Skip to main content

Home/ Accelerated Family Learning - Friends of Campaign4 Learning/ Group items tagged messages.

Rss Feed Group items tagged

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.
  •  
    "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

The Chronicle of Philanthropy: Live Discussions - 0 views

  • Using Video to Spread Your Nonprofit Group's Message and Mission
    • william doust
       
      Bunny, Chris, and Eliz, this one is thought provoking and for collaboration.
  •  
    Hi you three, this is a little article with related info about the power of video for tsory telling, spreading, message and vision! - you lovely 3 chums can work together and make miracles - enjoy ;o)
william doust

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

  •  
    "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

YouTube - Embrace Life - always wear your seat belt - 0 views

  •  
    How much are we under-using the power of video with emotion to convey a life changing gut wrenching message? - a message that goes straight to the primitive emotional brain? - Watch this powerful example. Why do we still have websites with the same functionality of the late 80s when there is sooo much more? Courtesy of CLP ;-)
william doust

Yoono Desktop Features - 0 views

  •  
    Yoono allows you to send messages to your contacts on: twitter, facebook and linked in all from one interface!!! - saving you valuable time to login into many platforms. There is also a firefox addon:
william doust

'Influentials' and 'Imitators': How to Better Forecast the Sale of New Products - Knowl... - 0 views

    • william doust
       
      Eliz - this is good to keep in mind when diffusing & growing CLP
    • william doust
       
      YOu don't have to read it, you can download the audio or listen to it on page.
  • 'Influentials' and 'Imitators': How to Better Forecast the Sale of New Products
  •  
    Eliz - please listen to audio or read & discuss with Chris - understanding spread & influence of message networks can help accelerate your WOM.
william doust

/Message: Twitter Supports 'Tracking' But Not #Hashtags? - 0 views

  • Today we're releasing a tiny feature to do just that, and we're calling it "tracking." If you've set up your phone or IM on Twitter, you can send a command like: track NYC When someone (anyone who updates in public) mentions "NYC," you'll get it on your device in real-time. From there you can send "whois username" to find out more about that person, or "follow username" to follow his or her updates. Don't want to receive anymore about NYC? Toggle it off with: untrack NYC You can create as many of these as you want, so send "track drinking tea", "track iphone", "track walking san francisco" and you'll receive matches for all. Want to get a list of what you're currently tracking? Send "track" alone (or "stats"). Turn them all off by sending "track off". We love this technology, and hope you do too. We're continuing to refine and play with it, so please send your feedback! What will you track?
    • william doust
       
      Productivity tip for twitter. I'm going to practice this and make a vid tutorial my charity chums ;0)
  •  
    see description- about tracking keywords on twitter and finding them later.
  •  
    How to track topics on twitter by keyword - bit like saving keyword searches in google Today we're releasing a tiny feature to do just that, and we're calling it "tracking." If you've set up your phone or IM on Twitter, you can send a command like: track NYC When someone (anyone who updates in public) mentions "NYC," you'll get it on your device in real-time. From there you can send "whois username" to find out more about that person, or "follow username" to follow his or her updates. Don't want to receive anymore about NYC? Toggle it off with: untrack NYC You can create as many of these as you want, so send "track drinking tea", "track iphone", "track walking san francisco" and you'll receive matches for all. Want to get a list of what you're currently tracking? Send "track" alone (or "stats"). Turn them all off by sending "track off". We love this technology, and hope you do too. We're continuing to refine and play with it, so please send your feedback! What will you track?
william doust

Fundraising is Not an Independent Variable | The Next Right - 0 views

  • Raise money and stockpile resources so that you can afford to get your message out. Spend the money to get your message out and gather support, usually through expensive mediums like TV, radio, or mail.
    • william doust
       
      can we learn good and positive practices from political fund raising in the third sector?
  •  
    can we take the good things and learn from political fund raising?
william doust

Charity badge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • A charity badge is a widget used on websites, blogs, social networks or e-mail for promotion of some humanitarian initiative, mainly gathering donations for charity projects
    • william doust
       
