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While the Iron is Hot
I suspect you're three steps ahead of me here, but there's plenty of people out there that can teach many of these things. What separates you is that you're so good bringing them all together and making them relevant in the large scheme of things.
In the things you mention as basic etiquette, I definitely think there will be room for you to emphasize just how important those aspects are and why they matter to the person attending the bootcamp.
Best of luck with this project!
You might want to offer ideas of group blogs that accept contributions.
Also, don't discount LiveJournal as a blogging platform. Or Facebook, for that matter, via its "Notes" application. I know many who do both, none of whom care to go with a Wordpress or other solution.
And... keep in mind many people in the bootcamp may have no idea what RSS is, so before launching into Google Reader, show them a sample of what a feed is and why it's important to read from a feed reader (or in email) than bookmarking sites on a browser.
One thing you might want to add is a module on "time management" with social media. Helping folks idenitify the "biggest bang" areas in their social media.
John
I wish I had more insight into working with hosts at the very outset of creating a blog. There are a lot of options out there for hosting, and for people who have never gone down that road, it can be daunting to choose the host, let alone work within it, using CPanel for instance. Also - beginners need to know about upgrading. I made the mistake of upgrading Wordpress without backing up the site and I lost any work I had accomplished on my site. Those are some suggestions from my experience, hope it helps.
How about a section on how business owners can manage your time within your social media outlets?
I get questions all the time from business people saying they have an interest in using social media, but they think they have to be on every SM site and dedicate hours to each one.
If there was a way you could show them how to pick the best 2-3 for their situation, and then how to maximize their time investment on those sites I think that would be a winning session.
Matt
I’m currently creating an online business from scratch and im sure your content will come handy.
Thanks, keep up the great work!
Dan
As was already mentioned above, I agree, definitely cover your "Workflow" process and along with different scenarios.
Maybe consider adding "reply responses" to the commenting part.
Maybe also consider covering Blogger since that is so much quicker and easier to get started with and can be migrated to Wordpress once they feel more comfortable.
Overall, great list!
Looks like a lot of fun here, should be a great day for all involved.
"Networking is always important when it's real and it's always a useless distraction when it's fake. What the internet has allowed is an enormous amount of fake networking to take place." -- Seth Godin
I would opt for emphasis here:
"Basics of profile building for social networks, including best practices, relevant business information, linking/outpost strategies." -- Chris Brogan
I say that because I still see a great disconnect between how people tie all the parts of the whole together (making Seth Godin's statement ring true). Fake networking takes place when what we're really looking for is to build social capital that translates into trust and hopefully, closed sales at some point.
I'd want to know how to identify what networks are going to derive what value for me. And then, I'd like to know how to maximize my use of those networks ("Best Practices") and how to tie all the pieces together to maximize my time on-line so that I can still focus on the business-side of my small business (the day-to-day paperwork, the client calls, etc.).
Anyway, those are my thoughts Chris. I hope you find them helpful!
As several comments have pointed out, while this is an awesome list, seems far too much for one day, especially if you intend to dwell on the nuts & bolts. Recently I had the (mis) fortune of trying to help a prospective customer with real (ol') world marketing who didn't have even the basics covered. So I found myself using the analogy of building a new house moving into it (getting permits, planning & the grunt work), and being a valued neighbor (well behaved, participatory) and community member (contributing, sharing and in turn being valued). This applies equally to your list I realize upon perusal
keep 'em coming
On the etiquette issue, perhaps a big emphasis on those integrity issues, such as edifying other bloggers and honestly trying to help other people out via your blog, without the expectation of anything in return. You've done such a great job of conveying this culture.... please include it in your presentation.
Best wishes,
Richard :)
Chief Deal Weaver
www.BlackWidowNetwork.com
I agree with a few above that it may be a bit much for one day, especially considering that many attendees will be real virgins. You might want to have a 1 day seminar hosted by someone else who can just cover things like "what is an RSS feed, what are the different blog platforms", etc.
For me, that good stuff would not be the technology behind Chris Brogan but the classic Chris Brogan we read everyday. That would be the value add for me.
And speaking of Classic Chris Brogan stuff, it would be very much in your persona, and your curriculum, to link to some of your contributors. As I comment here, I'm number 26. That means there's potentially 25 links ahead of me who could make that list. IMO, of course :-)
1) The Basics
2) Tactics
3) Strategies
For example, many people know how to use Twitter, but aren't human about it. As soon as you follow them, they send you a DM asking you to click a link, or plug a product. You are the one who taught me that online trust and relationships are a key ingredient, so knowing the technical aspect is definitely a necessity, but everyone is a person first........................:)
One thing I think is missing here - is community. Many, or most categories have large, vibrant, existing communities. Everyone should become a valued contributor to their own community. For example, http://howardforums.com gets >8 million posts per year about cellphones. If you have ANYTHING to do with cellphones, you need to be reading, contributing, helping people over there.
Figure out where the energy is and go there. Don't try to create it all by yourself.
Tom O'Brien
MotiveQuest LLC
Without great content, it doesn't really matter how good your network or social media profiles are. Copywriting, writing for the web, and basic journalism skills are key.
Also, what about basic setting up new products/offer pages and shopping cart basics?
Great list, I love reading your blog! It's so informative for a relative newbie and small business owner like me. A discussion about how to integrate the basic building blocks--website, blogs and social networks--would be useful. People have such varying degrees of experience...perhaps you might query attendees as to their experience with webs, blogs and various social networks to help you have an idea of their experience prior to delivering the marketing bootcamp.
Thanks!
Via the web, would be great for those of us with limited funds but a strong interest to learn about what you have to offer - this list (and relevant comments included) sounds like actionable for marketers who are looking to implement, but need a roadmap on what to do from a social media standpoint.
Cheers!
Your thoughts?
The thing with wordpress.com is that you cannot advertise. If you want to blog for business, it's much better to use WP install. Of course, if you want to make things simple, bBogger might be a good place to start.
Hope this helps!
C
It looks like I missed the boat to reply in a timely fashion (vacation will do that), but I was curious to see if there is any way to make these bootcamps interactive with your audience? I know bootcamps usually have a lot of talking at and not so much talking with your audience, but why?
For instance, can you send a few website addresses (of really good and some not so stellar) to participants BEFORE the bootcamp for them to review with some pointers? This way, when you go through Part 2 and talk about what's good about some of the websites you're showcasing, people will have already seen them and may be able to add to the conversation? You can also highlight some websites that are "almost there" that you can then throw to the audience to see how they would proceed?
This way you're keeping your audience engaged on different levels and forcing them to utilize what they're learning in your bootcamp at that moment. It may lessen the "in one ear and out the other" syndrome...
Best of luck with Brogan Bootcamp, it sounds wonderful!
Wow! A lot of great stuff! A smorgasbord!
Will there be any follow-up after the boot camp? Say in a week, then in a month, then 2 months, then 3 months, then 6 months.......? After completely showing everything to them at the boot camp, follow-up would be gradually backing off over time until they are flying on their own. In education we call it "scaffolding". This guided practice would ensure that all of your great tools would "stick" for the long haul.
Would there be people at your company who could do that kind of follow-up? If the boot campers knew that they were getting good tools & that there would be follow-up afterwards, it would initially make them feel more confident as well as hold them accountable for implementation later on. Your boot campers would grow into enduring success stories.
Your curriculum has great value. Best of luck to you!
Good luck!