Bay Area Residents – Support the Pleasanton Rotary on 9/11/2010 #sfbay #nonprofit

The Pleasanton North Rotary club is having there annual fundraiser on September 11th, 2010. I promised to blog about it while I was there giving a presentation today. I can say this group is passionate, energetic and effective. I would encourage anyone who can participate to support this great fund raiser. The website is also very visually appealing so please follow the link at the end of this post and check it out.

Amplify’d from www.astarrynight.org
Please call (877) KIDS-TLC Ext. 718 today for information about becoming an Event Table Sponsor.
BENEFICIARIES
A Starry Night is Pleasanton North Rotary’s only benefit event each year funding many local and international community service projects. This year’s major beneficiaries are:


Serving more than 300 Bay Area children from ages 18 months to 12 years, with conditions including Autism, Down Syndrome and Speech Delays, School of Imagination is a full inclusion Preschool and Kindergarten providing customized programs. A Starry Night will help create a permanet home for the School of Imagination


The Wheelchair Foundation is leading an International effort to create awareness of the needs and abilities of people with physical disabilities, to promote the joy of giving, create global friendships and to deliver a wheelchair to every child, teen and adult who needs one, but cannot afford one.

Other Recent Beneficiaries
have included:

Axis Community Health

Blue Star Moms

Camp RYLA

Houses, Inc.

Keystone Adult Learning Center

Pleasanton Partnership in Education

Pleasanton Unified School District

Taylor Family Foundation

El Oasis Orphanage

Polio Plus Program

and many others


SPONSORS

Premiere sponsorship opportunities are still available. For more information please E-mail Mitch Sigman
or call (877) KIDS-TLC Ext. 718

Read more at www.astarrynight.org

 


Never miss another Amplify.com Community Chat Second Friday of every month at 11:30AM Eastern @amplifytheweb

After our community chat this week I discussed options with Eric for future chats to be regularly scheduled. We worked out that the second Friday of every month at 11:30AM Eastern would work out well for him and is early enough for our friends in the Euro zone to join us. Sign up now via Plancast so you don’t forget. The link goes to my Blog Talk Radio account, the episode will be created shortly.

Amplify’d from plancast.com

Joe Hackman
Amplify.com community Chat on Blogtalkradio

Read more at plancast.com

 


A student of life some great tips by @chrisbrogan

Chris Brogan is clearly a tireless student of life, he continues to take learning to higher levels and I believe it has a lot to do with his strong desire to share. In his latest blog post below he mentions a great way to learn – by having prepared questions to ask. Do you ask enough questions?

Amplify’d from www.chrisbrogan.com

Carry Questions Around With You

Here’s something you can use immediately: think of two or three questions that will improve your business (or life or whatever), and ask these questions at some point when meeting new people.

Asking the right question to a handful of people (or to a dozen people) gives you a lot of value. Three or four years ago, I asked a question at Gnomedex to some of the attendees: I keep getting asked out for lunches where people pick my brains. Is consulting basically just telling them my fee after they ask me out to lunch? Answer: yes. With that, I started making money for what I know. One question: instant money.

A little while later, I started asking what people got paid to speak professionally. From there, I could judge my experience to theirs, and decide whether or not I could charge more or less than them. Now? I’m a professional speaker, and I know much more than my fee, because I know what I do that other speakers don’t normally do, and so I add value in that way.

What Kinds of Questions Should You Ask?

Ask open-ended questions that tap the person’s experience. Ask questions that will give you things to consider, not solid answers. Ask questions that will lead you into a bit more research, not a solid and final definitive destination.

Who Should I Ask?

For instance, when I had small business structuring and tax questions, my first good conversation was with Joe Sorge. When I had some glancing real estate questions, I started with Maya Paveza, and then a few others. In all cases, I asked questions that I knew the person could fill me in some parts of my puzzle. Not all, but parts. Remember: if you ask a carpenter how to improve your business, she’ll tell you to build. If you ask a lawyer, he’ll tell you to protect yourself better.

What Should I Do With the Answers?

