Presentation by Dave Briggs, Digital Enabler and Conference Chair at the PSFBuzz North East social media conference for local government, 7 July 2009, Newcastle. A Public Sector Forums conference.
Social Networking x Pastoral Care 社交網絡 x 堂會牧養 (2010.09.17@Network Mission 網絡使命)Calvin C. Yu
YouTube: http://bit.ly/mQQWre
Social Networking x Pastoral Care 社交網絡 x 堂會牧養 (2010.09.17@Network Mission 網絡使命)
Sharing about "Social Networking and Pastoral Care on 2010.09.17 @ Network Mission (HKCRM, GNCI, CC Net, Global Chinese Christian Post)
牧養沙龍:社交網絡與堂會牧養,由網絡使命主辦(網絡使命由香港教會更新運動、真証傳播、華信網絡、環球華人基督教新聞社等組成)
Museums Go Mobile: Start designing the service, not the websiteFrankly, Green + Webb
Guardian Culture Professionals article here - http://www.theguardian.com/culture-professionals-network/culture-professionals-blog/2014/may/16/mobile-museums-design-services-websites
The truth is that mobile isn't working for museums in the way we imagined. It's not the silver bullet. We've made apps that haven't been downloaded. We created handheld guides that don't get used and the perennial question of can mobile deliver pre- and post- visits still hangs in the air. So it is time to right mobile off? Or, perhaps now is the right time to think about mobile in a different way.
What do our visitors needs and behaviours show us about how they think and use our museums? How can we interpret these to design services that are truly transformative? What tools and processes can we use to make mobile a fully integrated part of the service offered by a museum?
Taking a look at what happens when we stop designing a mobile products and start using mobile as tool in the design for a whole service.
Creating effective ammunition in the battle for attentionicoEx
In an age where we can watch our favourite shows on the way to work, share images instantly and carry the worlds knowledge in our pockets, how do companies get at that most precious of commodities, our time?
The simple answer is that there's no simple answer. But there are ways of thinking that can help to unearth unexpected and engaging outcomes. We've been working in digital with museums and galleries for over 10 years to help make noticeable and memorable stories out of educational content. We've now started to bring this mix of behavioural psychology and awareness of current and cutting edge technologies to retail and agencies. We shared some of our thinking on attention, behavior and technology at a lunchtime talk for Start JudgeGill.
http://icoex.co.uk/
Presentation by Dave Briggs, Digital Enabler and Conference Chair at the PSFBuzz North East social media conference for local government, 7 July 2009, Newcastle. A Public Sector Forums conference.
Social Networking x Pastoral Care 社交網絡 x 堂會牧養 (2010.09.17@Network Mission 網絡使命)Calvin C. Yu
YouTube: http://bit.ly/mQQWre
Social Networking x Pastoral Care 社交網絡 x 堂會牧養 (2010.09.17@Network Mission 網絡使命)
Sharing about "Social Networking and Pastoral Care on 2010.09.17 @ Network Mission (HKCRM, GNCI, CC Net, Global Chinese Christian Post)
牧養沙龍:社交網絡與堂會牧養,由網絡使命主辦(網絡使命由香港教會更新運動、真証傳播、華信網絡、環球華人基督教新聞社等組成)
Museums Go Mobile: Start designing the service, not the websiteFrankly, Green + Webb
Guardian Culture Professionals article here - http://www.theguardian.com/culture-professionals-network/culture-professionals-blog/2014/may/16/mobile-museums-design-services-websites
The truth is that mobile isn't working for museums in the way we imagined. It's not the silver bullet. We've made apps that haven't been downloaded. We created handheld guides that don't get used and the perennial question of can mobile deliver pre- and post- visits still hangs in the air. So it is time to right mobile off? Or, perhaps now is the right time to think about mobile in a different way.
What do our visitors needs and behaviours show us about how they think and use our museums? How can we interpret these to design services that are truly transformative? What tools and processes can we use to make mobile a fully integrated part of the service offered by a museum?
