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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
I know I am teasing when I say this but I have just blogged about exactly what your role is. The link is as yet awaiting publisher approval ( sigh its the evening here in the UK ) I have been pondering the why and the how and the where of the value of social networks and how they can be utilised. I have even been asked by my own clients, How do I get involved ? , As Soon as the link is public I will get back here with a link for you.
Now why have I chosen Oreilly and not Loudmouthman to blog about this ? Well the brand for Loudmouthman is better suited for internal and open source community conversations. The Those who know me crowd. I have been using OReilly to create another brand and message which I can link into from the new company names I am planning to use. It will give them a "polish" and professional credential by using the social networks and blogo sphere in a productive and positive way.
Will it work ? Thats what I am blogging and betting on.
Thanks.
As a PR guy, the social Web is reminding me that all PR- -not just "PR 2.0" -- is about relationships and trust. We're just building that trust on a new platform.
Keep on keepin' on Chris!
Personally, I used to be in a music group. Before the internet, before cell and mobile, before WiFi. We used flyers, cassette tapes and fanzines made on photocopiers to generate interest in our cultural mission. We built communities around events and made exciting things happen out of a communal desire to celebrate and grow fulfil ourselves.
You like asking a lot of questions, Chris, and I like that. My questions for you are these:
1. How would you achieve your aims differently - let's say, no Twitter, no Facebook, no digital tools? Could you achieve your aims, would you have the same aims? (OK that's three in one!)
2. If you could ask only one more question in your lifetime, what would it be?
1.) without twitter/facebook or any digital tools, I'd be back to phone books, mail, and real time face-to-face meetings. I could achieve my aims because the same methodology applies (only far more serially): reaching out and connecting value points together. And yes, my aims would be the same.
2.) "How can I help?"
I don't even know where to start telling you how much I've learned from you. A year ago, I was pretty much a newbie in the blogging world - I think yours was actually the first one I subscribed to once I figured out how my RSS reader worked! Since then, I've become an avid blog reader and community member (online and off), and I've even started my own blog - all because of what I learned from you about the importance of having a network and building a community.
I learn the most from reading about what you're doing - how you're building your network, what tools you're using, and how you and other people are benefitting from it. Then I can think about how those things relate to what I'm doing, and how to use them to build my own relationships.
I can't speak for the other Grasshoppers, but you're definitely helping me tremendously - keep doing what you're doing! =)
I've learned community is what matters most.
It's the people, not the app.
And to go ahead and try and not ask for permission
Thanks CB
As promised, late better than never the article on the new market space "Social Network Optimisation".
Your thoughts and opinions appreciated thanks
http://www.oreillygmt.eu/2007/07/social-network...
Julia