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While I was at knetwit.com (social networking site where students share class notes) 3 of us camped out at the UT Chattanooga library during finals with laptops. When students took a break we asked them what they were studying and used Knetwit to search for related study materials on the site.
Instead of the students finding the site, we took the site to them. During that week we doubled our user base on campus and, I think, helped with some grades.
Phil
Fixing trade shows
To learn more about our upcoming Tweetups, latest research reports, and events you can follow us on Twitter, @forrester
Great to meet you in the physical world Chris – thanks for joining the Molson crew at PodcampTO! Cheers, @toniahammer.
That's one of the best examples of how a social network has successfully executed the offline-online experience.
Otherwise, twitter, facebook and others will go the way of bbs's and compuserve as just another geeky thing. That's right BBS old school social media.
We'll have a great bunch of people who have successfully organized "real world" groups and events, harnessing the power of a range of social media tools.
For anyone who may be interested, the panel is SXSW Year Round: Organize Groups, Maintain Your Buzz - Monday, 6:30 - 7:30 at the Hilton, Room D.
Chris, I am glad that you had a good party experience. What is more social than a party?
Plus, beer is much better shared together than at your desk. ;)
http://is.gd/gYDE
Great Post. Absolutely agree. Perhaps the obstacle to doing what you're proposing is that higher numbers can be attained more easily online. Obviously it's not as deep of an experience. But sometimes quantity does trump quality when we are looking at something on paper.
Another aspect of my blog is bring the physical world of LA into the online world via pictures and text. In essence, sharing my extensive backyard of LA via my blog. I do consider this part of physical meets social media. Comments on my blog reflect this sharing.
In addition, a series of guest blogs featuring other people's backyards, both large, like a city, or small, like a traditional backyard, will all be included. I'm really looking forward to it.
The great part to all of this and, Chris, your upcoming efforts, is that we get to see what happens and what does/does not change. And that's always interesting. Great stuff!
I am very strongly immersed in the Art market, and since the death of disposable income, what I have been doing to keep up the momentum is the following. I am a private art dealer/consultant with an Advisory Company, Forbes Art Consult, to collectors, interior designers and sometimes corporations. I have always wanted to have an ART SALON, (channeling Gertrude Stein), and I have made my inventory an Artists' Showcase, started a blog, and used MeetUp.com as a conduit, to attract people to come to my home. Viola! my Sunday "SALON" described at http://www.meetup.com/ART-SALON. I have over 100 people signed up and approximately 15-20 show up at each event, and I invite Special Guests from the art world to join our discussions. It gets lively and passionate, and much information is exchanged. I have used the blog http://lepetitsalon.blogspot.com to write, post photos and videos (that I have learned how to make and edit) and also posted them on our YouTube channel "Le Petit Salon" as well. I have also relaunched the NYC Art Gallery Walks in Chelsea for the SPRING ART SEASON that I facilitate to keep myself informed of the art market in the field have some company, feedback, share my expertise and have a lot of fun! I have a blog for this endeavor as well at http://nycartgallerywalkschelsea.blogspot.com. During this dry period in my field of work, it seems to be the right thing to do. BTW, reading your blog and newsletter has inspired me to do all of this from scratch...I'm very grateful to you for sharing your expertise to facilitate my growth in social media, as I would not have attempted to connect any of this otherwise. It is working well for me and I am totally enjoying myself, even though I'm not making money right now, I expect it will pay off later on by making new physical relationships and perhaps new and beginning collectors while keeping connected virtually. Thank you again for sharing, I appreciate it so very much. I "read you" every morning, follow every link, use all of the information I can in every way, what more can I say, except that I am grateful I found your link somehow at the right time...
Sincerely,
Helene Forbes
To this end, I've recently begun Denver Likemind (of the Likemind.us family) - the intention behind it is that it provide a place/time/way for creative folks to come together and interact, share ideas, brainstorm...simply connect.
This idea is driving much of my thought process going forward, and I think the opportunities in bringing these web-interactions into the real physical world are many.
Thanks for a great topic.
Yes, we all need to get out from behind our computers and live! How much more interested people are when they can converse face to face. With voice-mail, email, twitter, Facebook and Friendfeed serving as our daily communications paths, we need human contact, and to take a break and just have some fun!
In all of my efforts to make a living on-line, I still go walk the dog and visit with my neighbors. This is critical to staying connected for all of our lives.
Respectfully,
Nicholas Chase
www.twitter.com/nachase
I agree with this, and have been working with my clients (most of whom are doing outreach towards the female demographic) to embrace creating offline experiences that resonate online. I've seen some great examples this past week, such as Sleepover 2.0, where several women gathered in a hotel room and actually hosted video streamed panels all night long.
In my own online life, I'm part of a community of bloggers who all live in the same geographic area- there's nothing like running into a fellow blogger at the grocery store to blur those lines a little bit.
I think social media is just the beginning ... and not the end of contact.
I think the main challenge is that the discussions rarely have leadership, moderation or a consistent stream of interesting content. If you put a solution out there and just say sign up, there will likely be no value created. There needs to be a number of leaders that get the conversation going and keep stoking it on a regular basis. Ideally that conversation and leadership would come from the speakers or panelists of the conference.
There are also a number of matchmaking solutions used in the tradeshow industry. These are intended to match buyer profile with exhibitor products and services; recommend specific education sessions (kind of like Amazon does for books) and match up attendees with similar interests.
Another common tool for large shows is a personal expo planner. This is where you would select the exhibits you want to see in advance and a customized floor plan would be generated showing all of your stops.
Are these the kind of tools that you would help improve your conference or tradeshow experience?
www.irlconnect.com - bringing facebook & twitter to google maps as of yesterday.
Churches are using Twitter!
@Dana Lookadoo shared this link with me earlier today - http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29588220/ - it's about a new age church promoting Twitter while preaching. the church was encouraging people to tweet the sermon (or what ever they wanted to tweet related to listening to the sermon). pretty cool. though i wonder if anyone talked to each other in person :)
http://twitter.com/franswaa