Taking a look at what happens when we stop designing a mobile products and start using mobile as tool in the design for a whole service.
Creating effective ammunition in the battle for attentionicoEx
In an age where we can watch our favourite shows on the way to work, share images instantly and carry the worlds knowledge in our pockets, how do companies get at that most precious of commodities, our time?
The simple answer is that there's no simple answer. But there are ways of thinking that can help to unearth unexpected and engaging outcomes. We've been working in digital with museums and galleries for over 10 years to help make noticeable and memorable stories out of educational content. We've now started to bring this mix of behavioural psychology and awareness of current and cutting edge technologies to retail and agencies. We shared some of our thinking on attention, behavior and technology at a lunchtime talk for Start JudgeGill.
http://icoex.co.uk/
Social Media Integrated Campaign Case Study SlamBeth Kanter
A panel at the Stanford Innovation Review hosted "Social Media on Purpose Conference"
Storify: https://storify.com/kanter/social-media-on-purpose/preview
This was a presentation to the Latino Startup Alliance in San Francisco, CA on 12/6/13 by Wasabi Ventures co-founder, Chris Yeh.
"Be So Good They Can't Ignore You"
March 13 sxsw news entrepreneurs vs trad journalistsHack the Hood
Back in 2002-2005, we talked bloggers vs journalists and said we got past it, but today, some of the tensions are still there. How can we move forward? Some ideas for partnering.
Social Media is not only helpful to businesses, it is an essential part of the marketing mix. Social Media should be like any other marketing program, set goals, monitor progress, measure results and adapt as needed. This was a presentation given to a National Printing Organization for Presidents and Business Owners.
Everything You Wanted to Know About Social Fundraising Network for Good
Learn the basics of social fundraising, why it works, and what kind of tool can help your fundraisers raise more money. Want to see the webinar that this deck is from? Visit n4g.me/socialfundraisingbasics
Social Media Integrated Campaign Case Study SlamBeth Kanter
A panel at the Stanford Innovation Review hosted "Social Media on Purpose Conference"
Storify: https://storify.com/kanter/social-media-on-purpose/preview
This was a presentation to the Latino Startup Alliance in San Francisco, CA on 12/6/13 by Wasabi Ventures co-founder, Chris Yeh.
"Be So Good They Can't Ignore You"
March 13 sxsw news entrepreneurs vs trad journalistsHack the Hood
Back in 2002-2005, we talked bloggers vs journalists and said we got past it, but today, some of the tensions are still there. How can we move forward? Some ideas for partnering.
Social Media is not only helpful to businesses, it is an essential part of the marketing mix. Social Media should be like any other marketing program, set goals, monitor progress, measure results and adapt as needed. This was a presentation given to a National Printing Organization for Presidents and Business Owners.
Everything You Wanted to Know About Social Fundraising Network for Good
Learn the basics of social fundraising, why it works, and what kind of tool can help your fundraisers raise more money. Want to see the webinar that this deck is from? Visit n4g.me/socialfundraisingbasics
Refine Asia stands for class, creativity, and absolute professionalism in Asian corporate and luxury travel services. We apply our accredited experience and expertise to deliver flawless and reliable travel & event arrangements custom-tailored to every detail of your requirements, bringing you the most rewarding, enriching, and satisfying experiences of perfect Asian-style service.
Refine Asia is a member of the prestigious Focus Asia travel group, a highly successful tourism operation combining decades of industry experience. Refine’s core team of travel and business professionals, with over twenty years’ experience in the industry, represents the culmination of extensive efforts in creative product development in the commercial and high-end categories. With representative offices throughout Asia and sales offices worldwide, Refine Asia offers only proven, original, effective, and high-quality business and travel services in our region – Your Perfect Asia.
OntoSoft: A Distributed Semantic Registry for Scientific Softwaredgarijo
Credit to Yolanda Gil.
