The document promotes Collaborize, a social networking product that organizes conversations, captures ideas, and allows users to vote on decisions. It provides an overview of the company and product, describes how Collaborize brings structure to conversations and communities, and highlights testimonials praising its ease of use and affordability.
We provide a platform that reduces your emails and meetings and create a platform where your entire online community to communicate, share ideas, and provide input so that you can make better decisions through the power of WE instead of ME.
The Web has always been about people, but in a Web 2.0 world, this is taking on new meaning. Giving your users more control and influence over your site unveils a whole new set of opportunities — and a whole new set of challenges. How are user ratings and reviews, tagging, editorial control, user-generated content, and social networking changing the way you should be thinking about your site? How are sites dealing with negative user contributions? What does all of this mean for how you design and build your site? Come take an entertaining tour through the social wonderland of Web 2.0 and learn what it means for you. Presentation by Steve Mulder.
Innovations in Digital Journalism: 5 Lessons Learned (V2)Jeremy Caplan
As digital journalism evolves, this presentation offers a summary of five key lessons learned from successful new— and traditional— news organizations.
This presentation is taken from Engage’s ‘Social Media MasterClass’ – a workshop held in July 2009
The session was interactive however these slides have been revised based on the exercises undertaken and the feedback received on the day
For more information or to talk about attending a future MasterClass please contact: john.toker@engagegroup.co.uk
Slides for a webinar hosted by the gov't of Queensland, Australia, delivered by Matt Leighninger of the Deliberative Democracy Consortium, on 'Using Online Tools to Engage - and be Engaged by - the Public.
We provide a platform that reduces your emails and meetings and create a platform where your entire online community to communicate, share ideas, and provide input so that you can make better decisions through the power of WE instead of ME.
The Web has always been about people, but in a Web 2.0 world, this is taking on new meaning. Giving your users more control and influence over your site unveils a whole new set of opportunities — and a whole new set of challenges. How are user ratings and reviews, tagging, editorial control, user-generated content, and social networking changing the way you should be thinking about your site? How are sites dealing with negative user contributions? What does all of this mean for how you design and build your site? Come take an entertaining tour through the social wonderland of Web 2.0 and learn what it means for you. Presentation by Steve Mulder.
Innovations in Digital Journalism: 5 Lessons Learned (V2)Jeremy Caplan
As digital journalism evolves, this presentation offers a summary of five key lessons learned from successful new— and traditional— news organizations.
This presentation is taken from Engage’s ‘Social Media MasterClass’ – a workshop held in July 2009
The session was interactive however these slides have been revised based on the exercises undertaken and the feedback received on the day
For more information or to talk about attending a future MasterClass please contact: john.toker@engagegroup.co.uk
Slides for a webinar hosted by the gov't of Queensland, Australia, delivered by Matt Leighninger of the Deliberative Democracy Consortium, on 'Using Online Tools to Engage - and be Engaged by - the Public.
Top 5 things every practice should know about social media. This presentation was delivered at Legal Tech West Coast Conference June 25, 2009. It contains results from the Networks For Counsel 2009 Study, blogging best practice and lessons learned from using social media to advance the business and practice of law.
Slides from lecture by Paul DiGangi in the Strategy module in the 2011 Media Management Course at Stockholm School of Economics and the Royal Institute of Technology. Here is more information on the course: http://nordicworlds.net/2011/01/21/strategy-course-focuses-on-virtual-worlds-and-gaming-industries/.
Learn about the benefits of having a Social Intranet from Socialtext, Forrester Research and the American Hospital Association.
To see a recording of this presentation please visit http://www.socialtext.com/products/webinar_socialintranet.php
The business value in social networks tgmcDaryl Pereira
Join Bilal Jaffery, (Worldwide Social Media & Competitive Marketing Leader, IBM ISV & Developer Relations) and Daryl Pereira (Web and Social Media Manager, IBM ISV & Developer Relations) on an exploration into how businesses are finding real value in social media.
You'll see how social networks within the workplace can make us more efficient and knowledgeable, and how a social business breaks down barriers between prospects, customers and its extended ecosystem.
