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william doust

Crowdsourcing: Getting Attention is the Key to getting the message out | socialmedia.ne... - 0 views

  • inancial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • l, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on. Instead of an old style news editor sitting in their office deciding what hundreds of thousands of their readers are going to read about or what millions of viewers are going to watch on their televisions we now have random individuals coagulating around an idea and creating content simply because other people are willing to pay attention to it. Instead of the world being presented to us through the filters and 'judgment' of a relatively tiny amount of editors and their editorial teams we now have the world being shown to us by content creators who have managed, by whatever means, to bring attention to their work. Loading comments... Problems loading Disqus? Like Dislike Community Disqus Login options About Disqus Glad you liked it. Would you like to share? Facebook Twitter Share No thanks Sharing this page ... Thanks! Close Add New Comment Post as … Showing 0 comments Sort by Popular now Best rating Newest first Oldest first   Subscribe by email   Subscribe by RSS Trackback URL View the discussion thread. Social Media, Views 78 reads Follow socialmedia.net conten
  • ...22 more annotations...
  • tributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on. Instead of an old style news editor sitting in their office deciding what hundreds of thousands of their readers are going to read about or what millions of viewers are going to watch on their televisions we now have random individuals coagulating around an idea and creating content simply because other people are willing to pay attention to it. Instead of the world being presented to us through the filters and 'judgment' of a relatively tiny amount of editors and their editorial teams we now have the world being shown to us by content creators who have managed, by whatever means, to bring attention to their work. Loading comments... Problems loading Disqus? Like Dislike Community Disqus Login options About Disqus Glad you liked it. Would you like to share? Facebook Twitter Share No thanks Sharing this page ... Thanks! Close Add New Comment Post as … Showing 0 comments Sort by Popular now Best rating Newest first Oldest first   Subscribe by email   Subscribe by RSS Trackback URL View the discussion thread. Social Media, Views 78 reads
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on. Instead of an old style news editor sitting in their office deciding what hundreds of thousands of their readers are going to read about or what millions of viewers are going to watch on their televisions we now have random individuals coagulating around an idea and creating content simply because other people are willing to pay attention to it. Instead of the world being presented to us through the filters and 'judgment' of a relatively tiny amount of editors and their editorial teams we now have the world being shown to us by content creators who have managed, by whatever means, to bring attention to their work. Loading comments... Problems loading Disqus? Like Dislike Community Disqus Login options About Disqus Glad you liked it. Would you like to share? Facebook Twitter Share No thanks Sharing this page ... Thanks! Close Add New Comment Post as … Showing 0 comments Sort by Popular now Best rating Newest first Oldest first   Subscribe by email   Subscribe by RSS Trackback URL View the discussion thread. Social Media, Views 78 reads Follow socialmedia.net
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • Instead of an old style news editor sitting in their office deciding what hundreds of thousands of their readers are going to read about or what millions of viewers are going to watch on their televisions we now have random individuals coagulating around an idea and creating content simply because other people are willing to pay attention to it. Instead of the world being presented to us through the filters and 'judgment' of a relatively tiny amount of editors and their editorial teams we now have the world being shown to us by content creators who have managed, by whatever means, to bring attention to their work. Loading comments... Problems loading Disqus? Like Dislike Community Disqus Login options About Disqus Glad you liked it. Would you like to share? Facebook Twitter Share No thanks Sharing this page ... Thanks! Close Add New Comment Post as … Showing 0 comments Sort by Popular now Best rating Newest first Oldest first   Subscribe by email   Subscribe by RSS Trackback URL View the discussion thread. Social Media, Views 78 reads Follow socialmedia.net http://socia
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • Instead of an old style news editor sitting in their office deciding what hundreds of thousands of their readers are going to read about or what millions of viewers are going to watch on their televisions we now have random individuals coagulating around an idea and creating content simply because other people are willing to pay attention to it. Instead of the world being presented to us through the filters and 'judgment' of a relatively tiny amount of editors and their editorial teams we now have the world being shown to us by content creators who have managed, by whatever means, to bring attention to their work. Loading comments... Problems loading Disqus? Like Dislike Community Disqus Login options About Disqus Glad you liked it. Would you like to share? Facebook Twitter Share No thanks Sharing this page ... Thanks! Close Add New Comment Post as … Showing 0 comments Sort by Popular now Best rating Newest first Oldest first   Subscribe by email   Subscribe by RSS Trackback URL View the discussion thread. Social Media, Views 78 reads Follow socialmedia.net http://socia
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
  • All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on.
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    "All this suggests a mechanism for ideas to bubble up through oceans of data and set the public agenda begins with contributors being rewarded by attention being given to their work, the subject of which could be shared beliefs of a political, financial or of any other nature. As more attention becomes centred on these ideas the more motivation the contributors have to create more product along the same lines and thus create more attention and so on. "
william doust