OntoSoft is a distributed semantic registry for scientific software. This paper describes three major novel contributions of OntoSoft: 1) a software metadata registry designed for scientists, 2) a distributed approach to software registries that targets communities of interest, and 3) metadata crowdsourcing through access control. Software metadata is organized using the OntoSoft ontology along six dimensions that matter to scientists: identify software, understand and assess software, execute software, get support for the software, do research with the software, and update the software. OntoSoft is a distributed registry where each site is owned and maintained by a community of interest, with a distributed semantic query capability that allows users to search across all sites. The registry has metadata crowdsourcing capabilities, supported through access control so that software authors can allow others to expand on specific metadata properties.
Presentation on "Choosing the Right Social Media Tools to Get Your Message Out". Some of the tools may have changes since 2012 but this is all about the basics to help you no matter what comes and goes.
Oikos workshop presentation on Social Media. The presentation takes a high-level strategy view of Social Media for small charities and community groups, along with providing statistics, hints and tips and some fun as we go.
This our standard presentation for helping executive teams understand the rise and influence of social media. We discuss the conditions that created social media, various tools, then dive in to the 4 C's of successful social media implementaiton - Culture, Content, Conversations, and Conversions. Available as a keynote or a workshop.
Driving Your Hospitality Business with Social Media - VancouverShane Gibson
With over 1.5 Billion people globally using social media to communicate and make buying decisions daily it has become very evident that social media cannot be ignored by anyone doing business in the hospitality industry. Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Yelp and Google places (to name a few) are all platforms that provide considerable opportunity – there are also serious risks to using them if you don’t have a solid plan and process in place.
This session has been specifically designed for owners, managers and marketing teams in the hospitality business. If you own, operate or lead a team for a restaurant, bar, lounge or club this event will help you systemize your approach to social media marketing and maximize your return on investment on all of your marketing efforts.
The top social and mobile marketing trends that can positively impact your business
Why you need a social media policy for your staff now (samples included)
Visual marketing online, creating great content for Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest and more.
How to use Twitter to build relationships, gather business intelligence and drive foot traffic
Facebook best practices plus contests and promotions that put people in your locations
Social media monitoring tools that will help you protect your brand integrity, turn fans into advocates and un-earth vital business intelligence
How to use tools like Yelp, Google Places and FourSquare effectively
How to assemble an effective social media plan and team
Leadership in the Digital Age for Christian MillenialsJomer Gregorio
I delivered this message to the Youth and Young Adults of Blessed Word Church on May 1, 2017 during the 3 day (May 1 to 3) L.E.A.D. Leadership Summit composed of 70+ millennials.
The presentation is all about the proper usage of technology especially social media and information for leadership in a "Christian" worldview or perspective.
Images were used for non-profit and non-commercial purposes.
Official pictures can be found here: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.1669628639744748.1073741835.296595453714747&type=3
Social Media, Technology, and Tenant Engagementuknowa
uknowa presents at ONPHA on how social media and mobile/web technologies can be leveraged to increase tenant engagement. Topics included defining social media, learning how it can impact an organization, how brands are now 'owned' by the conversation around them, and practical tools for utilizing social media in daily operations.
Webinar: 10 Things to Include in Every Social Media PolicyCase IQ
In a free webinar hosted by i-Sight, Sharlyn Lauby, SPHR, CPLP and President at ITM Group shared 10 practical tips to consider in developing your social media policy.
You can view the webinar recording by visiting: http://i-sight.com/webinar-10-things-to-include-in-every-social-media-policy/
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Donate to charity during this holiday seasonSERUDS INDIA
For people who have money and are philanthropic, there are infinite opportunities to gift a needy person or child a Merry Christmas. Even if you are living on a shoestring budget, you will be surprised at how much you can do.
