During my senior year of High School I reacted a magazine that showcased teens achieving great things in the community as well as information about current trends in music and fashion.
This document contains a collection of slides from a first year student presentation covering various topics including: graphic images with a warning; research tips and resources; gratitude and positive psychology; professional letters; urban chickens; a social practice journal; taking a trip to Mars or cleaning up garbage patches; community advice; a reference for graphic design; senior choir and community organizations; bike theft on campus; an open source visual campaign; and dentistry at a museum presented chronologically. The slides provide highlights from the student's first year of study.
This document discusses identifying target audiences and creating personas for marketing purposes. It covers defining demographics, constraints, needs, and wants for personas. It emphasizes narrowing personas and specifying details to humanize them. Examples provided include potential graduate students and the cruise industry audience. The cruise audience wants stimulation, convenience and group experiences. The document also briefly discusses levels of social media engagement and consumer behavior on social media platforms.
This document provides guidance for an oral presentation speech given by a newly elected member of government. It outlines that the speech should thank the community for voting for the member and introduce themselves. The core issues that need addressing are the member's plans to address domestic violence in the local area, including providing statistics about domestic violence in Queensland and the community. The speech should also explain the goals of reducing domestic violence, how those goals will be achieved through education and other initiatives, and conclude by reiterating gratitude to the community.
SmithOUT is an organization at the University of Maryland established to provide professional development and social networking opportunities for LGBTQ+ students in the Smith business school. Membership is open to currently enrolled Smith students who attend at least half of organization meetings each year. The organization has 5 officer positions and a faculty advisor. Elections are held annually in April. Upcoming events include marketing, social, professional development, and advocacy activities. The vision for fall 2012 is to increase awareness of the organization through a kickoff event and speaker series. The member list currently includes 24 students.
DePaul HCI 580- Digital Tip Jar Final PresentationKate Fitzgibbon
This document summarizes work done by a student team to design a digital tip jar app called Felicity. The team conducted stakeholder interviews, identified key themes around engagement and discovery, did user research with fans and musicians, created personas and affinity diagrams, designed wireframes and a prototype, and conducted usability testing. Testing provided positive feedback but also identified issues like too many clicks, unclear terminology, and security concerns. Recommendations were made to address these issues and enhance features for both fans and musicians in a future state.
This document provides an overview of a presentation about information literacy and the Chronicling America historic newspaper database. It introduces information literacy and its importance, discusses how to evaluate information sources using the CRAP test, and demonstrates how to search Chronicling America to access digitized historical newspapers. The presentation notes how newspapers provide important historical context but also reflects the biases and perspectives of their time. It emphasizes the need to consider both the credibility and context of information sources.
This document contains a collection of slides from a first year student presentation covering various topics including: graphic images with a warning; research tips and resources; gratitude and positive psychology; professional letters; urban chickens; a social practice journal; taking a trip to Mars or cleaning up garbage patches; community advice; a reference for graphic design; senior choir and community organizations; bike theft on campus; an open source visual campaign; and dentistry at a museum presented chronologically. The slides provide highlights from the student's first year of study.
This document discusses identifying target audiences and creating personas for marketing purposes. It covers defining demographics, constraints, needs, and wants for personas. It emphasizes narrowing personas and specifying details to humanize them. Examples provided include potential graduate students and the cruise industry audience. The cruise audience wants stimulation, convenience and group experiences. The document also briefly discusses levels of social media engagement and consumer behavior on social media platforms.
This document provides guidance for an oral presentation speech given by a newly elected member of government. It outlines that the speech should thank the community for voting for the member and introduce themselves. The core issues that need addressing are the member's plans to address domestic violence in the local area, including providing statistics about domestic violence in Queensland and the community. The speech should also explain the goals of reducing domestic violence, how those goals will be achieved through education and other initiatives, and conclude by reiterating gratitude to the community.
SmithOUT is an organization at the University of Maryland established to provide professional development and social networking opportunities for LGBTQ+ students in the Smith business school. Membership is open to currently enrolled Smith students who attend at least half of organization meetings each year. The organization has 5 officer positions and a faculty advisor. Elections are held annually in April. Upcoming events include marketing, social, professional development, and advocacy activities. The vision for fall 2012 is to increase awareness of the organization through a kickoff event and speaker series. The member list currently includes 24 students.
