This document summarizes Farida Vis's use of social media to engage audiences for an academic conference on visual social media. It describes her strategy for promoting the conference months in advance on multiple social media platforms and tracking engagement. It also outlines her plan for sharing and curating content from the conference online in the following weeks to maximize engagement and create an archive.
Picturing the Social: Talk for Transforming Digital Methods Winter SchoolFarida Vis
This talk highlights the work of the Visual Social Media Lab and the Picturing the Social project. It summarises the key research questions and aims of the project. It highlights the value of interdisciplinarity and working closely with industry in this area. It also focuses on the way in which me might study different types of structures involved in the circulation and the scopic regimes that make social media images more or less visible. It also tries to unpack how we can start to think about APIs as 'method' and looks at the different ways in which we can get access to different kinds of social media image data. Both through public ('free') APIs and ('pay for') firehose data.
ESRC Research Methods Festival - From Flickr to Snapchat: The challenge of an...Farida Vis
From Flickr to Snapchat: The challenge of analysing images on social media. Presentation part of the 'Challenges/Opportunities of Using Social Media for Social Science Research' panel. 9th of July 2014
Researching Social Media – Big Data and Social Media AnalysisFarida Vis
Researching Social Media – Big Data and Social Media Analysis, presentation for the Social Media for Researchers: A Sheffield Universities Social Media Symposium, 23 September 2014
Twitter analytics: some thoughts on sampling, tools, data, ethics and user re...Farida Vis
Keynote delivered at the SRA Social Media in Social Research conference, London, 24 June, 2013. The presentation highlights some thoughts on sampling, tools, data, ethics and user requirements for Twitter analytics, including an overview of a series of recent tools.
Picturing the Social: Talk for Transforming Digital Methods Winter SchoolFarida Vis
This talk highlights the work of the Visual Social Media Lab and the Picturing the Social project. It summarises the key research questions and aims of the project. It highlights the value of interdisciplinarity and working closely with industry in this area. It also focuses on the way in which me might study different types of structures involved in the circulation and the scopic regimes that make social media images more or less visible. It also tries to unpack how we can start to think about APIs as 'method' and looks at the different ways in which we can get access to different kinds of social media image data. Both through public ('free') APIs and ('pay for') firehose data.
ESRC Research Methods Festival - From Flickr to Snapchat: The challenge of an...Farida Vis
From Flickr to Snapchat: The challenge of analysing images on social media. Presentation part of the 'Challenges/Opportunities of Using Social Media for Social Science Research' panel. 9th of July 2014
Researching Social Media – Big Data and Social Media AnalysisFarida Vis
Researching Social Media – Big Data and Social Media Analysis, presentation for the Social Media for Researchers: A Sheffield Universities Social Media Symposium, 23 September 2014
Twitter analytics: some thoughts on sampling, tools, data, ethics and user re...Farida Vis
Keynote delivered at the SRA Social Media in Social Research conference, London, 24 June, 2013. The presentation highlights some thoughts on sampling, tools, data, ethics and user requirements for Twitter analytics, including an overview of a series of recent tools.
Analyzing social media may be a daunting task, given its overwhelming size and messy, unstructured nature. Further, for those new to analyzing social behavior in online systems, there are any number of pitfalls that make it challenging to find the meaning in the mess. The goal of this session is to provide practical tips for collecting and analyzing social media data.
Lecture 3: Vocabularies & Data Formats on the Social Web (2014)Lora Aroyo
This is the third lecture in the Social Web course (2014) at the VU University Amsterdam. Visit the website for more information: http://thesocialweb2014.wordpress.com/
Week 6 slides from the class "Social Web 2.0" I taught at the University of Washington's Masters in Communication program in 2007. Most of the content is still very relevant today. Topics: Lightweight authoring, blogs, and wikis
Social Web 2.0 Class Week 9: Social Coordination, Mobile Social, Collective A...Shelly D. Farnham, Ph.D.
Week 9 slides from the class "Social Web 2.0" I taught at the University of Washington's Masters in Communication program in 2007. Most of the content is still very relevant today. Topics: Social coordination, mobile social, and collective action.
For my final year project I used data analysis techniques to investigate user behavior pattern recognition in respect of similar interests and culture versus offline geographical location. This was an out-of-the-box topic, which I selected due to my love on Data Analysis, in respect of the Social Network Analysis in the Internet era.
Challenges of using Twitter for sentiment analysisAna Canhoto
Presentation discussing the potential of Twitter as a source of insight about customer sentiment towards the brand, but also highlighting the challenges of doing so via automated tools.
