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If Social Media Is a Conversation, What Questions Should You Be Asking? PDF  | Print |  Email
Written by jkownacki  
July 5th, 2010

One of the most-used phrases in social media is an invitation to “join the conversation.”

But what are we all talking about?

In some cases, brands are listening to what their customers are saying about them (and their competitors), and trying to get better at doing business.

In other cases, citizen journalists are redefining what we think of when it comes to “news.”

And still others are interested in exploring their surroundings, establishing like-minded communities, experimenting with various media forms and more.

So: Where do you fit into this conversation?

Step One: Start by Listening

If you walked into a cocktail party or the corner pub, you’d need a few minutes to get up to speed.  You’d have to study the crowd and figure out what they were talking about, why they cared, and who was directing the conversation.

Social media is a giant cocktail party or global pub, spread across the Internet, 24 hours a day.

Figuring out what everyone knows, and why they’re so passionate about it, can take time.  But it’s well worth it.  Otherwise, you won’t know what’s already been said, where you might contribute, and what you want to do next.

Step Two: What Do You Want to Know?

Are you pursuing social media for business?  Art?  Pleasure?  All of the above, or something else entirely?

Defining your own goals for social media will help you figure out what you do know, what you don’t know, and which questions you need to ask next.  And, by listening (see above), you’ll figure out what to ask of whom.

(NOTE: Don’t worry; you don’t always need a gameplan to “join the conversation.”  Some people are happier simply jumping in and figuring out the details later.  If that’s your style, dive in — just make sure you’re not at the shallow end.)

Step Three: Ask and Engage (Politely)

If you don’t ask questions, you’ll never learn.

Like most subjects, there are no “dumb questions” in social media, but there’s a lot of bad advice, and even more good advice that no one bothers to follow.

Ask around.  Weigh the answers.  Test-drive some solutions, figure out what works for you (and what doesn’t), and then share your learnings with everyone else.  By the time you know what you’re talking about, you’ll be able to help people who ask the same questions you were just asking a few days or months ago.

However, a warning.

You know all those times you’ve been out with your friends, heatedly debating politics or religion, and someone who “couldn’t help but overhear” your discussion decides to chime in with an unwanted comment intended solely to make himself look good?

Don’t be that guy.

By all means, engage others.  But do so in a way that respects them and their conversation.  Because the Internet may be a 24-hour cocktail party, but that doesn’t mean you always have to crash it.

The Bottom Line?

When in doubt, ask.

(Then listen.)

Posted by Justin Kownacki, who blogs regularly and tweets a bit too often.

 
Do You Have a System for Social Media Success? PDF  | Print |  Email
Written by jkownacki  
June 3rd, 2010

This post was originally published on JustinKownacki.com, a veritable storehouse of social media tough love and contrarian opinions.

If you work in social media, you probably spend most of your time talking about theory, strategy and process. That’s because it’s easy to talk about social media; it’s a lot harder to take action, and it’s even more difficult to take successful actions.

Why?

Because social media is a field rife with minor victories and few long-term successes.

Don’t Confuse Victory with Success

Let’s say you’re a videoblogger who’s posted dozens of webisodes to YouTube. On average, your videos garner a few hundred views. Then, one day, one of your videos skyrockets to 50,000 views.

Does that make you a web video expert?

No. It means you got lucky.

In fact, you probably have no idea why that video became so popular. It could have been…

  • The title
  • The description
  • The thumbnail image
  • A keyword within the title or description
  • A suddenly-relevant tag
  • Getting mentioned by a powerful influencer
  • Cross-posting to a highly-trafficked blog
  • A complete and total accident

If you don’t know why it happened, all you can do is guess. And if your next video is back to a few hundred views, you guessed wrong. You may have one victory under your belt, but you don’t yet have a winning system.

Victory means something worked. Success means your system works.

6 Tips for Building a Winning System

Set a goal. I repeat this often because I firmly believe it. Actions without reasons can’t possibly be measured accurately, mistakes made without context can’t be learned from, and any progress you make is arbitrary because you never know which direction you’re supposed to be pointed in.

Yes, exploration and experimentation are important, but they still need a course to deviate from.

Hold yourself accountable. No matter what goes wrong, it’s your fault. You could always have planned better, or done better research, or explained yourself more clearly. You could have hired the right people, managed them properly, trusted your gut or taken that risk. This isn’t about second-guessing; it’s about realizing that you’ll never succeed if you expect somebody else to carry you.

Measure everything (then analyze). Know what you’re doing, when you’re doing it, how and with whom. Know what the results are. Know how those results change when your variables change. The more you understand about the actions being taken and the impact they’re having, the better prepared you’ll be to maximize, troubleshoot and innovate.

Study the competition. Who are your competitors? What’s your shared measure of success? What percentage of that success does each competitor “own”? What are they doing differently, and how are those actions benefiting or backfiring against their bottom line? You can’t lose sleep over your competition, but you can’t ignore them (or the lessons their actions can provide) either.