DePaul HCI 580- Digital Tip Jar Final PresentationKate Fitzgibbon
This document summarizes work done by a student team to design a digital tip jar app called Felicity. The team conducted stakeholder interviews, identified key themes around engagement and discovery, did user research with fans and musicians, created personas and affinity diagrams, designed wireframes and a prototype, and conducted usability testing. Testing provided positive feedback but also identified issues like too many clicks, unclear terminology, and security concerns. Recommendations were made to address these issues and enhance features for both fans and musicians in a future state.
This document provides an overview of a presentation about information literacy and the Chronicling America historic newspaper database. It introduces information literacy and its importance, discusses how to evaluate information sources using the CRAP test, and demonstrates how to search Chronicling America to access digitized historical newspapers. The presentation notes how newspapers provide important historical context but also reflects the biases and perspectives of their time. It emphasizes the need to consider both the credibility and context of information sources.
Netnography: Overview and How to (Schulich School of Business, MBA class, Soc...elpinchito
This is a slide deck used for 'Netnography: Overview & How-to' presentation on Feb. 15, 2012. The presentation (watch the YouTube video below) was a part of the class assignments for "Social Media Marketing" class taught by Robert Kozinets at Schulich School of Business, York University. In this presentation, topics such as why netnography is useful for marketing research and what the researchers have to keep in mind are explored with some specific examples.
The video on the first slide is a teaser for this presentation.
The link to the recorded presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UWApBu2ERTU&context=C31c1b83ADOEgsToPDskJO-DQt8ZUtzIA-tdvMiOHd
Alienation as vice and virtue: knowing the difference and making a differenceTansy Jessop
This document outlines a presentation on alienation in higher education. It discusses two types of alienation: Type A as a vice, which can result from factors like mass higher education and an overemphasis on metrics; and Type B as a virtue, which is part of the intellectual development process involving questioning and doubt. It also presents three ways to overcome alienation: through research, relationships, and risk-taking. Research can stimulate curiosity, relationships are important for a positive university experience, and taking risks can help students become engaged in their education.
The document proposes a marketing strategy called "generAEtion" to strengthen American Eagle's brand identity among college students. It involves rebranding stores with a classic rock theme, creating branded playlists, holding a tribute music festival, and engaging customers through social media contests. The goals are to make AE's messaging more concrete and resonate with its target market by connecting the brand to the heritage of American classic rock music. A timeline, budget, and measurement tools are outlined to track the initiative's outcomes.
This document proposes a marketing strategy called "generAEtion" to strengthen American Eagle's brand identity among college students. Key elements include remodeling stores to have a classic rock theme, creating branded jeans named after artists, developing playlists and digital content tied to classic rock music, hosting a tribute music festival and campus events. The goals are to make AE's messaging more concrete and resonate stronger with its target market through nostalgic connections to classic rock music genres popular among younger generations. Research showed this strategy could help define the brand and AE's generation while driving engagement.
"Telling A Good Story: Getting from Idea, to Pitch, to Public," was presented by Generation PRX Director Jones Franzel at the 2012 NYC Digital Waves Youth Media Festival. Learn more at htttp://generation.prx.org
Learn the difference between reliable and unreliable sources
Identify URL parts, & 6 Steps of Research
Discover strategies for Google search techniques
This document profiles the identity, lifestyle, and media habits of restless target audiences aged 18-25. It finds that they highly value individuality, fame, and fortune, and outwardly express their identities through fashion, tattoos, and body piercings. They are most influenced by their friends and entertainers over political leaders. Music, films, social media are their most used media, and they are open to brand messages at music festivals but have less leisure activities and means to access them than previous generations.
What do you need to know that will help you design a community engagement-oriented project that will work? Whether your interest is in news, music, or events, come to this session to find out. Ann Alquist of NCME and Joellen Easton of APM’s Public Insight Network each help dozens of stations design projects that connect deeply with community. And they’ve learned a few things along the way. Jo and Ann share their tales of engagement gone wrong, and what they’ve learned about what works -- and what doesn’t -- in their combined 16 years of work on engagement. You’ll also get to hear from those stations whose successes and challenges are highlighted.