Non Profit 2.0: How Web 2.0 is changing the game for Non ProfitsAvinash Jhangiani
Identifies key drivers and trends relevant to NPO leaders. Shows how some NPOs are using Web 2.0 for online fundraising, recruit volunteers, building supporter communities, etc.
Social Technologies: challenges and opportunities for participationPenny Hagen
This presentation was given at the Participatory Design Conference in Sydney in 2010. It explores how social technologies both enable and demand new participatory approaches to designing with our future communities, that push design out of the studio and ‘into the wild’.
A presentation with 80% new content on social tagging. This covers "faces of perception", "depth of perception", and perception matrix, which greatly helps to analyze, research, and build social software. Enterprise uses of social bookmarking and their concerns are also included.
This presentation gives an overview of how social networks are used in companies and what are the risks associated with them. Some actions points are proposed to mitigate those risks.
Social Technology
by Marti A. Hearst
We are in the midst of extraordinary
change in how people interact with one
another and with information. A
combination of advances in technology
and change in people's expectations is
altering the way products are sold,
scientific problems are solved, software
is written, elections are conducted, and
government is run.
People are social animals, and as Shirky
notes, we now have tools that are
flexible enough to match our in-built
social capabilities. Things can get
done that weren't possible before
because the right expertise, the missing
information, or a large enough group of
people can now be gathered together at
low cost.
These developments open a number of
interesting questions for NSF and CISE.
What are the key research problems? How
should these developments change how
research is conducted? How can the
intersection of social science and
technology research be aided or
improved? And how should this effect
how NSF researchers get involved with
relevant government efforts, including
transparent government, emergency
response, and citizen science?
In this talk I attempt to summarize
and put some structure around some of
these developments.
Making Web 2.0 Real Part 1: Social MediaMolecular Inc
In this webinar, Steve Mulder shares his knowledge, expertise and insight into the world of Web 2.0, exploring social media in this first episode
of a three part series. Explore tagging, blogs, social networks, ratings and reviews, collaborative content and more! Presentation by Steve Mulder.
View the webinar recording of this presentation at:
http://tinyurl.com/5bdma9
Top 5 things every practice should know about social media. This presentation was delivered at Legal Tech West Coast Conference June 25, 2009. It contains results from the Networks For Counsel 2009 Study, blogging best practice and lessons learned from using social media to advance the business and practice of law.
Slides from lecture by Paul DiGangi in the Strategy module in the 2011 Media Management Course at Stockholm School of Economics and the Royal Institute of Technology. Here is more information on the course: http://nordicworlds.net/2011/01/21/strategy-course-focuses-on-virtual-worlds-and-gaming-industries/.
Learn about the benefits of having a Social Intranet from Socialtext, Forrester Research and the American Hospital Association.
To see a recording of this presentation please visit http://www.socialtext.com/products/webinar_socialintranet.php
The business value in social networks tgmcDaryl Pereira
Join Bilal Jaffery, (Worldwide Social Media & Competitive Marketing Leader, IBM ISV & Developer Relations) and Daryl Pereira (Web and Social Media Manager, IBM ISV & Developer Relations) on an exploration into how businesses are finding real value in social media.
You'll see how social networks within the workplace can make us more efficient and knowledgeable, and how a social business breaks down barriers between prospects, customers and its extended ecosystem.
Non Profit 2.0: How Web 2.0 is changing the game for Non ProfitsAvinash Jhangiani
Identifies key drivers and trends relevant to NPO leaders. Shows how some NPOs are using Web 2.0 for online fundraising, recruit volunteers, building supporter communities, etc.
Social Technologies: challenges and opportunities for participationPenny Hagen
This presentation was given at the Participatory Design Conference in Sydney in 2010. It explores how social technologies both enable and demand new participatory approaches to designing with our future communities, that push design out of the studio and ‘into the wild’.
A presentation with 80% new content on social tagging. This covers "faces of perception", "depth of perception", and perception matrix, which greatly helps to analyze, research, and build social software. Enterprise uses of social bookmarking and their concerns are also included.
This presentation gives an overview of how social networks are used in companies and what are the risks associated with them. Some actions points are proposed to mitigate those risks.
