Glass brings a Community Layer to the Internet [Video]

Glass Conversation with Danny Brown

A Glass Conversation

Earlier this week I received an invite from Danny Brown to join him on Glass. Being perpetually curious about tech and web applications I headed over and signed up. The last few days the application has really piqued my interest because it creates a new community layer over the internet unlike anything that has been available previously. It achieves this by combining side-wiki like features with a virtual social network. It also allows comments and conversations to occur on any website but privately with the connections of your choice or publicly with any Glass users. It caps all that off with a community streaming function bringing your Glass, Facebook and Twitter content that contain links into one place.

Reasons Glass is usefull

  • Transcends the boundaries of social networks and websites
  • Allows private or public conversations about any site or page
  • Creates a community stream of your Glass, Facebook and Twitter
  • Potential to integrate any social network, blog comment systems
  • Enables you to share any website or page via Twitter, Facebook and Email

How about a video?

This video that takes a tour of the features and describes in more detail what you can do with Glass and why it may be a helpful tool for you.

Don’t see the video? Try this link instead.

Is the Rise of Word Press Killing off Jobs?

Is Word Press killing of jobs? That’s what a new connection of mine on Twitter suggested to me just last week:

Wordpress Kills JobsThe minute I read Monica’s Tweet, the wheels in my head started spinning. One of them was wondering if it was true, and the second was what can (or should) be done about it. Before we go there, I learned that Monica’s opinion is an informed one, she started writing about WordPress in 2009, about the same time I started working with it (we share that too, she’s done WordPress web development too).

Is it True the WordPress is Killing Jobs?

This would be hard to prove, because during the rise of WordPress there was a corresponding fall in the economy that appears to be unrelated. WordPress does make web development and website maintenance easier and more available to more people to both develop and maintain with less technical skills however. Almost anyone can setup and maintain a WordPress based website. One thing is certain it’s still progress and it must be creating opportunities elsewhere. WordPress actually got me excited about web development after a very long hiatus.

What should we do about it?

It’s never fun to end up on the disrupted end of disruptive technology but the fact remains that innovation and value are important qualities in any business. If people are losing jobs from the rise of Word Press, they probably have some marketable skills that can be re-purposed. Web development takes a mix of creativity, technical and business skills, and there is always room for people with these skills. The challenge might have more to do with the discomfort of the disruption and the change that might be involved.

Do you think WordPress is really putting web firms out of business?

Curating Tweets on Amplify and using Twitter to get off pesky Email lists.

What do you use Twitter for? It seems a great use is to get opted out of Email lists where the opt out procedure leaves a lot to be desired (or doesn’t work).

Also a great use of Amplify is curating tweets right from Twitter.com or Hootsuite. The Amplify clipping tool is absolutely an essential part of my toolkit. Have you ever used it?

hackmanj 8:37am via HootSuite

Hi @WinZipComputing I’ve been trying to opt out of your Emails but they keep coming. Suggestions? #uce #spam

WinZipComputing 8:52am via TweetDeck

@hackmanj Happens sometimes that you might be on more than one email list. Write in to help@winzip.com, direct it to Bill. I’ll see to it

hackmanj 9:22am via HootSuite

@WinZipComputing Email sent, please confirm you receive it. Thanks Bill.

WinZipComputing 9:23am via TweetDeck

@hackmanj Got it. Now I need to see how many different people need to be involved to get you off whatever lists you are on. I will reply.

hackmanj 9:40am via HootSuite

@WinZipComputing do you agree it ought not be so complicated? A simple one click should be all we have to do, no?