South West Forum News - 0 views

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    "One Year On: the Defra Third Sector Strategy 10/11/2009 Defra's Third Sector Strategy 'One Year On' report discusses the progress Defra have made on the range of commitments in their Third Sector Strategy. The report is accompanied by a detailed annex which contains a commentary on the progress they have made on every commitment in the strategy. Go to page to Download the Third Sector Strategy 'One Year On' report. (1MB PDF) Go to page to Download the Third Sector Strategy. (4.17MB PDF) Congratulations also to Defra for winning the Compact Award for Excellence at National level. Full details (and sign up for updates) are available at blogs.defra.gov.uk. "
william doust

The Make Lounge: Contemporary craft workshops with a stylish, social twist - 0 views

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    The make lounge is a concept that can be copied for the skills you impart. You could create collectives that creates stuff - then learns to teach stuff (to the community for small fee) - collaboratively make it, and then sell it either as part of a charity auction or as part of your "portable charity shop" ;-) For Bunny Ideas: >Develop a puppet kit... all the bits they need, instructions, ideas on paper element and an invitation to: >> send you their puppet creation photos (to go into a book!!!) >>send you their puppet movie to be put on your youtube channel (most viewed would be put onto DVD and sold - Vanity factor!!! >>donate their first puppet to go into a puppet catwalk or puppet "celebrity" - voted by people (in a celebration event?) >Develop animation kit... perhaps animation kit that learners can use on the day then buy to take home and practice. They then could be invited to: >>Share/send their story for the corresponding book >>Share/send their animatin for inclusion in the youtube channel For Xtine & ELiz, what could you think about for your activities? >Story sack kit & instructions? >character cakes? (dalek, etc.?) >what else?
william doust

Helping others share your content: socialbookmarking widgets - 5 views

wibiya: http://wibiya.com/ relatively new one - adds a fab bar at bottom of the page. It has hedged its bets by going with the most known socialnetwokring and socialbookmarking platforms - so limi...

widget widgets social bookmarking share content share

william doust

Learning Revolution: Festivals, Libraries & Interesting responses ;-D - 7 views

Digital Britain Report... http://www.official-documents.gov.uk/document/cm76/7650/7650.asp main interest...From informal adult learning.... >Fun digital related activities build confidence & invis...

learning revolution learning

william doust

The Chronicle, 11/9/2006: Social Change and the Connected Age - 0 views

  • Social Change and the Connected Age
    • william doust
       
      Social Media phenomenon harnessed for social change & charities... Please read this - as it has plenty of examples of the tide shifting to connected individuals who want active participation! - not passive purse and pocket trawling! - forward thinking charities are harnessing people's existing behavioursa and passions with social media.
  • Connectedness does not come from technology but is facilitated and strengthened by it. The greatest challenge for nonprofit organizations and their leaders in the connected age is recognizing that using social-media tools is easy compared with adopting a new mindset for social change. Today, nonprofit groups are part of a larger network or ecosystem of people, organizations, resources, and information. Relying on old-fashioned, top-down management approaches for setting activist agendas and designing fund-raising and volunteering efforts will lead inevitably to disappointing results. Power is shifting from institutions to individuals throughout society. We have seen what happens when people can barter and sell goods without a middleperson on eBay, and when we can watch what we want, when we want, through YouTube. The same sorts of shifts are happening quietly in the nonprofit world. Anyone can create and post a video of what they think their Congressional representatives do all day as part of the "Congress in :30 Secs" campaign organized by the Sunlight Foundation. Volunteers can document the connections between campaign contributions and legislation as part of the Genocide Intervention Network. Donors can pick a school and a specific project to support as part of the DonorsChoose Web site. Successful connected-age organizations are those that facilitate broadly representative networks of social activists — not necessarily organizations with the biggest membership lists or the most money in their coffers. These days, young people, in particular, are not likely to join behemoth membership organizations. Instead, they go online to express their views and instantly connect with individuals and communities interested in their issues and concerns. They also self-organize for social action as so many did in joining the immigration marches last spring.
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    INSPIRATIONAL - ABOUT THE SHIFT OF POWER TO THE NETWORK: not passive participants. It's like the "coming of the angels" CLP - from the real world to the virtual world. B-INSPIRED ;0) My lovely charity chums
william doust

Coke Pours In-House Social Media Experiments Down the Drain | Ben Paynter | Fast Company - 0 views

  • Yesterday, the company announced that it will abandon building ever-more networking platforms in favor of approaching customers at the places they already hang out, like Facebook and YouTube.
    • william doust
       