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-to-donate-to-charity-during-this-holiday-season/
#charityforchildren, #donateforchildren, #donateclothesforchildren, #donatebooksforchildren, #donatetoysforchildren, #sponsorforchildren, #sponsorclothesforchildren, #sponsorbooksforchildren, #sponsortoysforchildren, #seruds, #kurnool
Monitoring Health for the SDGs - Global Health Statistics 2024 - WHOChristina Parmionova
The 2024 World Health Statistics edition reviews more than 50 health-related indicators from the Sustainable Development Goals and WHO’s Thirteenth General Programme of Work. It also highlights the findings from the Global health estimates 2021, notably the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on life expectancy and healthy life expectancy.
Presentation by Jared Jageler, David Adler, Noelia Duchovny, and Evan Herrnstadt, analysts in CBO’s Microeconomic Studies and Health Analysis Divisions, at the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists Summer Conference.
This session provides a comprehensive overview of the latest updates to the Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards (commonly known as the Uniform Guidance) outlined in the 2 CFR 200.
With a focus on the 2024 revisions issued by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), participants will gain insight into the key changes affecting federal grant recipients. The session will delve into critical regulatory updates, providing attendees with the knowledge and tools necessary to navigate and comply with the evolving landscape of federal grant management.
Learning Objectives:
- Understand the rationale behind the 2024 updates to the Uniform Guidance outlined in 2 CFR 200, and their implications for federal grant recipients.
- Identify the key changes and revisions introduced by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in the 2024 edition of 2 CFR 200.
- Gain proficiency in applying the updated regulations to ensure compliance with federal grant requirements and avoid potential audit findings.
- Develop strategies for effectively implementing the new guidelines within the grant management processes of their respective organizations, fostering efficiency and accountability in federal grant administration.
ZGB - The Role of Generative AI in Government transformation.pdfSaeed Al Dhaheri
This keynote was presented during the the 7th edition of the UAE Hackathon 2024. It highlights the role of AI and Generative AI in addressing government transformation to achieve zero government bureaucracy
Preliminary findings _OECD field visits to ten regions in the TSI EU mining r...OECDregions
Preliminary findings from OECD field visits for the project: Enhancing EU Mining Regional Ecosystems to Support the Green Transition and Secure Mineral Raw Materials Supply.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
2. Dramatic Change
1995
Hype alert: Why cyberspace isn’t, and will never be, nirvana
By Clifford Stoll | NEWSWEEK
... Visionaries see a future of telecommuting workers,
interactive libraries and multimedia classrooms. They speak of
electronic town meetings and virtual communities.
Commerce and business will shift from offices and malls to
networks and modems. And the freedom of digital networks
will make government more democratic.
“Baloney. Do our computer pundits lack all
common sense? The truth in no online database
will replace your daily newspaper, no CD-ROM
can take the place of a competent teacher and no
computer network will change the way
government works.”
7. Facebook: Still growing
• 750 million users
• 50% log on every day
• Avg. user: 130 friends
• 700 billion minutes
spent on FB every
month
• Woman 55+ fastest
growing demo
9. YouTube: Ready for Its Close-up
• More content in 60 days
than 60 years of TV
• Almost 500 million
users
• Avg. user 15-25 minutes
per day
• 2nd most search site
after Google
11. Keeping it Short & Simple
• 5 years old
• 140 characters
• 200 million tweets/day
• 10% users follow more
than 50 people
• 1.5 million accounts
follow more than 500
Source: @chartoftheday
19. 1. Peruse
• Listening is key
– Google Alerts, Google
Blogs, Twitter search
• Are people mentioning
you?
• What are they saying?
(+/-/=)
• Are they talking about
your issues?
23. 5. Plant your flag
• What will be your digital outposts?
• You don’t have to be everywhere
• Do what works for you, but…
• Stay committed to where you are
24. 6. Plan for Content
• Editorial Calendar
• Make it rich
• Make it relevant
• “Reimagine” your
content
• Enable sharing
28. @Redcross Account: “Ryan found two
more 4 bottle packs of Dogfish Head’s
Midas Touch beer…when we drink we
do it right #gettngslizzerd.”