      Wikipedia defintion of a charity badge ;0)
  •  
    personal contribution face-to-face (getting donations) more effective than badges. But perhaps badges should be thought of as a way to "xtend the net of awareness?" I think image badges, news badges and video bages need to work harder to extend that msg! - it is all in the message and excecution!
  •  
    personal contribution face-to-face (getting donations) more effective than badges. But perhaps badges should be thought of as a way to "xtend the net of awareness?"personal contribution face-to-face (getting donations) more effective than badges. But perhaps badges should be thought of as a way to "xtend the net of awareness?"
william doust

How charities are getting bloggers on board - Third Sector - 0 views

  •  
    "How charities are getting bloggers on board By Helen Barrett, Third Sector, 1 February 2010 Blogs, forums and other social media provide new ways for charities to get their messages across to the public. But they are a far cry from traditional PR, as Helen Barrett reports"
william doust

Customer Reference Pros Twitter List by Sean White on Listorious - 0 views

  •  
    A page with a list of contacts who post messages on twitter (tweet) about engineering better customer experiences, customer advocacy, customer value. Etc., etc. you get the point ;-D
william doust

Embracing Social Media to Strengthen our Marketing Message - 0 views

  •  
    some good slides in here on facebook - check it out ;-)
william doust

3 Minute Wonder - Channel 4 - 0 views

  •  
    Channel 4's three minute wonders are televised compelling films that are bite-sized. Just three minute for the whole lot! Why not prepare the groundwork? and see what audience responds to b4 approaching channel 4? you could get your stories televised - work with Bunny ;o) spread your message for free on three ;o) and use feedback to position your stories for the 4 mintue wonder ;o) here's the link to bbc3 film uploading: http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcthree/beontv/
william doust

BBC - BBC Three - Be On TV - 0 views

  •  
    short video upload to bbc3. fab opportunity to tell stories. If you polish these like mini 3minute movies, then you can build an audience. Perhaps giving you evidence and confidence to get in touch ith Channel 4's three minute wonders: http://www.channel4.com/programmes/3-minute-wonder Spread your message for free on three ;o)
william doust

Message in-a-Box - 0 views

william doust

twitter unfollow jason calacanis loic le meur | The Tech News Blog - 0 views

  •  
    wow - my gravatar has been activated - mmm? more abou this via skype.
william doust

The Fast Track From Meme to Book - PSFK.com - 0 views

  • First off, author Nick Douglas is collecting his favorite Twitter posts and making a book out of them - and as crazy or banal as it sounds, there is actually some thought behind it. Douglas hopes to inspire readers with his curated selection of mico-wit, to make small creative acts each day. (Nick lets us know that interested contributors can submit their Twitter messages to http://twitterwit.net, and anyone who gets in the book gets a contributor copy)
    • william doust
       
      Chris & Eliz - remember what I mentioned about involving community in Publishing? - well here is a fab example
  • The Fast Track From Meme to Book
  •  
    MUST- INPSIRATIONAL-MAVERICK: Community Publishing: This guy is making a book out of twitter witty twitters! - invigint community to participate and get copy of book ;0) sweet, or tweet?
william doust

ICA Home | ICA/AIGA Design Series: Design as Social Agent - 0 views

  • Through a full day of presentations, interviews, gallery tours, author talks, and more, this program considers the place of Shepard Fairey's work in a powerful design history of civic empowerment and resistance, seeks to understand how images resonate and gain momentum, examines the latest trends in communication and messaging, and discusses the implicit challenges of social agency in design.
  •  
    impact of design and images in social change, politics, marketing...bit of interesting blurb
william doust

Ten Brutal Twitter Tips - 0 views

  • Ten Brutal Twitter Tips
  • First, please fill in your bio,
  • Second, please don’t use an avatar/photo showing more than one person
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • Third, please make sure your avatar/photo is not accidentally out of focus
  • please don’t make all your tweets single-word replies to other tweeps
  • Fourth
  • Fifth, if you must autofollow when someone chooses to follow you please don’t use an autoresponse service to ask me to visit your site
  • Sixth, build up some presence on twitter before following people you really don’t know
  • Seventh, please use direct messaging (DM) for simple replies that will be meaningless to anyone else without them viewing the conversation history.
  • retweeting (RT) my tweets and please feel free to do so, don’t feel obliged to use my exact tweet, add your thoughts and just make sure the link is the same and you include “@sciencebase RT ” without the quotes at the start of tweet.
  •  
    twitter tips.
1 - 20 of 26 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page