21 Mar 2009 (Sat)
DOES ONE NEED TO DO ANYTHING before attending a conference? Chris Brogan listed 27 Things to Do Before a Conference (thanks, Keven). Here’s a compact rewrite of the tasks in terms of the tools involved (Google, Flickr, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc.):
1. Event schedule :
- Research - Note what you want to see and get a sense of what you might ask and/or decide what the business value of your interaction at the session might be.
2. Google Blogsearch and Technorati :
- Research - Look for event references to the event, company announcements, signs of business opportunity.
3. Google News and Google searches (in addition to 2. above) :
- Research – Look for industry news around the event, to understand what might be impacting the people you’re mingling with. Read the rest of this entry »
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Posted by J.K. in Business, Events, Marketing, Technology | View Comments |
5 Mar 2009 (Thu)
[Reposting because my blog "died" this morning and was "resurrected" this afternoon without the last two posts.]
SOME OF THE KEY BEST PRACTICES as presented in the latest Nielsen Norman Group report, ”Intranet Design Annual 2009: Year’s Ten Best Intranets“, are:
- Company and industry news
- Integrating internal and external information sources
- Editorial control of the intranet homepage
- Keeping the intranet up-to-date
- CEO blogging
- Employee and department weblogs
- Onboarding of new employees
- Consistent navigation
- Multilingual intranets; supporting international employees
- Multimedia and video on intranets
- Data visualization
- Web 2.0 features on intranets
- Community
- Polls
- Collaboration tools and discussion boards
- Internal wikis
- Employee self service
- Search
- Governance
- Development process for intranet redesigns
- Web analytics for intranets
- Staffing of intranet teams; where they report in the organization
- Updating and maintaining standards and guidelines for intranet design
- Intranet branding
- Promoting new intranet features
- Staff directory and employee profile pages
- Corporate calendars
- Personalization
- Customization
- Alerts
- Working with external design agencies
- Intranet budgets and staffing
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Posted by J.K. in Design, Media | View Comments |
5 Mar 2009 (Thu)
[Reposting because my blog "died" this morning and was "resurrected" this afternoon without the last two posts.]
FOUND THIS INTERESTING LINK ON a Facebook friend’s profile when I was about to post a birthday greeting to her. I agree with the author, Dan York, who wrote:
The only reason I visit a web site these days is generally if either:
- The website turns up in a search result.
- I get notified that there’s something interesting there that I should look at.
- Random times when for some reason I decide to go there, perhaps remembering a URL for a site I wanted to check out.
That’s it. (Note that I do get the content of many websites through the ways I mention below, but I don’t actually go to those websites and see their page.)
As I think about it, my consumption of information online really comes down to five ways:
- E-mail, although I get too much of it to read it all. [Me: Exactly!]
- Twitter, where I see links from people or services that I follow. [Me: Now, it's the FriendFeed (or NewsFeed) on Facebook.]
- RSS feeds where my reader pulls it in and I quickly scan through the posts.
- Skype persistent group chats where I’m connected to several different groups of people on various topics.
- Searching for data, typically using Google.
The key thing is that, with the exception of search:
All the data comes to me!
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Posted by J.K. in Design, Marketing, Media | View Comments |