Social Media Brian Johnson Program, 07.14.10JacquiSakowski
The document provides an overview of social media including Facebook, LinkedIn, blogs, Twitter, and YouTube and discusses opportunities for personal, professional, and Rotary applications of each platform. Examples are given for how individuals, businesses, and Rotary clubs currently utilize various social media tools. The document emphasizes that social media provides new ways to communicate information and connect with others.
Brain science and web marketing go together. And anyone can learn how to do it.
In this presentation, we’ll review the neuromarketing research, case studies and web marketing tactics that work with natural, human behavioral tendencies.
• Herds, halos and the science of social proof
• Context, contrast and color
• Fear, loss and scarcity
• Eye tracking, color and visual prominence
• Writing copy for busy minds
We'll reveal secrets of the brain, behavior and marketing on the web. If there are humans in your target audience, this presentation is for you.
The ideal attendee has 2+ years of digital marketing experience. Space is limited. Register before your competition does.
Learn the secrets of the brain, behavior and marketing. We’ll break down the marketing tactics that work with natural human tendencies. If there are humans in your target audience, this presentation is for you.
Social media is a new form of communication that allows sharing of information freely. It enables group thinking around messages and encourages discussion of brands and ideas. While it has value as a communication tool, there are also risks like inappropriate contact with students that require caution and adherence to proper channels. Overall, social media works best when used authentically to listen to others and have human-to-human conversations rather than one-way broadcasting.
This presentation addresses questions from members of the Women's National Book Association (WNBA), New York City chapter. It provides an explanation of Facebook's EdgeRank algorithm and the basics of marketing. Throughout the presentation,
Christopher Sibona Ph.D. is the Principal Software Engineer at Oracle Corp. Christopher obtained his Ph.D. at the University of Colorado Business School in 2011. His study on why people unfriend on Facebook has helped hundreds of corporations and individuals understand what encourages engagement and what turns people off when marketing on Facebook. This is Christopher’s talk at the January 2011 Emerging Media Conference in San Francisco, CA.
This document discusses how college presidents are using social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, blogs, and Instagram to promote their institutions. It provides examples of how presidents at various colleges engage with students, alumni, and other constituencies on social media to share news, events, and issues in higher education. The document emphasizes that an active social media presence helps presidents build their personal brands and connect with broader audiences in order to promote their institutions. It also stresses the importance of authenticity and consistency across social media platforms to effectively engage communities.
This document provides information about the Fourth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry to be held from May 14-18, 2008 at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The theme of the congress is "Ethics, Evidence and Social Justice." Over 900 people from over 55 nations have registered for previous congresses. This congress will explore the relationship between ethics, evidence and social justice and their implications for qualitative inquiry. Sessions will address topics such as alternative models of social justice, the politics of evidence, criteria for evaluating qualitative inquiry, and using qualitative research in policymaking. The congress will involve keynote speakers, plenary sessions, workshops, and opportunities for scholars to present innovative methodologies and formats for dissemin
The document provides guidance on researching an artist by highlighting key biographical details to focus on, including their childhood, education, adult life, career, and influential works. It prompts the reader to consider 10 questions to research the following week, and suggests reflecting on the artist's impact, what appeals to the student about their work, and how their style could influence the student's own art.
Netnography: Overview and How to (Schulich School of Business, MBA class, Soc...elpinchito
This is a slide deck used for 'Netnography: Overview & How-to' presentation on Feb. 15, 2012. The presentation (watch the YouTube video below) was a part of the class assignments for "Social Media Marketing" class taught by Robert Kozinets at Schulich School of Business, York University. In this presentation, topics such as why netnography is useful for marketing research and what the researchers have to keep in mind are explored with some specific examples.
The video on the first slide is a teaser for this presentation.
