Successful Blog

  • Home
  • Community
  • About
  • Author Guidelines
  • Liz’s Book
  • Stay Tuned

Social Networking: User Generated Content and Community

December 17, 2008 by Guest Author

Guest Post by Richard Reeve

Social media intrigues me on many levels, especially as it relates to those platforms which have chosen to publish publicly. The poet Charles Olson predicted a day would come “when the private would be public.” I think that day is dawning.

International Space Station

If you are doing business within social media, what I have to share should be useful. If you think you’re not doing business in social media, I’d like to challenge that notion. I know, I know: “where’s the profit? show me the ROI.” Coming as I do from an arts background, I’m quite comfortable seeing engaged and talented folks not turning a dime from their activity. None the less, to call their work a hobby is both disrespectful and untrue. They are producers. No matter what you might take away from your social media experience, including the dollars that many are already realizing, you are also a producer contributing to the front edge of the largest data bloom in history. It’s a collective business you’re engaged in, and whether you realize it or not, you’re playing your role quite nicely.

Then you might protest: “But isn’t social media just today’s version of the chat room?” Unlike the proto-social media chat room experiences, your activity across platforms like blogs, twitter, and friendfeed allows for public access, and at least in theory, forever. You’re never replying solely to the person you are replying to, nor even to those currently in your network, nor to those currently on-line. Take for example this post I shared about a NASA website. It guides you to locate the space shuttle going overhead from wherever you live. Now I posted this over a month ago and through search it remains both fully functioning and as useful as the day I wrote it.

My experience has been that communities arise around content clusters emerging in the data bloom. While these clusters often have a personality shepherding the interest, it’s the shared interest in the content that aligns everybody. And shared interest eventually creates opportunity for the liquidation of social capital. That being the case, it’s through contributing to the data surrounding your interests that you are building the potential for your business.

The poet Robert Creeley wrote that “form is never more than an extension of content.” Social Media allows content to extend in previously unimagined ways, carrying the details of our commonplace lives, our deepest interest and our wildest aspirations into digitalized perpetuity. And that’s serious business, no?

—Richard Reeve
Image: flickr –International Space Station
_______________
Richard, aspiration means breathing toward. I hope that’s where we’re headed.
Thank you for this and everything you contribute.

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Work with Liz!!

If you haven’t had a chance yet, add your $500 wish to the list. I hope you win!

Filed Under: Community Tagged With: bc, Richard Reeve, social-media

How Many Followers Make a Demographic?

December 17, 2008 by Liz

Seeing Numbers Instead of People

It happens in art and in science. I’ve seen the market flatten and demolish educational best practice. Exceptional music has been remixed into muzak. Groundbreaking movies have been merchandised into plastic toys.

Commercial culture depends on the theft of intellectual property for its livelihood. Mass marketers steal ideas from visionaries, alter them slightly if at all, then reissue them to the public as new products. In the process what was once insurgent becomes commodity, and what was once the shock of the new becomes the shlock of the novel. Invariably, early expressions of sub- or alternative cultures are the most fertile sampling grounds, as their publications or zines are the first to be pilfered. Invariably, pioneers of radical form become wellsprings for appropriation. Rebellion of any kind breeds followers, and many followers become a demographic.
Underground Mainstream
[emphasis mine]

Any idea, philosophy, or culture that gathers a large enough number of followers has the potential to become a demographic. That’s not necessarily a bad thing.

Identifying a demographic can be a good thing. When blogging moms became a demographic, their voices were elevated, strenthened, more respected. When they formed communities and networks — BlogHer, Sparkplugging, and Mom Central, they became visible, listened to, reachable. It’s a benefit to consumer moms everywhere. Products offered will serve moms better and moms in customer outreach will be portrayed more accurately.

While awareness and understanding of the influence and collective wisdom of group can be a good thing, sheer aggregation of a group opinion is not conversation or even effective communication. Individuals still matter. Not every mom wants the same things. Geekmommy doesn’t write a blog about her kids.

How Keep Your Followers from Becoming a Demographic

Once we pass some number of followers — Dunbar says it’s 150 — it’s hard to know every invididual in a group personally. Howdo we keep the conversation personal and valuable without flattening it to numbers and global traits of people we hardly know?

The question has been whether the conversation is scalable. It seems it can be. But as Amber Nashlund says, “It’s not a plugin, people … It’s a serious approach to business communications and customer service and if you’re to succeed with it, you had better take it that seriously from the outset. You are making a commitment.”

We can do what great communicators and community builders have always done. Here are some ways to keep sight of the people who are following you.