Episode summary Blogger Ethics with Guest Danny Brown (Podcast)

Danny BrownRecently Danny Brown to joined me for a discussion about blogging ethics and transparency. Danny Brown is co-founder and partner at Bonsai Interactive Marketing, offering integrated marketing, social media, digital and mobile marketing solutions and applications. His blog is featured in the AdAge Power 150 list as well as Canada’s Top 50 Marketing Blogs, and won the Hive Award for Best Social Media Blog at the 2010 South by South West festival. After reading Danny’s blog for a while I learned two things that compelled me to invite him to join me for this episode:

  1. That he calls things the way he sees them
  2. That he is passionate about blogger ethics

Who better to dive into a topic that some might view as controversial? I knew that Danny would give me his honest answers and would not pull any punches. I really looked forward to chatting with him again, Danny was a part of the PRapalooza panel in early November 2010. Danny definitely lived up to my expectations and if you’re interested in learning more about transparency and ethics in the blogosphere have a listen:

Listen to Blogger Ethics and Transparency with Danny Brown:

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Find Danny Brown online:

On Twitter @dannybrown
Also might want to read his recent post about Blog Disclaimers at Dannybrown.me.

Know someone or a group of people that might be interesting to interview? Contact me or @hackmanj.

Bring more readers to your blog with the LiveFyre comment system

In my recent post about tagging people on Facebook there was a robust discussion that occurred that was largely not related to the post but was actually centered around the Livefyre comment system itself. In this video I explain how and why that occurred and how you can use the system to bring more readers to your blog.

Screenshot of the LiveFyre Comment System Video

What comment system do you prefer and why?

Episode summary Interview the Interviewer Episode 1 – Adriel Hampton (Podcast)

Adriel Hampton, Gov 2.0 Radio HostThis is a new monthly feature on my podcast where I will be interviewing “interviewers” in this case Gov2.0 Podcast host Adriel Hampton. Adriel is a passionate advocate for harnessing emerging technologies to make government more effective, collaborative and transparent. He is an early Gov 2.0 adopter and co-founded the popular public interest podcast Gov 2.0 Radio. In addition to producing the weekly show, Adriel is a community leader at GovLoop.com, the social network for government, and group manager for the LinkedIn Gov 2.0 group and its more than 4,500 members. Since 2005, Adriel has worked as an investigator for the San Francisco City Attorney’s Office, and he began his career as an editor, designer and writer for several San Francisco Bay Area daily newspapers. In 2009, he ran a grassroots campaign for U.S. Congress.

Highlights

What can you expect by listening to this podcast?:

  • Insights from one of the top people in the Gov 2.0 Space
  • Twitter and Social media tips
  • Where Adriel finds time to Tweet (hint – he commutes on public transit)
  • Some social media book opinions
  • Social media in relation to political campaigns (Adriel ran for Congress in 2009)

Listen to Interview the Interviewer Episode #1:

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Adriel Quotables:

Regarding his 2009 campaign for Congress

I got more Twitter followers than I got votes.

Defining Gov 2.0

Basically Gov 2.0 is the use of Web 2.0 tools and principles in government.

On the disconnect between government and citizens

We are the government, it doesn’t matter if you work for government or are a tax payer, or an immigrant to the country. Everybody makes up a democratic governance structure.

Find Adriel Hampton online

On Twitter @adrielhampton
His blog adrielhampton.com

Listeners, who should I interview next?

Episode summary of the first Ampalooza (Podcast)

This week I had the opportunity to chat with some very cool people about my favorite social networking site Amplify.com. I have done several podcasts and lots of posts about Amplify, but after kicking the idea around with my friend Shonali Burke,  the panel began to take shape. The panelists were:

Shonali Burke – my main co-conspirator in this effort, past podcast guest and all around awesome Marketing and PR genius. Also blogging at Waxingunlyrical.com and shonali.amplify.com or @shonali.

Tinu Abayomi-Paul – a new media veteran regularly sharing her traffic tips at freetraffictip.com and asktinu.amplify.com or @tinu.

Alex Schleber – my biggest influencer of #curation efforts, also savvy and prolific. Definite power user of #amplify. Also find him at businessmindhacks.com or Curation FTW his amplog or @alexschleber.

Eric Goldstein – the discussion would not be complete without the CEO of Amplify. Eric joined us for the last 20 minutes or so answering questions and sharing his insights. He’s participated in several interviews. You can find Eric on egoldstein.amplify.com or @egoldstein.