29.
30. What are some of the rewards
• Get Info out faster
• Unfiltered message
• Community building
• Direct communication
• Increases Trust
• Leverage Word of Mouth
• Positioning
• Traditional Media
Amplifier
This presentation is about the WHAT and the WHY of social media, and why I think it is a great tool for public health. In the second portion of our program we will talk about the HOW, and that will be a great part of the program because we get to hear how several state health department’s are turning the promise of social media into reality.
But before we begin, let’s take a look back to 1995 when the Internet was still in its infancy and just beginning to change our lives forever. I love to share this slide with people – it shows the risk of punditry. There was a famous opinion piece that ran in Newsweek that year from Cliff Stoll.
Now, it’s easy to laugh at Cliff Stoll read of the future, but how many among us could really have imagined the tools that we have today and what the media landscape would look like?
(Story from 1994)
Design and mailing of a simple piece of literature, involved days if not weeks of work. Contracting with photographers, writers, graphic designers, printer, mail house. For the list that we used, because we needed it “quickly” we shipped a big computer tape reel on a plane from Washington to New York for same day delivery. I had drive to Kennedy Airport to pick up the tape and take it to the printer who had received the photo and graphic files separately via Fedex. Well, it turns out the printer put the wrong pictures in the wrong places and completely screwed up the printing. So, thinking on my feet… take the 3 color mailer and make it a 2 color so I won’t have to wait as long for it to dry. And then I waited, and I waited … in that stuffy, cramped print shop in Hell’s Kitchen. When it was finally done, I rented a van, loaded the mail pieces into it and drove it, and the big computer tape to the mail house which would have to print the labels and affix them to the brochures. When that was done, I drove the load back to the campaign headquarters so volunteers could prepare to take the mailing to the post office. And then I collapsed. It was like a modern day version of the run from Marathon.
But think about how far we’ve come. That single job, which all told took probably about a week with the help of about 20 people, can now be done pretty much in a matter of hours without leaving your laptop. And that is really a small example of how far we’ve come.
In my part of the presentation, I’m going to be talking mostly about the WHAT and the WHY of Social Media. The examples of HOW to do social media will be handled by the esteemed members of our panel -- who have some great examples of how they have integrated social media tools into their public health practice
Social media are online tools that allow users to collaborate, share and connect around various forms of content. Among other things, It can be a facebook post or a tweet from twitter, in can be a video, audio recording or a photo you share on Flckr. It is believed that the term was first used by a technology consultant in California way back in 2007.
Although the term and some of the platforms may be relatively new, some forms of social media, like blogging have been around for more than 15 years
To me the three things that I think about defining social media is that it’s about;
Content
Connecting through online conversations
Sharing
And if you are wondering how many different social media tools are out there, well there is an infographic for that. This is a graphic that is updated yearly, I believe, by social media guru Brian Solis
This is a great representations that I think I’ve seen in terms of describing the ecosystem of the social web, and it gives you a sense of the exponential growth in just the last few years in this space.
Look at all of those networks. And you have to be on all of them
For the purposes of our discussion, let’s look at the big three social media sharing outposts. Incidentally, doesn’t this illustrate how much things have changed? We used to talk about ABC, NBC and CBS as being the big three and now we talk about Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.
Just last week, Facebook announced that it had reached 750 million users, and while the exponential growth is slowing a bit -- it is still growing and we will likely be hearing in the not too distant future that FB has 1 billion users.
Interesting note about women is that they also tend to the dominant users across social media. According to a Pew report they comprise
56% of social network users
52% of Email users
55% of instant messaging
54% of bloggers
58% of users of photo sharing sites
This is a screen shot of a graph that Mark Zuckerberg used for his latest announcement, and it really jumped out at me. Because while Facebook user growth appears to be slowing a bit, the growth of sharing on the network doubles every year.