Never take anything as gospel. Instead, consider yourself informed. Take the answers, mash them into your own thoughts, and then move forward.

One Last Bit

Always thank people for their advice. Whether or not you use it, it’s really important to thank people for their time and their advice.

Questions are Powerful, Don’t You Agree?

There’s one more trick to all this: people love being asked for their advice and opinion. They truly do. I’ve yet to meet someone who doesn’t want to share just a tidbit of help. That’s why I spend an hour or two each day in Third Tribe Marketing, helping where I can. It’s why we all do.

I end lots of my blog posts with questions. Have you ever noticed that? Why do you think I do it?

Read more at www.chrisbrogan.com

 


Facebook Connect 2.0 Like or Recommend?

It is with a bit of trepidation that I write this post. There are some exciting things going on at Facebook this week. The main reason for the concern is the potential for abuse with the new like feature. As Arnab points out in his blog, the new feature can be used to dupe people into liking something other than that article or website. Or more specifically as my friend Hugh Briss over at Amplify points out the following:

“I realize that no self respecting blogger would use the new Facebook “like” button to trick their readers into “liking” something besides their own blog or a particular post, but what about the spammers? Since you can add any url you want into the iframe code, what would stop them from setting up hundreds of shill pages that draw traffic and entice readers to click the “like”button which then posts to their friend’s news feeds that they “like” something that they really didn’t “like”, like a porn site, for example.”

Ok so what about the part about the exciting part? The fact is there are some amazing, extremely easy to implement features in what I am calling Facebook Connect 2.0. Not the least of which is the aforementioned “Like” feature, though I prefer the “Recommend” version of it for example:

Results in the reader “recommending” my blog. This subsequently posts a notice on their profile that looks like this:

Which is generally great for me, because it allows me to get support from people who are interested in my blog, but something critical here as Hugh and Arnab noted – I was the one that chose what website to point the recommendation to, not you. Of course you probably know who you can trust, keep that in mind before you click like or recommend for now because it is not controlled.

Activity Feed

Facebook has also extended the simplicity to other areas of connect, such as the Activity Feed. This widget lets you display activity of any public page anywhere you want via iFrame. Here is an example of my this blogs activity:

Live Stream

It is now also easy to allow visitors on your site or application to share activity and comments in real time. This is perfect to use in conjunction with real time events, definitely a attempt to one up Twitter as a back channel for public events as one example. (From Facebooks developer page – I will update to this site when I have more time):

There are additional options as well, to see them all visit the Social Plugins page at Facebook.

WordPress 3 Beta out, Merges MU, provides new menus! via @Mashable

As someone who is heavily committed to WordPress as a content management system (CMS), any new release of WordPress is exciting. This is particularly appealing to me because it solves some significant development speed issues for some of my clients who only really need one top level domain to host a number of sites. You can bet I’ll download and install this right away! http://bit.ly/aVHQhV

One of the most profound quotes I’ve read in a while.

While working on an upcoming article based on a podcast interview I did a couple of weeks ago I came across this quote: “That is why they act like animals. Treat them like animals and people will act that way. Hand them the food like humans and they are all gentle and beautiful people.” It was in relation to the delivery of Aid in Haiti by the Plane to Haiti people. http://bit.ly/bqunhv

This sign has a very clear meaning!

I love this sign, people are tired of being ripped off. I follow this blog, the area it covers is north of where I live about 15 miles. GREAT local blogger. http://bit.ly/bc8N6w

Tungle now integrates with LinkedIn

This is a pretty cool App I’ve been playing with for a while now. It allows people to see your available and request an appointment. I have the widget on my website. This integration with LinkedIn is likely to make the application more useful to me. http://bit.ly/ddY03F

Psychics – claim your million dollar prize!

I love this effort because if anyone ever claims to have supernatural powers you can ask them why they haven’t collected this prize. I wonder what % of our population believes some human beings have super natural powers? http://bit.ly/bxkifG

Like productivity tips? I do, check this out.

I love stuff like this.. usually one or two gems to take away. http://bit.ly/9gyk91