      Eliz & Christine - this is what you discovered with the Angels when using facebook
  • Coke Pours In-House Social Media Experiments Down the Drain
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  • Coke Pours In-House Social Media Experiments Down the Drain
    • william doust
       
      There are also some upsides from what they learned here ;-D
    • william doust
       
    • william doust
       
      coca-cola we are social (includes video) http://www.diigo.com/09adk
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    This article shows the evidence on a large corporate scale - What CLP naturally discovered with virtual spaces - go where the learners hang out. Coca-cola wasted a lot of money trying to get people to go to other virtual spaces.
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    Shame we didn't have all of that money to burn!! We'd have used it a lot more wisely......
william doust

Internet: Social Value, Social Internet, Digital life-styles!!!! - 2 views

Reflections on seeding in socal design: building connections with communities, design and use in social technology projects http://www.slideshare.net/pennyhagen/reflections-on-seeding-in-socal-des...

social intelligence social media digital lifestyle

william doust

MediaPost Publications Digital Partnerships Could Revive, Energize Local Media 03/02/2009 - 0 views

  • Digital Partnerships Could Revive, Energize Local Media
    • william doust
       
      Eliz what we were discussing about grass roots documentaries! - the real Slum dog millionaire budgets of $0.00 but a Zillion tons of energy, good will and dedication
  • The shift of core ad dollars to digital could be even more pronounced if the major traditional media are not able to integrate new interactive products into their bundle. Holding on to advertiser and consumers isn't enough; everyone must be interactively engaged. 
  • Local news, interests and connections between consumers and advertisers are at the heart of both the failing traditional media saddled with legacy costs and the nimble Web-based contenders. The value of all things local has been woefully underestimated. It has been devalued in print and television, which can't quite make the leap to digital, and botched on the Internet--where it seems impossible to capitalize on the hyperpersonal in bloggers and tweeters run amok. What could be more relevant than what is going on in consumers' own backyard? Institutional media (newspapers and TV stations) has failed to connect with local as it is being redefined by consumers who are obsessing over the interactive ME-dia they care about most: their needs, family and friends. "The future of local is intensely personal. It is about what is within 1,000 feet of where you stand. Local is centered on the individual," says Outside.in CEO Mark Josephson
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  • Relevance is the new key metric
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    Eliz what we were discussing about grass roots documentaries! - the real Slum dog millionaire budgets of $0.00 but a Zillion tons of energy, good will and dedication
william doust

Successful Communication Tool - Visioning Scenarios: Show the Future - 0 views

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    How is our organisation going to adapt to changing climates in the future? Don't know? - well why not use the 'Scenarios' process, to develop a positive outlook to the future, a negative outlook and a neutral outlook. Bring on board the factors that contribute and affect the dynamics in your area of discpline or expertise and see how you could plan for the challenges which the three scenario paths present.
Bunny Martin

Moroccan Children's Trust - Morocco, volunteering, gap year, volunteer projects, projects - 0 views

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    This is a partnership Charity Volunteer group with the Klevis Kola Foundation which has been set up a group of Medical students from St Georges Hospital in Tooting London SW17 (which was STAR (Student Action for Refugees & Asylum Seekers) - STAR has been going for over 7 yrs - and Body action Campaign (our Charity) has been working alongside them for the past 6 years providing film, animation, editing, & puppetry workshops - Chris Hands (Chair of the board of Trustees for Klevis Kola - told me about tonight (25th Feb 09) - If any gap year students - or passionate volunteers-want to take part in - by working with the children in Morocco - get in touch (Speaking French or Arabic is really helpful) - you can sign up on the site & talk to other volunteers who have been working there and get the low down!
william doust

Video Marketing- 42 Ways to Use Video | Market Yourself as a Speaker - 0 views

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    "Video Marketing- 42 Ways to Use Video Posted on February 27th, 2010. Stop wasting time trading links with other websites, posting the same how-to article to a gazillion article directory sites, and doing sneaky little things at your own website to try to trick the search engines. Spend your time instead creating video, one of the most powerful ways to pull traffic to your website or blog. It will boost your position in the search engine rankings and, in some cases, take tons of business away from your competitors. Do it right, and they'll be so shell-shocked they'll pack up and go home."
william doust

What Would Homer Simpson Do? Your Messages and the Emerging Science of Behavioral Econo... - 0 views

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    "Pop quiz: The following messages have what in common? * Frances Osborne's The Bolter is an Oprah Winfrey Book Club selection. Buy it now. * 75% of guests who stay in this hotel reuse their towels. Join them and reuse your towel to help save the environment. * Any money you donate will go to Rokia, a seven-year-old girl who lives in Mali, Africa. The answer? They all use principles of behavioral economics to influence their audience's decisions. And you can too. Nonprofit marketers and fundraisers often base important strategic and tactical choices on thinking grounded in established theories and practices, including direct marketing and economics. But what about established psychological theories? Enter behavioral economics."
william doust