For more information, or to join the discussion, check my blog www.anacanhoto.com
Coding Social Imagery: Learning from a #selfie #humor Image Set from InstagramShalin Hai-Jew
Social media messaging has long been harnessed to inform faculty about their respective learners. The textual channel is often used because of the ease of interpretation and analysis. Social imagery—tagged images, #selfies, grouped imagery, and others—has been less used, in part because images are more complex and multi-meaninged to analyze. Also, there are not many generalist models that inform how to code or even understand social imagery in an emergent way. (There are large-scale computational means to interpret online images, such as the AlchemyAPI of IBM Watson, for various types of feature extractions. There are ways to code imagery based on specific research questions in particular fields-of-practice.)
The presenter recently analyzed a 941-image #selfie + #humor image set from Instagram, with three main research questions:
What does identity-based humor look like in terms of a #selfie #humor- tagged image set from the Instagram photo-sharing mobile app?
Do more modern forms of mediated social humor link to more traditional forms theoretically? Is it possible to apply the Humor Styles Model to the images from the #selfie #humor Instagram image set to better understand #selfie #humor?
What are some constructive and systematized ways to analyze social image sets manually (with some computational support)?
This digital poster session will highlight some of the initial research findings (forthcoming in a near-future publication) and share insights about effectively coding social imagery in a bottom-up and emergent way.
30 Tools and Tips to Speed Up Your Digital Workflow Mike Kujawski
Have you ever found yourself wasting a considerable amount of time performing some annoying, repetitive process within a common application, social media website, or your web browser? Wish there was a "magic" shortcut or simply a better way of getting it done? There most likely is.
While having a solid strategy should always be the first priority before engaging in the digital/social media space, it's also smart to arm yourself with a set of tools that will help you with the tactical implementation of your plan. These presentation slides provide 30 tools and tips hand-picked from Mike Kujawski's personal experience, day-to-day observations, and interactions with his consulting and training clients.
These tools are meant to help you be more efficient and effective as a communicator in today's digital world, where agility and "life-hacking" skills are becoming increasingly valued.
Just What Is Social in Social Media? An Actor-Network Critique of Twitter Age...Jeffrey Keefer
These are the slides I presented at the #SMSociety15 conference https://smsociety15.sched.org/event/84f2409561cd92c5cc1fc5b8b01558f9
While social media includes the applications that support the creation and exchange of user generated and participatory content (Kaplan & Haenlein, 2010), the focus is commonly on the presentation or actions of users, the networks created on the platforms, and what we can do to promote our various WIIFMs (What’s In It For Me). It is less studied from the perspective of the networks themselves, especially through the influence and role of the non-human elements. Through this inverted perspective much may be learned, especially involving simple assumptions about the role of agency, namely the power to act (Latour, 2013). It is this social aspect of social media where actor-network theory can be most usefully employed, as the agency of things themselves may frequently be overlooked (Adams & Thompson, 2011) when rushing to understand the black box of assumptions present in social media research and practice.
2014 TheNextWeb-Mapping connections with NodeXLMarc Smith
Slides from a talk at the 2014 TheNextWeb in Amsterdam.
NodeXL social media network analysis of Twitter reveals six common structures in Twitter networks.
2015 #MMeasure-Marc Smith-NodeXL Mapping social media using social network ma...Marc Smith
Networks are a powerful way to understand social media.
This talk reviews the ways the NodeXL application can be used to reveal the social media networks structures around topics.
Analyzing social media may be a daunting task, given its overwhelming size and messy, unstructured nature. Further, for those new to analyzing social behavior in online systems, there are any number of pitfalls that make it challenging to find the meaning in the mess. The goal of this session is to provide practical tips for collecting and analyzing social media data.
Lecture 3: Vocabularies & Data Formats on the Social Web (2014)Lora Aroyo
This is the third lecture in the Social Web course (2014) at the VU University Amsterdam. Visit the website for more information: http://thesocialweb2014.wordpress.com/
Week 6 slides from the class "Social Web 2.0" I taught at the University of Washington's Masters in Communication program in 2007. Most of the content is still very relevant today. Topics: Lightweight authoring, blogs, and wikis
Social Web 2.0 Class Week 9: Social Coordination, Mobile Social, Collective A...Shelly D. Farnham, Ph.D.
Week 9 slides from the class "Social Web 2.0" I taught at the University of Washington's Masters in Communication program in 2007. Most of the content is still very relevant today. Topics: Social coordination, mobile social, and collective action.
For my final year project I used data analysis techniques to investigate user behavior pattern recognition in respect of similar interests and culture versus offline geographical location. This was an out-of-the-box topic, which I selected due to my love on Data Analysis, in respect of the Social Network Analysis in the Internet era.
Challenges of using Twitter for sentiment analysisAna Canhoto
Presentation discussing the potential of Twitter as a source of insight about customer sentiment towards the brand, but also highlighting the challenges of doing so via automated tools.