As FB has added the ability to share information on its network people have taken advantage of it. Today facebook users share 4 billion pieces of information every day.
This sharing is really important because it points to what Zuckerberg say will be the next wave in social media. Less about getting people connected and more about development of Apps for social sharing will explode, emphasis on mobile computing will increase, and new tools to increase the ability to segment social users into groups will be developed.
You may have heard this stat recently – that more content is created and uploaded to youtube in 60 days than content that was produced in 60 years of TV history.
Charlie bit my finger is most popular video on site
And now for your viewing pleasure, the first video ever uploaded to YouTube
It’s hard to believe that Twitter has now been around for five years.
That 1.5 million is out to about 175 million accounts.
And now for your viewing pleasure, I present the first tweet ever sent out on twitter
Of course Jack went from sending that tweet five years ago to hosting a Twitter Town Hall with the President, so it looks like social media was very good for him.
So all of these new channels are nice but impact are they having on our work and how we communicate?
Well it depends who you ask?
If you ask a haggard communication professional like I did recently, they’ll say – I love the potential these new tools offer but you know what, I don’t have the time, and I don’t really get twitter, and by the way, I don’t have the time.
Now if you ask a former teacher of mine, Bill Gentile, an award winning photo and video journalist who’s covered his share of revolutions, he’ll tell you that the times that we are living in a time of history right now is as significant, from a communications standpoint, as when Gutenberg invented his printing press.
That this disruptive change has created an unparalleled opportunity for people and organizations to tell their own stories in their on words and and images, without anyone else’s filter, and have the potential to share that with millions
So who’s right?
Well it turns out they’re both right.
So let’s take a quick look at what I call the 7 p’s of getting social media right.
Based on what you learn to, engage in discussions on other sites. Dive in – you can participate before you have your own program up and running to get a feel for the social space. Respond to comments, posts, Tweets, etc.
It takes a village to roll out Enterprise-wide social media program
In order to develop a successful program, you need buy-in from you IT department
You’ll need your legal department involved in making sure that policies and guidelines are properly drafted
You’ll need HR to help in training and communicating those new polices and procedures internally to staff
You may need the help of web designers if say you want to have a blog that more visually integrates with the look and feel of you web site
And of course you’re going to need content creators to constantly prime the pump
Policies are a big deal, but luckily there are many government organizations who have gone before you and are more than willing to share what they have developed. This is a screen shot from Govloop.com – they have a whole section of polices and best practices from various state and federal agencies linked on their site.
Incidentally, policy development is important even if you are going to have a formalized program for your department. Because the truth is, you’re already involved with social media whether you know it or not -- there’s a good likelihood that close to half of your staff are using social media during the work day. They are reading blogs, or posting status updates on facebook or twitter.
It’s really important to set the ground rules explicitly for your staff.
Now this is an area where I think public health can really excel – because public health departments are content creation machines.
Let people know that you are in the social space.
Not enough resources to sustain the effort. Social media is affordable, but as we’ve seen with the amount of work, its not free.
You have to figure out ways to pay for those opportunity costs. I really believe that is a management function in all of this -- you have to figure out how to integrate this into your public health practice. And remember, you don’t have to be a power user in all of these spaces. Pick out a few areas where you want to focus and do them really well.
There also the organizational challenge of losing control a bit…. You may be afraid that people will say bad things about you, and that’s not a fun feeling. But a funny thing is going to happen. If you commit to building your community your followers will defend you -- they will stick up for you. And you’ll also have a say in the conversation.
The other thing that public health has going for it in this space is that you have a built in audience. There isn’t a second state health department in your state, so you start out way ahead of the game.
I believe that public health is having its tree in the forest moment. There have been a lot of trees falling in our public health forest over the last few years, and it’s not likely to get better soon.