WP upgrade that rewrote the database, and something that went wonky. It was almost fixed; then it wasn’t. No one could find the problem that caused my home page to want to download a file or why the database decided to allow only one-way communication with my blog.

Everyone who worked on it — WordPress gurus and geniuses, Server sages and savants — said they had never seen anything like it. My husband kept repeating his mantra, “When someone says ‘one in a million’ they are talking about YOU!”

In this case they were talking about MY BLOG.

Perhaps the database had decided it was done with social media. It would talk, but it wouldn’t listen. My blog could fetch information from the database, but it could not send any to it.

I was the proud owner of the singular READ-ONLY WEB 1.0 blog.

Fired by My Blog

I’d been busy preparing for the Blog Potomac and 140conf trip. So much to do before I left … suddenly I couldn’t do anything about any of it.
What future posts I had done were scheduled to run. I wouldn’t be adding any more.

It was as if a snow day, an unexpected vacation was forced on me –except it was the snow day that wouldn’t end. My blog refused to recognize me for more than a week.

What that meant to you was that it looked like I took time off. What that meant to me was that my dashboard didn’t work. I could log in, but every attempt to change, post, edit, or write was returned with a white screen message that said “action unknown.”

I’d been fired by my blog.

A friend asked if I used the time to get on Twitter to push out content.
Is that what I should have done?

I’m an introvert. I actually went to Twitter less. I didn’t feel much like talking about what was going on. An endless stream of support tickets got written to explain the problem. Friends were helping. Hours were invested by so many. Nothing was working. I did client work — I could put that in order before I left town.

DAY FIVE the feeling of being fired by blog started to sink in.

Every morning I logged in and clicked “Edit Post” to see the same no response. I started thinking of the investment my blog represents, what it take be to recreate it — yeah we had a backup, but who trusts that? — I had started to relate to my blog the way I used to relate to my job.

The same friend said, “But did you post on your other blog?”

I didn’t want to start posting over there. It would have been like admitting that this blog wasn’t coming back.

Weird. Huh?

Outside the Signal and the Noise

I decided to ride it out. I wanted to see what would happen if I lived outside of the signal and the noise. It wasn’t a clean experiment because I had uploaded four future scheduled posts. Still I didn’t add any new content for two weeks … I lived that.

Eight thoughts about what I learned …

  • A community history lives in the comments of this blog.
  • I can live without the content, but I’d miss the opportunity to visit the words of the people who have visited it.
  • Being helpless to fix the tech is an abject lesson in patience, humility, and gratitude.
  • People continued to read deeply into the pages even when I wasn’t adding new content for ten days.
  • People continued to read deeply into the pages even when I wasn’t adding new content for ten days.
  • I had some fine conversations without ever touching a keyboard.
  • No one died. No one cried. Twitter and the blogosphere did fine without me.
  • I am not my blog.

Though I was traveling and couldn’t comment, the future scheduled posts helped my blog keep moving. I soon snapped back to where it was tracking before it shut me out. Now I just have to show up again when folks stop by to comment.

It’s sort of like starting a new job … I’ve gotten used to like the habit of having time away, still I’m ready, so ready, to be back.

Weird huh?

What would happen if you had ten days locked out from your blog?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz!!

Buy the ebook. Learn the art of online conversation.

Filed Under: Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc

Thanks to Week 191 SOBs

June 20, 2009 by Liz

muddy teal strip A

Successful and Outstanding Bloggers

Let me introduce the bloggers
who have earned this official badge of achievement,

Purple SOB Button Original SOB Button Red SOB Button Purple and Blue SOB Button
and the right to call themselves
Successful Blog SOBs.

I invite them to take a badge home to display on their blogs.

muddy teal strip A

alldaybuffet

how-to-make-my-blog

christinelu

new-social-economy

shatterbox-media

They take the conversation to their readers,
contribute great ideas, challenge us, make us better, and make our businesses stronger.

I thank all of our SOBs for thinking what we say is worth passing on.
Good conversation shared can only improve the blogging community.

Should anyone question this SOB button’s validity, send him or her to me. Thie award carries a “Liz said so” guarantee, is endorsed by Kings of the Hemispheres, Martin and Michael, and is backed by my brothers, Angelo and Pasquale.

deep purple strip

Want to become an SOB?

If you’re an SO-Wanna-B, you can see the whole list of SOBs and learn how to be one by visiting the SOB Hall of Fame– A-Z Directory . Click the link or visit the What IS an SOB?! page in the sidebar.