The community at large – there were tons of great Amplify users present in the chat, many of them are listed here. I regret that I could not have managed more people on the panel. This could have been a panel of 30-40 people that are great trusted sources on Amplify. Many (but not nearly all of them) are listed at “Why sources are more valuable than followers“.

What's on your Mind? An Amapalooza!

Highlights

What can you expect by listening to this podcast?:

  • Insights from several different users with unique approaches
  • That Shonali has a wonderful speaking voice and accent (Thanks @zn_moment and @flapic)
  • How discussion and meeting people creates a lot of value for the site users
  • Ideas about how Amplify could scale and remain “intimate”
  • The power of the @mentions on Amplify (Originally suggested to Eric by Shonali)
  • Lots of great suggestions for new features
  • A conversation between the panel and Eric

Listen to the Ampalooza:

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Quotables:

Amplify is what Google Buzz should have been.” – Tinu Abayomi-Paul

The structure of Amplify does create some of that intimacy, it’s not just happenstance and it’s not just that the community is still relatively small.” – Alex Schleber

“(On Amplify being a great time saver) - The clipping function which is to me is the core of it and is so beautiful about it and the way that it clips and presents the posts particularly when you post them to Facebook is remarkable.” – Shonali Burke

“(On being willing to change priorities) - The internet is incredibly fluid and one thing we try to do as a company is try to remain as fluid as possible.” – Eric Goldstein

Self quote (I know, strange quoting myself):

“(On the Amplify team) - When you deal with people that treat you right and give a crap, it makes it really easy to be an advocate.” – Joe Hackman

Listeners, how would you have responded to the questions? Are there any features that you would have suggested to the Amplify team?

Helping friends not Twitter Spammers

You may have recently heard how Twitter, Facebook and Buzz factor into Bing and Google search results. I was somewhat concerned when I read that article. I was concerned because I think it will encourage spammers and SEO games with twitter and further clog up an already difficult to manage stream of information. I wrote about your sources being much more important than your followers earlier this year but it is becoming even more critical today and that is why I am revisiting this issue. Here are some key points to consider:

  1. When you follow a spammer, your good name makes it more likely for other legitimate people to follow them.
  2. By adding to their follower count you increase their reach and improve the SEO of the garbage they are pimping.

Follow the leader, they love the spammer

Remember the Honda motorcycle jingle (maybe you don’t but that’s alright, you didn’t grow up with that 2 wheel culture?):

Follow the leader, he’s on a Honda.

Your vote of confidence and good name could really make the difference between someone that respects you following or not following an unscrupulous user. In fact it is one of the things I’ve weighed in my decisions on whether or not to follow someone. Take this example, I clicked to find a random Twitter user, for this example let’s pretend that @katyzack just followed me:

Katy Zack on Twitter

As you can see in this initial view of Katy’s profile I note that several trusted sources of mine are already following her. This scores some kudo/follow back points, but note when I click through to see who the 10+ others were I saw this trio in the list:

Credible Followers

This is indeed good news for Katy, a couple of my #infosec sources follow her and my pal Gini Dietrich as well. I wouldn’t even think twice about following Katy now. This is an example of an obvious credible user but imagine if one of these folks that I respect followed another user with shall we say less than admirable selfish intentions? This is in fact the point I am trying to make:

Your good name could encourage me to follow someone I probably shouldn’t

Passing on Twitter Juice

According to the article I cited earlier the authority of a user is impacted by the number of followers they have (Bing) and both Bing and Google calculate the authority of all Twitter users. My argument here is simpler:

Follow a Spammer and you are improving their SEO

Summary and Conversation Fodder

Sources are becoming more and more crucial, you want to pass along democratic SEO happiness to quality folks but certainly don’t want to help saturate the Twitter Firehouse. With benefit of this information are you going to reconsider your Twitter policy? There is one heck of a post and comment thread about Twitter policies on Spinsucks. I’d imagine these recent developments could re-start that debate? What do you think?