Capital campaigns in a tight economy - should you cancel yours and how to decide. - Soc... - 0 views

  • Capital campaigns in a tight economy - should you cancel yours and how to decide
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    Origianally found by Chris & Eliz - my sweeties, PLS make sure you click on the title of the article (blogs) as ten you will have direct link to it ;o) otherwise you'll be linking to Dr. O's blog bit. When new pages come, we will lose track. Learn & share on the go. Love it ;0*
william doust

ChangeThis :: This is Your Buyology - 0 views

  • “I have spent years talking with brand fans; from obsessed Harley Davidson riders to young Japanese Hello Kitty admirers (one of whom, incidentally, owns more than 12,000 pieces of Hello Kitty merchandise), to devoted Irish Guinness beer drinkers. I’ve, time after time, been struck by the apparent parallels between the power of religion and of brands over followers. But, in reality, would such a claim possibly hold up? Is it possible that some brands have managed to create their own religion by, coincidently or deliberately, adopting triggers and tactics from the world of religion? The question became an obsession for me.”
    • william doust
       
      Read this free PDF - and if you like it - go hardcore with I'm with the brand by Rob Walker: http://tinyurl.com/c8q7a3 (amazon associates). I read it, really fab!
    • william doust
       
      If you want to follow up on this after reading the free PDF - check out the following book on amazon: http://tinyurl.com/c8q7a3 I'm with the brand - Rob Walker! - Fab read!
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    branding - how people relate to brands. This has been covered also by Rob Walker's fab book called: I'm with the brand. See page for more detail - check out sticky note.
william doust

Postcard Printing, Post Cards, Custom Postcards, Design a Post Card online - 0 views

    • william doust
       
      Example of a group/charity using postcards to "product-ize" - sell what they do: Early Arts
    • william doust
       
      early arts page - selling postcards using paypal: http://bit.ly/earlyArtsPostcards
    • william doust
       
      You could try a printing on demand service like this to reduce costs? Perhaps invite your community of learners service users to co-create cards, photograph artwork then put on cards! - so order only what service users want and go from there! with a trackable link (on the back of the card) you could get the postcard to sell itself ;-)
  • Postcard Printing, Post Cards, Custom Postcards, Create a post card
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    make your own postcards - sart at US $ 0.95 per card. The higher number the lower it becomes. check it out.
william doust

Answers to The Silver Lining Audio Conference Questions - Scott Anthony - HarvardBusine... - 0 views

  • Process frequency. At many companies, strategic planning and portfolio management is an episodic process that happens quarterly or annually. In turbulent times, strategic planning has to happen more frequently. Kill rate. As times get tough, many companies have to de-prioritize some projects in their portfolio. Companies should make sure they focus on an idea's true potential, or else they will accidentally sacrifice ideas with great long-term potential (see a recent excerpt from The Silver Lining in BusinessWeek for more on this topic) Focus on "loving the low end." Most companies generally default towards providing better products or services to demanding customers. In tough times, companies have to figure out how they are going to compete for increasingly value-conscious customers. Ask whether you have any explicit strategies focused on "loving the low end" of your market.
    • william doust
       
      This one is about innovation! - useful in tough times ;-)
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    innovation of services during tough times!
william doust

Kenny Kellogg: Raising Money the Right Way - 0 views

  • it feels impersonal. I love hearing stories, it's what I respond to, and that is especially true when donating.
    • william doust
       
      power of story when donating - just asking without sharing is cold! - not only according to this guy! - rapport building and setting backdrop needs to work way ahead of campaigns!
  • Lately though, I've been a little bummed out by the way people have been asking for donations. Folks have been using new tools like Facebook and Twitter and mass email to broadcast their fundraising needs.
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    Power of Stories, fundraising & rapport! Raisign money on the web: tell your story and build rapport way before you need people to reach into their pockets. Technology can as cold and as impersonal as you going up to somone shaking money tin! - who are you? what's your story - what stories can you show me to move me?
william doust

How social is your cause on Vimeo - 0 views

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    fab little video on socialmedia - going where the user is, etc.
william doust

YCN | Creative Agency, Content, Projects, Opportunities - 0 views

    • william doust
       
      This one also discovered via twitter. Go on steal my contacts @williamdoust
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    You can learn from the work of creative agencies! - they do their own books: CLP, CBF - this is wot i'm talkin about my lovely charity chums!
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    CWP - check out the shoe!
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    WoW! but one shoe is no good unless you have one leg. You need many many more pairs.EXCELLENT web site
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