The link to the recorded presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UWApBu2ERTU&context=C31c1b83ADOEgsToPDskJO-DQt8ZUtzIA-tdvMiOHd
Alienation as vice and virtue: knowing the difference and making a differenceTansy Jessop
This document outlines a presentation on alienation in higher education. It discusses two types of alienation: Type A as a vice, which can result from factors like mass higher education and an overemphasis on metrics; and Type B as a virtue, which is part of the intellectual development process involving questioning and doubt. It also presents three ways to overcome alienation: through research, relationships, and risk-taking. Research can stimulate curiosity, relationships are important for a positive university experience, and taking risks can help students become engaged in their education.
The document proposes a marketing strategy called "generAEtion" to strengthen American Eagle's brand identity among college students. It involves rebranding stores with a classic rock theme, creating branded playlists, holding a tribute music festival, and engaging customers through social media contests. The goals are to make AE's messaging more concrete and resonate with its target market by connecting the brand to the heritage of American classic rock music. A timeline, budget, and measurement tools are outlined to track the initiative's outcomes.
This document proposes a marketing strategy called "generAEtion" to strengthen American Eagle's brand identity among college students. Key elements include remodeling stores to have a classic rock theme, creating branded jeans named after artists, developing playlists and digital content tied to classic rock music, hosting a tribute music festival and campus events. The goals are to make AE's messaging more concrete and resonate stronger with its target market through nostalgic connections to classic rock music genres popular among younger generations. Research showed this strategy could help define the brand and AE's generation while driving engagement.
"Telling A Good Story: Getting from Idea, to Pitch, to Public," was presented by Generation PRX Director Jones Franzel at the 2012 NYC Digital Waves Youth Media Festival. Learn more at htttp://generation.prx.org
Learn the difference between reliable and unreliable sources
Identify URL parts, & 6 Steps of Research
Discover strategies for Google search techniques
This document profiles the identity, lifestyle, and media habits of restless target audiences aged 18-25. It finds that they highly value individuality, fame, and fortune, and outwardly express their identities through fashion, tattoos, and body piercings. They are most influenced by their friends and entertainers over political leaders. Music, films, social media are their most used media, and they are open to brand messages at music festivals but have less leisure activities and means to access them than previous generations.
What do you need to know that will help you design a community engagement-oriented project that will work? Whether your interest is in news, music, or events, come to this session to find out. Ann Alquist of NCME and Joellen Easton of APM’s Public Insight Network each help dozens of stations design projects that connect deeply with community. And they’ve learned a few things along the way. Jo and Ann share their tales of engagement gone wrong, and what they’ve learned about what works -- and what doesn’t -- in their combined 16 years of work on engagement. You’ll also get to hear from those stations whose successes and challenges are highlighted.
Social Media Brian Johnson Program, 07.14.10JacquiSakowski
The document provides an overview of social media including Facebook, LinkedIn, blogs, Twitter, and YouTube and discusses opportunities for personal, professional, and Rotary applications of each platform. Examples are given for how individuals, businesses, and Rotary clubs currently utilize various social media tools. The document emphasizes that social media provides new ways to communicate information and connect with others.
Brain science and web marketing go together. And anyone can learn how to do it.
In this presentation, we’ll review the neuromarketing research, case studies and web marketing tactics that work with natural, human behavioral tendencies.
• Herds, halos and the science of social proof
• Context, contrast and color
• Fear, loss and scarcity
• Eye tracking, color and visual prominence
• Writing copy for busy minds
We'll reveal secrets of the brain, behavior and marketing on the web. If there are humans in your target audience, this presentation is for you.
The ideal attendee has 2+ years of digital marketing experience. Space is limited. Register before your competition does.
Learn the secrets of the brain, behavior and marketing. We’ll break down the marketing tactics that work with natural human tendencies. If there are humans in your target audience, this presentation is for you.
Social media is a new form of communication that allows sharing of information freely. It enables group thinking around messages and encourages discussion of brands and ideas. While it has value as a communication tool, there are also risks like inappropriate contact with students that require caution and adherence to proper channels. Overall, social media works best when used authentically to listen to others and have human-to-human conversations rather than one-way broadcasting.
This presentation addresses questions from members of the Women's National Book Association (WNBA), New York City chapter. It provides an explanation of Facebook's EdgeRank algorithm and the basics of marketing. Throughout the presentation,
Christopher Sibona Ph.D. is the Principal Software Engineer at Oracle Corp. Christopher obtained his Ph.D. at the University of Colorado Business School in 2011. His study on why people unfriend on Facebook has helped hundreds of corporations and individuals understand what encourages engagement and what turns people off when marketing on Facebook. This is Christopher’s talk at the January 2011 Emerging Media Conference in San Francisco, CA.