For more information, or to join the discussion, check my blog www.anacanhoto.com
Coding Social Imagery: Learning from a #selfie #humor Image Set from InstagramShalin Hai-Jew
Social media messaging has long been harnessed to inform faculty about their respective learners. The textual channel is often used because of the ease of interpretation and analysis. Social imagery—tagged images, #selfies, grouped imagery, and others—has been less used, in part because images are more complex and multi-meaninged to analyze. Also, there are not many generalist models that inform how to code or even understand social imagery in an emergent way. (There are large-scale computational means to interpret online images, such as the AlchemyAPI of IBM Watson, for various types of feature extractions. There are ways to code imagery based on specific research questions in particular fields-of-practice.)
The presenter recently analyzed a 941-image #selfie + #humor image set from Instagram, with three main research questions:
What does identity-based humor look like in terms of a #selfie #humor- tagged image set from the Instagram photo-sharing mobile app?
Do more modern forms of mediated social humor link to more traditional forms theoretically? Is it possible to apply the Humor Styles Model to the images from the #selfie #humor Instagram image set to better understand #selfie #humor?
What are some constructive and systematized ways to analyze social image sets manually (with some computational support)?
This digital poster session will highlight some of the initial research findings (forthcoming in a near-future publication) and share insights about effectively coding social imagery in a bottom-up and emergent way.
30 Tools and Tips to Speed Up Your Digital Workflow Mike Kujawski
Have you ever found yourself wasting a considerable amount of time performing some annoying, repetitive process within a common application, social media website, or your web browser? Wish there was a "magic" shortcut or simply a better way of getting it done? There most likely is.
While having a solid strategy should always be the first priority before engaging in the digital/social media space, it's also smart to arm yourself with a set of tools that will help you with the tactical implementation of your plan. These presentation slides provide 30 tools and tips hand-picked from Mike Kujawski's personal experience, day-to-day observations, and interactions with his consulting and training clients.
These tools are meant to help you be more efficient and effective as a communicator in today's digital world, where agility and "life-hacking" skills are becoming increasingly valued.
Just What Is Social in Social Media? An Actor-Network Critique of Twitter Age...Jeffrey Keefer
These are the slides I presented at the #SMSociety15 conference https://smsociety15.sched.org/event/84f2409561cd92c5cc1fc5b8b01558f9
While social media includes the applications that support the creation and exchange of user generated and participatory content (Kaplan & Haenlein, 2010), the focus is commonly on the presentation or actions of users, the networks created on the platforms, and what we can do to promote our various WIIFMs (What’s In It For Me). It is less studied from the perspective of the networks themselves, especially through the influence and role of the non-human elements. Through this inverted perspective much may be learned, especially involving simple assumptions about the role of agency, namely the power to act (Latour, 2013). It is this social aspect of social media where actor-network theory can be most usefully employed, as the agency of things themselves may frequently be overlooked (Adams & Thompson, 2011) when rushing to understand the black box of assumptions present in social media research and practice.
2014 TheNextWeb-Mapping connections with NodeXLMarc Smith
Slides from a talk at the 2014 TheNextWeb in Amsterdam.
NodeXL social media network analysis of Twitter reveals six common structures in Twitter networks.
2015 #MMeasure-Marc Smith-NodeXL Mapping social media using social network ma...Marc Smith
Networks are a powerful way to understand social media.
This talk reviews the ways the NodeXL application can be used to reveal the social media networks structures around topics.
Monetary Policy: What it is and Who is in ChargeMazen El-Haidari
This is a quick presentation I created for my MBA class on the U.S. Monetary Policy and the role of the Federal Reserve. Any questions at all, please reach out and I will be happy to answer.
Social media engagement must be designed. This slide deck includes discussion of the social media funnel, how to design engagement, barriers to engagement, a sample engagement calendar, and examples of nonprofit organizations engaging effectively on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.
An overview presentation on using social media as a customer service channel. Presented at the ASMI two-day session on Customer Engagement Marketing (Jan. 29, 2010).
Visualizing Co-authorship Networks for Actionable Insights: Action Design Res...Jukka Huhtamäki
Huhtamäki, J. (2016). Visualizing Co-authorship Networks for Actionable Insights: Action Design Research Experiment. In Proceedings of the 20th International Academic Mindtrek Conference (pp. 208–215). New York, NY, USA: ACM. https://doi.org/10.1145/2994310.2994340
The global API Ecosystem: A deep dive into gamingJukka Huhtamäki
Digital platforms play an increasingly transformative role in the global ecosystem of interactive media and games. Recently, we studied one type of platform boundary resource, namely application programming interfaces (APIs). We examined more than 15,000 APIs and mashups, mapping the global locations where APIs are created. Our results show the global distribution of APIs, and their concentration in various parts of the world. In this talk, I will dig deeper into the gaming API ecosystem to share insights about the development of interactive games. On the side, I will discuss the process and tools we used in our data-driven methodology.