  • Listen individually. Pay attention to people as they speak. Listen for the differences in how they say things. How they react to the same situations.
  • Before you answer someone new, take a peek at his or her profile. Visit a blog. Read a blog post. Know something about the person you’ll be talking with.
  • Ask intriguing questions that invite individual opinions. Encourage people to elaborate and to ask questions.
  • Reach out to folks who don’t talk much and always answer the new person who makes a comment.
  • Get the whole community talking to each other.
  • Set aside time to talk to new people. Make a special point to invite them to participate in the conversation.
  • Be interested in every person’s experience. Ask for details.

Thinking demographics reduces people to numbers and flattens our understanding of why they do things. It washes out the rich, diversity and individual details. When we get into “demographic think,” we can lose sight that every person brings unique wisdom, experience, and history to make decisions based on their own criteria. Know the demographics, but talk to the individuals.

<a href="http://www.sxc.hu/browse.phtml?f=profile&l=wilhelmien">m. ricquier </a>

Have you felt like you were a number — not a person — recently?

–ME “Liz” Strauss
Image: sxc.hu
Work with Liz!!

Get your best voice in the conversation. Buy my eBook.

Filed Under: Marketing /Sales / Social Media, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, crowd think, demographics, Marketing /Sales / Social Media

The Mic Is On: We’re Making Each Other Laugh

December 16, 2008 by Liz

It’s Like Open Mic Only Different

The Mic Is On

Here’s how it works.

It’s like any rambling conversation. Don’t try to read it all. Jump in whenever you get here. Just go to the end and start talking. EVERYONE is WELCOME.
The rules are simple — be nice.

There are always first timers and new things to talk about. It’s sort of half “Cheers” part “Friends” and part video game. You don’t know how much fun it is until you try it.

Tell Me Something Funny

Sometimes friends just get together to share fun and laughter. The bar is open. We’re with friends. Let’s just have some fun. Let’s

  • tell stories
  • show videos
  • tell jokes
  • relate strange and silly happenings
  • share comics
  • and just be silly for once.

And, whatever else comes up, including THE EVER POPULAR, Basil the code-writing donkey . . . and flamenco dancing (because we always get off topic, anyway.)

Oh, and bring example links.

–ME “Liz” Strauss
image: sxc.hu
Related article
What is Tuesday Open Comment Night?

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

More from Blog Talk Radio

December 16, 2008 by SOBCon Authors

Subscribe to RSS headline updates from:
Powered by FeedBurner

Filed Under: Attendees Tagged With: bc

The Generosity Connection that Lifts Us Higher

December 16, 2008 by Liz

Community Raises People Up

At any moment, most of us are doing fine, but a few are feeling the hill’s too high or the burden’s too heavy. So those who can reach out to those who’ve lost the spirit.

At times like that, generous folks reach out to show us how to push through and climb up. It’s hard to know which reach will make a difference.
People get back on track and move forward, keeping their eye on the goal.
Sometimes on the way to that goal people get impatient, feel deprived, or forget the folks who helped.

Then someone generous of spirit stops long enough to say something like this

I wouldn’t have pushed through if you had not been there.

It’s a gift to hear that.

The generosity connection lifts us higher.

Tell someone …
you’re there to help.

Thank someone …
who’s been there for you.

I love you all.

–ME “Liz” Strauss
image source: sxc.hu gwyther77
Work with Liz!!

If you haven’t had a chance yet, add your $500 wish to the list. I hope you win!

Filed Under: Motivation, Successful Blog Tagged With: bc, Community, generosity, LinkedIn

Open Mic 7pm Chgo Time: It’s about Laughing

December 16, 2008 by Liz

Join Us Tonight

JOIN US TONIGHT AT 7PM

Tell Me Something Funny

Sometimes friends just get together to share fun and laughter. The bar is open. We’re with friends. Let’s just have some fun.

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 promostion, discussion, letting-off-steam, living-social-media, Open-Comments-Night

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 485
  • 486
  • 487
  • 488
  • 489
  • …
  • 1050
  • Next Page »

Recently Updated Posts

The Creator’s Edge: How Bloggers and Influencers Can Master Dropshipping

Is Your Brand Fan Friendly?

How to Improve Your Freelancing Productivity

How to Leverage Live Streaming for Content Marketing

10 Key Customer Experience Design Factors to Consider

How to Use a Lead Generation Item on Facebook



From Liz Strauss & GeniusShared Press

  • What IS an SOB?!
  • SOB A-Z Directory
  • Letting Liz Be

© 2025 ME Strauss & GeniusShared