Make incremental changes. The system you’re using now isn’t perfect, and it never will be. But that’s okay. Don’t throw it out; tinker with it. Tweak the elements that need tweaking. Add new tools when necessary, and retire old methods when they’re no longer effective.

Times change, people change, competition changes. Your system needs to change, too… just not all at once.

(Interested in seeing how some social media successes define their systems? Check out what John Jantsch of Duct Tape Marketing does on a daily basis, or how Chris Brogan assigns differing values to the five kinds of media he produces.)

A Word About Failure

If you think momentary victories are frustrating, try failing gracefully after a string of successes.

Success is always temporary. As soon as you think you have the system figured out, something changes — your personnel, your competition, your resources, your priorities. One day you wake up and you just don’t give a damn. Or, worse, you do still give a damn… but you just can’t execute.

Entropy happens. Dynasties crumble. The best teams still lose games, the best armies still lose wars and the best companies still get outfoxed by younger, hungrier competitors.

This is a good thing.

Old methods and ideas deserve to be challenged and surpassed by newer, better alternatives. If these things didn’t happen, we’d be trapped by the worst success of all: the unimprovable kind. And knowing there’s an infallible system is even more depressing than never winning once.

Winning forever isn’t a realistic goal. But winning more often than once?

That, you can do.

Want to learn how to get better at social media?  So will everybody else attending PodCamp Pittsburgh 5.  See you there!

 
Coming Soon: PodCamp Pittsburgh 5 PDF  | Print |  Email
Written by Missy  
April 10th, 2010

That’s right folks.  We are currently in the planning stages for PodCamp Pittsburgh 5.  We should have a date for this year’s event in the coming weeks, as well as a re-do of the website to roll out the carpet for PodCamp Pittsburgh 5 this fall.  Check back in the coming weeks for updated information.  In the meantime, feel free to check out our videos and content from last year’s event as uploaded in previous news entries on our website home page.

 
PodCamp Pittsburgh – September Blog Blitz! PDF  | Print |  Email
Written by ChrisLugo  
August 27th, 2009

With last month’s successful Blog Blitz, PodCamp Pittsburgh thought it would be a good idea to get MORE of your input!

On Friday, September 4, 2009 – PodCamp Pittsburgh wants to know…

What Pittsburgh individual, business or organization is doing GREAT things with Social Media?

PodCamp Pittsburgh 4. Learn. Interact. Apply.

Create a short post or video entry to YOUR blog on Friday, September 4, and be sure to include the tags “PodCamp Pittsburgh” and “PCPGH4” – That way we can find and share your thoughts on PodCampPittsburgh.com!

Don’t forget:

Register for PodCamp Pittsburgh

Get your PodCamp Pittsburgh Badges

 
PodCamp Pittsburgh – Blog Blitz Response! PDF  | Print |  Email
Written by ChrisLugo  
August 13th, 2009

This past Friday, August 7th – PodCamp Pittsburgh asked,

“What Does Social Media Mean to YOU!?”

PodCampPittsburghBanner

Here are some of the great responses we received:

Burghseyeview

Uncle Crappy

LipSmackingWit

Sorgatron.com

DahCheet

PGH is a City

Thirty Seven Roses

Thomas C Waters

Bloggy Blog

Norman Huelsman

Rants of an Annoyed Angel

ClickstoMySite

How Can I Get Involved?

First, you need to REGISTER NOW for PodCamp Pittsburgh 4 (October 10-11, 2009).  From the basic 101’s to how Social Media can enhance a Non-Profit’s donations campaign, PodCamp Pittsburgh really gives everyone a Free, Quality weekend of Education, Interaction and Application.  No matter your definition of Social Media, we want YOU at PCPGH4!

podcamp-webbadge

Second, help us spread the word about PodCamp Pittsburgh 4. You can do this by using badges, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn. Talk with your friends, family, neighbors and colleagues about PodCamp – It’s free and open to EVERYONE!!!

Third, answer this Blog Blitz question – “What Does Social Media Mean to You!?” It’s not too late!

We determine what Social Media means to us – What will YOU learn at PCPGH4 this October?

 
Announcing PodCamp Pittsburgh 4 PDF  | Print |  Email
Written by Norm  
June 2nd, 2009

PodCamp Pittsburgh 4 – October 10-11, 2009

Pittsburgh’s New Media Unconference

Where: The Art Institute of Pittsburgh, 420 Boulevard of the Allies  Pittsburgh, PA  15219
click for map

What is PodCamp Pittsburgh?
PodCamp Pittsburgh is a FREE community UnConference, run by and for people who
create, enjoy or are interested in learning more about:

  • blogs
  • vlogs (video podcasts)
  • audio podcasts
  • web video
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • social and content networks
  • new media monetization

Check back for more information about speakers, sessions, and registration.

 

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