Howto create your own url shortening service (Video)

Earlier this week you might have read my post about why it might be time to create your own URL shortener. Today I am responding to several reader comments and providing a detailed video on how to do it. If you are looking to create your own URL shortening service you may want to watch both of the videos in this post, this video is simply a test drive of the URL shortening service interface. I suggest you watch this one and decide if it is worth the trouble, or if you’re already convinced just skip it and view the second video below.

If the service passed muster and has the features you need, you will want to make sure you meet some pre-requisite items:

  1. Hosting account somewhere that supports MySQL databases and PHP (almost every host does).
  2. Domain name (the shorter the better, in this case I use 0b0.us)
  3. FTP Client (I would recommend Filezilla to Windows users)
  4. Will power to carefully watch the video below and potentially adapt the procedures to your own hosting companies MySQL setup.

Now that you’ve covered the checklist and without further ado, the goods:

I would love to hear if you completed this process yourself, let me know how it worked out. If you still need help feel free to post your questions in the comments below.
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The Value of Serendipity in New Media

Liz StraussI had a great serendipitous experience this month, it all started when I noticed a great blog post that had some un-answered comments. The author happened to be someone that I have now learned is exceptional about responding to comments but there had been a technical challenge making it difficult for her to do so. If you want to hear the rest of that part of the story you can view this post on amplify, but that is not what this post is about. This post is about meeting that person, none other than Liz Strauss, in SF for lunch. When I saw her tweet that she just landed in SF I reached out to see if we might meet for coffee or lunch while she was in town. Eventually we worked something out and I was headed to SF to meet a fantastic blogger and person.

When Liz came across the street she was finishing a phone call and she stretched out her arms to give me a hug. To me this was a great gesture for someone I was meeting for the first time. We grabbed a table inside and started to chat. One of the things that struck me right away is how Liz was asking me a lot of questions, gauging my knowledge with sincere interest. Before long she began to share with me a lot of great ideas about blogging, being found, Twitter, hired help and other things. I am going to highlight that information in this post because much of it has been extremely valuable to me.

  • Some tips about article titles.
  • A strategy to find some help.
  • A great strategy for engaging content creators on Twitter.

Some prudent advice on article titles

Liz gave me some great advice, in a very simple way, about how to title articles. She suggested that you read your article and determine what question it answers and build the subject around that. The thought process was brilliant, when people search for that question they are likely to find your article with content relevant to their question. I know people that love tricky titles may not like this approach, but you can always tweet out different content and see which one works better. I have taken this method very much to heart and I am utilizing it when appropriate here on my blog.

A strategy to find some help

I explained to Liz that I cut back on my manpower over the past two years and I am the only full time employee at my company. I also explained that I am enjoying it but there are times when I would like to delegate some work. Liz asked about universities in the area and explained an excellent way to establish a relationship with professors and their top students. The idea is that you reach out to the appropriate subject matter professor – Computer Science if you’re looking for IT, Marketing if you need marketing and so forth. You offer to get involved with classes, possible helping with providing your area of expertise as a resource. You also ask if they have students that might be interested in internships. Going through the professor the idea develops further, they have a vested interest in the success. They are likely to suggest their best students, wanting to make sure that things work out since they are involved.

Engaging quality content creators on Twitter

The premise for this was simple, whenever you share an article see if you can’t find the author on Twitter and reference them in the Tweet. If they are monitoring their Twitter account at all they are likely to follow you and even RT you. This seems really obvious, but in an age where content curation has become so critical this technique is that much more valuable. Liz is an absolute pro blogger and power Twitter user. In fact look at what Klout says about her:

Liz Strauss Klout Influence Matrix

“You have the amazing ability to filter massive amounts of content to surface the nuggets that your audience truly care about.”

A little about Liz

While Liz was so generous with her time, I worked at learning more about what she does. I was pleased to hear that she does public speaking, puts on SOBCon and consults with clients helping them navigate social media. I have added the SOBCon event to my “must do” events for 2011 and I confess I am completely pumped up about it. You can find Liz via @lizstrauss on Twitter and via successful-blog.com.