Social Technology
by Marti A. Hearst
We are in the midst of extraordinary
change in how people interact with one
another and with information. A
combination of advances in technology
and change in people's expectations is
altering the way products are sold,
scientific problems are solved, software
is written, elections are conducted, and
government is run.
People are social animals, and as Shirky
notes, we now have tools that are
flexible enough to match our in-built
social capabilities. Things can get
done that weren't possible before
because the right expertise, the missing
information, or a large enough group of
people can now be gathered together at
low cost.
These developments open a number of
interesting questions for NSF and CISE.
What are the key research problems? How
should these developments change how
research is conducted? How can the
intersection of social science and
technology research be aided or
improved? And how should this effect
how NSF researchers get involved with
relevant government efforts, including
transparent government, emergency
response, and citizen science?
In this talk I attempt to summarize
and put some structure around some of
these developments.
Making Web 2.0 Real Part 1: Social MediaMolecular Inc
In this webinar, Steve Mulder shares his knowledge, expertise and insight into the world of Web 2.0, exploring social media in this first episode
of a three part series. Explore tagging, blogs, social networks, ratings and reviews, collaborative content and more! Presentation by Steve Mulder.
View the webinar recording of this presentation at:
http://tinyurl.com/5bdma9
Social Media notes for 2.5 hour workshop. National Service grantees, AmeriCorps, Senior Corps, VISTA and Learn and Serve America. Including Social Media Game.
Online Collaboration Success Stories, Tactics And ToolsDavid Friedman
Introduction to online collaboration focusing on needs (mostly) of smaller businesses and professional firms. Looking at what people do to be successful. Material from presentation at Chicago Booth alumni club event.
Social Media Convergence - The ARF/Adweek 2009Lynne d Johnson
Social media is a critical part of progressive marketing thinking. The consumer, with the rise of social media, has been able to drive the conversation with or without input from the brands. This change in who controls the dialogue has transformational impact:
1. Social media creates a brand/consumer conversation that will transform organizations.
2. Social media blends brand communications, PR, customer care, research and insights as all happen simultaneously via the conversation.
3. Most marketers are still struggling to find a coherent social media strategy.
4. Social media produces naturally occurring conversation and behavior that offers incredibly rich insights, but companies are still learning how to mine this continual stream.
The ARF launched its new Social Media Council with a panel of industry experts explaining how social media creates convergence among the advertising, marketing, public relations, customer care and consumer insights spheres.
Powerpoint presentation created for a workshop hosted by CASLIS-Ottawa, "Connecting with Our Clients: Marketing and Communicating Information Services". January 12 2009.
An online community is a group of people with common interests who use the Internet (web sites, email, instant messaging, etc.) to communicate, work together and pursue their interests over time.” Jul 7, 2003, Commoncraft.com
Slides from a workshop about the Third Sector and Social Media I delivered on the Isle of Wight on 1 December 2009. Not fully annotated - will do that soon
The Socializers - A Thousand True Fans - IMH Communications 2011 CyprusThe Socializers
Video of this presentation: http://bit.ly/9thcomcon
More on A Thousand True Fans here: http://bit.ly/a_thoousand_fans
IMH Communications Conference May 2011 in Cyprus. More information here: http://bit.ly/IMH_Cyprus2011
1. Date: XXXXX xx, 2010 Organize conversations. Capture great ideas. Collect votes. Get results.
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7. Organize conversations. Capture great ideas. Collect votes. Get results. “ Brain Dead Simple to Use” Matt Marshall - Editor and CEO of VentureBeat “ You’ve taken the best from Facebook, Linkedin and Twitter and put it all in one application” Amy Yamner - Monitor Group “ This is exactly what California schools need” Marc Elin – Principal Windsor High School “ Collaborize looked quite good, and is reasonably priced” Michael J Miller - senior vice president for technology strategy at Ziff Brothers Investments "The Social Web could be put to more fruitful uses than the ones it is being put to now, and tools like this one point the way to go” “ Finally a powerful web based app that is simple to use and at a price that makes it affordable for anyone!” Robert Cringely – Tech Blogger Date: XXXXX xx, 2010
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Editor's Notes
-Edit this slide based on the knowledge of our customer -Ask for how much time is allowed in the meeting