–ME “Liz” Strauss

Filed Under: SOB Business, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, blog-promotion, Directory-of-Successful-Blogs, Successful and Outstanding Blogs

Delegation Happens: Working with Friends Can Be Dangerous

June 17, 2009 by Liz

Ever End Up Doing Someone Else’s Work?

Working Plans logo

Susannah was an editor who worked me years go. She had a project that needed help and knew just the person she wanted to call … her friend Christie. Christie was an experienced editor on maternity leave.

A meeting was set. Christie came in to get the work. Susannah explained exactly what was entailed and when it was due.

When the due date arrived, the work never came. When the work came, it was less than what Susannah had described. Susannah ended up doing the work and paid her friend anyway.

Ever been there?

Some things to remember when you’re about to delegate work to a friend.

  • Prepare for a friend as you would for someone you’ve never met. One clear signal to your friend and yourself of the business nature of what you’re doing is to treat the conversation as a strictly “work” conversation.
  • Define the relationship as you would with a new client or a new employee. When we’re delegating to a friend, communication can complicate itself. Friendship filters can recast everything that’s said. State your expectations. Write out guidelines and share them.
  • Leave room for the possibility that you’ve misjudged your friend’s skill set. As you describe the task ask whether this sounds like something he or she wants to do and has the time to do well.
  • Explain everything as clearly and in detail. We tend to endow our friends with information they don’t have. Understanding is often assumed — we assume they know things because they’re our friends.
  • Take time to say what the work means to you and your situation. Let the friend know that you are depending on him or her for your success. State clearly why you’re delegating the work and what depends on part of the project that you’re handing over.
  • Talk about who will make corrections or revisions to things that get missed if the work is incomplete or incorrectly executed. If at all possible, have time in the schedule for sending it back to your friend for such revisions.
  • If your ability to communicate during this conversation seems difficult, call off the delegation. It’s better to find someone else than to move forward with what doesn’t seem to be a good communication already.

On the Internet, we meet and make friends easily, but sometimes we endow them with the “halo effect,” thinking their great personality is a sign of their great compentency.
Sometimes the only way to learn that we’ve gotten a wrong impression is by asking for help and finding out the person isn’t who we thought. Usually though, asking a few questions, and offering complete information can get us to a great working relationship.

We all have friends who are better than we are at so many things. Are you finding the right ones to help you when you need them?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz!!
Buy the Insider’s Guide. Learn how to write so that the Internet talks back!

Filed Under: Business Life, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, business, delegation, Productivity

Delegation 2: I Can't Let Someone Else Do That!!

June 16, 2009 by Liz

No One Can Do This Like I Would

Working Plans logo

Delegation is the art and a science of communication needs. For most of us, it’s a skill we acquire, not a talent that comes naturally. Delegation takes practice in order to fully share
enough information for another person to complete a task successfully. Have you ever left a meeting sure you knew what to do, only to realize later that you didn’t understand. Yeah, me too.

More than that, it takes the ability to communicate the importance of the task and to negotiate a work agreement that shifts the accountability for making sure that the task is on time, complete, and of high quality.

Before you delegate a job, have a plan to communicate to the person who’s joining your project. Great communication will help in making sure that you pass on accountability and a sense of mission with the work that you’re handing over.

  • Start with the big picture. Decide what every person on the project must know. Offering the big picture context helps a new player immediately frame decisions and judgment calls properly.
  • Show where this piece fits. By placing the delegated assignment into the context. We communicate its importance to us and to the success of the project.
  • Explain and show exactly what a good result would look like. Write guidelines or goals for the task. Have examples of a prototype or something similar that you and the delegatee can discuss. Take the time to say what you want and what you like.
  • Invest more time if the meeting can’t be face to face. When a conversation isn’t face-to-face, communication degrades significantly. Some figures say it goes as low as 35% comprehension without visual reinforcement. Send an agenda or samples before you meet.
  • Know your goals and how you’ll check whether you’ve communicated clearly. Include and early sample to check that messages you think you communicated are the same ones that were heard. A quick look at a first step can save a project gone way off kilter.

The minute we delegate, communication becomes key. Unfortunately in an effort to show respect for other professionals we often tell them less than they need to know and still think we’re telling them too much. In like manner rather than looking like they don’t know, the often ask less than they might.

What’s the single biggest error you find you make when you’re asking someone to do work for you?

Tomorrow … Delegation Happens: Working with Friends Can Be Dangerous

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz!!
Buy the Insider’s Guide. Learn how to write so that the Internet talks back!

Filed Under: Business Life, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, business, delegation, Productivity

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