This document discusses how college presidents are using social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, blogs, and Instagram to promote their institutions. It provides examples of how presidents at various colleges engage with students, alumni, and other constituencies on social media to share news, events, and issues in higher education. The document emphasizes that an active social media presence helps presidents build their personal brands and connect with broader audiences in order to promote their institutions. It also stresses the importance of authenticity and consistency across social media platforms to effectively engage communities.
This document provides information about the Fourth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry to be held from May 14-18, 2008 at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The theme of the congress is "Ethics, Evidence and Social Justice." Over 900 people from over 55 nations have registered for previous congresses. This congress will explore the relationship between ethics, evidence and social justice and their implications for qualitative inquiry. Sessions will address topics such as alternative models of social justice, the politics of evidence, criteria for evaluating qualitative inquiry, and using qualitative research in policymaking. The congress will involve keynote speakers, plenary sessions, workshops, and opportunities for scholars to present innovative methodologies and formats for dissemin
The document provides guidance on researching an artist by highlighting key biographical details to focus on, including their childhood, education, adult life, career, and influential works. It prompts the reader to consider 10 questions to research the following week, and suggests reflecting on the artist's impact, what appeals to the student about their work, and how their style could influence the student's own art.
5. Four Ways to Wear…
Featured Articles
A Denim Jacket
A Black Blazer
Destroyed Jeans
Good Girl Gone Bad: The Revival of the Punk/Grudge Look
It’s a Jungle Out There: Animal Print Clothing and Accessories
Colors that Glow: The New Trend of Neon Fashions
Crazy Eyewear: Funky Sunglasses for Spring
Bigger Isn’t Always Better: The Trend of Small Shoulder Bags
Read Between the Lines: Horizontal Striped Fashions
Trend Alert: Spring’s Color Palette
How Do You Feel About Fashion: Survey Results
6.
7. Featured Articles
Young Hungry Concert at the Norva
A Star on the Rise: An Interview with a local artist
Interview with Matt Carter and Austin Wreen: Two Local Talent Mangers
What Are You Listening To?: Survey results
Download or Delete: A Synopsis of New Releases
8.
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11.
12. Featured Articles
• Rock Solid Organization
• Operation Smile
• Techno Pals
• Alzheimer's Association
• Pearls of Wisdom Fundraiser
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15.
16.
17.
18.
19. Featured Articles
Cool Cuts
• Layers
• Bangs
• Pixie
• Bob
A Divergence from the Norm: The Craze of Exotic Nail Art
Color Match: The Right Lipstick Shade for Your Skin Complexion
Polish it Off! : How to Get Shiny Hair
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21.
22. Featured Articles
30 Tips to Get the Most Out of High School
An Inside Look Into College Preparation
What to Expect
Financing
Loans
Application Process
Frequently Asked Questions Answered
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25. Featured Individuals
1. Aryn Kormanis (First Colonial Lacrosse Captain)
2. Petey Smith (Advanced Technology Institute Student)
3. Forrest Amici (NJROTC)
4. Reggie Ford (Landstown Technology Academy Student)
5. Nick Dew (Virginia Tech University Football Player)
6. Jackie Washington (First Colonial Step Team Captain)
31. Feedback
FaceBook
•Makeup Artists
• Professional web/graphic designers
•Radio Stations
•DJs
•Club Owners
• Professional Models
•Photographers
Reel World Media
11th Annual The Virginia Beach City Public School’s Partnership Advisory Link Gala
32. Research Paper
Relationship between Project and Paper:
I wrote my research paper on the necessity to censor the press because as
the creator and editor of a magazine I had to be aware of what publications could and
could not publish.
Thesis:
The notion of freedom of the press, as laid out in the first amendment of the United
States Constitution is not absolute nor unguarded; the establishment of
groundbreaking precedents has idealistically offered protection against the misuse of
this freedom, in which provides backing to the necessity of censoring the press.