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Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The Top 10 Marketing Infographics of 2011 - 1 views

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    Identified by HubSpot--first one is on how outbound marketing has been eliminated by people's preferences for inbound marketing
Diana Woolis

Education Market Research | Gilfus Education Group | Gilfus Education Group - 0 views

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    " Education Market Research "
Diana Woolis

Word of Mouth (WOM) Social Media Marketing Social CRM (sCRM) Solutions | Affinitive - 0 views

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    "Word of Mouth, Social Marketing, Technology and Social CRM Solutions"
KPI_Library Bookmarks

Seth's Blog - 0 views

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    By Seth Godin. His self-described topics of interest are "post-industrial revolution, the way ideas spread, marketing, quitting, leadership and most of all, changing everything."
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    A favorite of KPI
KPI_Library Bookmarks

Higher Ed Live - 0 views

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    From their About blurb, "HigherEd Live is a weekly web show focused on the emerging role of social media and digital media marketing in higher education."
KPI_Library Bookmarks

Taggstar - bring your photos to life - 0 views

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    This is free software that you can download in order to tag images (or elements in images) on your website/blog. The tool was created as a merchandising/marketing tool (e.g. visitors can find out where to buy all of the cool things in your image), but it seems ripe for other more scholarly purposes as well. Downside: unclear whether others can tag your images.
Diana Woolis

The Next Big Thing? Social Lead Curation | Social Media Today - 0 views

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    " Twitter Strategy Search ROI Policy Metrics Marketing Influence Google+ Facebook Events Trending: Pinterest Super Bowl Social Search SOPA Webinars Posted by: Tammy Kahn Fennell Posts About Comments Connect Follow: Twitter LinkedIn Facebook website The Next Big Thing? Social Lead Curation"
Diana Woolis

Content Curation Tools for B2B Marketing - Forbes - 0 views

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    "Developing high-quality content is still a problem. This is why I'm currently infatuated with the idea of content curation and the tools that enable it."
KPI_Library Bookmarks

Aggregage - - 0 views

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    Users of Aggregage are Bloggers, Marketers and Readers."Aggregage creates online communities by bringing together content from the best sources around particular topics. We identify a topic (Social Media, eLearning, Careers, Leadership, etc), find high-quality blogs around that topic, and then display their posts on a new site dedicated to that given topic. The original site on eLearning has become the highest traffic site on that topic."
KPI_Library Bookmarks

Re-designing Learning Contexts: Technology-rich, Learner-centred Ecologies - 0 views

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    By Rosemary Luckin, published by Routledge (UK), April 2010. Luckin is Professor of Learner-Centred Design at the London Knowledge Lab. This book has just been released in the UK, and may not yet be available in US markets or libraries.
KPI_Library Bookmarks

SciVee - 0 views

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    A resource site that proclaims itself the "leading provider of internet video and rich media solutions for the scientific, technical and medical market." SciVee was founded in 2007.
Diana Woolis

Just Published: The Forrester Wave™ For Community Platforms | Forrester Blogs - 0 views

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    "The community platforms market has been heating up for the past few years. Today, there are more than 100 vendors in the space, and we evaluated the top 5 in our most recent Wave: Lithium, Jive, KickApps, Telligent, and Mzinga.*"
Brenda Kaulback

Forget the business case, open online courses are about learning | Higher Education Net... - 0 views

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    MOOC and higher ed
KPI_Library Bookmarks

Cooking pot markets: an economic model for the trade in free goods and services on the ... - 0 views

  • much of the economic activity on the Net involves value but no money
  • Life on the Internet is like a perpetual auction with ideas instead of money.
  • network of trust comes in very handy
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • people do not only - or even largely - produce in order to improve their reputation, but as a more-than-fair payment for other goods - "ideas" - that they receive from the cooking-pot.
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    By Rishab Aiyer Ghosh, First Monday, Vol 3(3), 2 March 1998. Nearly 14 years later, many of the impressions of and language about the Internet in this article seem quaint and outddated. However, the author offers the "cooking pot" model to explain how much content and code is shared for "free" on the Internet. In the Internet cook pot model, since physical proximity and distribution are not truly issues, the "pot" can grow (and be widely shared) by as much as people chose to put in it.
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    This article does not look at internet barter per se, but helps to explain how all the ideas around barter and trade look different on the internet than they might look in the physical world.
KPI_Library Bookmarks

Robin Good's MasterNewMedia - 0 views

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    The authors of this site write on all things related to building an audience for and driving traffic to your web presence, be it a blog, twitter, a website, or something else. There is an RSS feed to deliver the regularly published feature articles.
KPI_Library Bookmarks

Innovation Administration - 0 views

  • "Find the most effective programs out there and then provide the capital needed to replicate their successes in communities around the country. By focusing on high-impact, results-oriented nonprofits, we will ensure that government dollars are spent in a way that is effective, accountable, and worthy of the public trust."
  • Through the Department of Education's innovation funds, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan is promoting a very specific image of school reform, one that borrows liberally from the venture philanthropists' goal of bringing free-market values to the public sector. The federal guidelines encourage states and schools to embrace specific "innovations," such as enacting merit pay for teachers and lifting laws that cap the number of charter schools. Though such policies may have tertiary benefits, there is no research consensus on whether either one contributes to the "bottom line" of education reform -- increased academic achievement for high-poverty kids.
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    By Dana Goldstein, published in The American Prospect, November 19, 2009. The article is critical of the idea of "innovation" in public policy, and cites specific criticisms of recent Obama initiatives in innovation, including in education. See highlights.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Harold Jarche » Increased complexity needs simplified design - 0 views

  • As Jay has said, informal learning is a better approach for more complex environments. Given the above, here are some guidelines for what informal learning development could look like: Spend less time on design and more on ongoing evaluation to allow emergent practices to be developed. Build learning resources so that they can be easily changed or modified by anyone (allow for a hacker mentality) Allow everything to be connected, so that the work environment is the learning environment (but look for safe places to fail) There is no clearly defined start or finish so enable connections from multiple access points. Information is no longer scarce and our connections are now many. If an organizational informal learning effort lets people connect more easily and communicate more effectively, then it will have a chance of success. Connecting & Communicating are central roles for organizational leaders whose workplaces are becoming more complex, either in terms of evolving practices, changing markets or advances in technology. Enabling the integration of collaborative learning with work is a more flexible model than designing courses that are outdated as soon as they’re published.
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    Exellent article on formal learning designs and why they don't work so well
KPI_Library Bookmarks

Five Tips for Creating Fresh Blog Content Fast. Day after Day. - 0 views

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    Blog post by Paul Farol in the Blog Herald, published July 20 2011. The post describes how one might keep regularly scheduled blog posts interesting. While the focus is on writing posts for a corporate client, the ideas should apply equally to the posts we (eventually) write for our KPI readers.
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