Using Social Media to Promote Your Research (Translate MedTech edition)Kirsten Thompson
Using Social Media to Promote Your Research is a workshop developed by Kirsten Thompson and Sally Dalton, University of Leeds. It was facilitated in June 2019 as part of the Translate MedTech programme for the Yorkshire and Humber region.
How Social Media Can Enhance Your Research Activitieslisbk
Slides for a talk on "How Social Media Can Enhance Your Research Activities" given by Brian Kelly, Innovation Advocate at Cetis, University of Bolton at the IRISS Research Unbound conference in Glasgow on 21 February 2014.
See http://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/events/iriss-2014-how-social-media-can-enhance-your-research-activities/
Using Social Media to Enhance Your Research Activitieslisbk
Slides for a workshop session on "Using Social Media to Enhance Your Research Activities" facilitated by Bran Kelly, Innovation Advocate at Cetis, University of Bolton at the DAAD 2013 conference, at Cumberland Lodge, Egham on 16-18 December 2013.
For further information see
http://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/events/daad-conference-2013/
Beyond the scientific article making your research social bec-a writing work...Simone Staiger-Rivas
This presentation was given as part of a seminar on the topic at the BecA 'technical/research paper writing' workshop, held in ILRI Addis campus, 15-18 November 2010. We also got the participants to try writing blog posts.
CADTH Workshop - Keeping Ahead of the Curve: Social Media - April 2012Connie Crosby
Social media planning for health information organizations. Presented as a workshop at the CADTH Symposium 2012 in Ottawa, Canada presented by the Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technology in Health - http://cadth.ca/ Includes discussion of strategy, risks and policy.
With the ubiquitous nature of social media effecting all areas of society, how do we as academic researchers need to respond to this challenge to use social media to promote our practice. This presentation will provide some clues.
Slides from the Building a Social Media Plan workshop in Calgary & Edmonton, Alberta (November 2009).
Social media can be an incredible tool for your organization, providing you with direct communication channels, access to audience insight, and the ability to reach people all over the world.
But as the proliferation of social media platforms grow, participating can often be overwhelming and confusing. Join us as we take you through how to kick-start your organization's social media action plan.
Activities around digging have again become very popular recently, including in the attention they have received from cultural institutions. Many cultural institutions have in recent years recreated wartime (allotment) gardens to highlight a range of different issues and values. Such exhibitions and events, organized during a time of renewed austerity measures, increased concerns around food and the environment, draw obvious parallels to the contemporary moment, offering possibilities to rethink our own values. This panel brings together exciting new research that focuses on this renewed interest in growing your own food.
The first half of the panel highlights work from the recently completed ‘Everyday Growing Cultures’ project, which focused on the potentially transformative value of connecting two currently disparate communities: allotments growers and the open data community. Based on comparative research in Manchester and Sheffield, it explores potential effects of digital engagement and open data for allotment holders to build stronger, more active communities, benefit local economies and improve environmental sustainability and food security. The second half of the panel seeks to understand the different ways in which issues around digging have reemerged in recent years, to understand these by looking at how they have been expressed and mobilized by different people and actors. This can be expressed as actual digging linked to food production, symbolic digging as performance, digging up local histories, or as new forms of gift-giving.
Panel presentations from: Farida Vis, Ian Humphrey, Yana Manyukhina and Penny Rivlin. Penny's slides will be uploaded separately.
Where do images fit in the era of ‘Big Data’?Farida Vis
This presentation makes an argument for a more central focus on images within social media research. It offers approaches and concrete examples from both 'Big data' and 'small data' perspectives. Presented at the Digital Transformations in the Arts and Humanities: Big Data Workshop, London, June 25 2013.
These are the slides of a keynote I gave at Emerce Eday on 25 October 2012 in Rotterdam.
The short description of my talk was as follows: With the ongoing rise of third party applications like Klout, tools for measuring Twitter influence are important to understand. This presentation takes a look at the different ways in which influence measures have been developed for Twitter. In particular it will use the case study of the UK riots of 2011 for which a database of 2.6 million tweets was collected in collaboration with Twitter and The Guardian newspaper. By examining the top 1000 most tweeted accounts, it will give further insight in how influence worked during this crisis event, specifically highlighting the emergence of the ‘ordinary influential’ during 2011 as well as how large organisations have incorporated social media practices.
Allotment (publics): an open data and data driven journalism perspective Farida Vis
This talk was delivered at the USING OPEN DATA policy modeling, citizen empowerment, data journalism workshop (19-20 June, 2012), organised by the W3C, hosted by the European Commission.
The talk addresses issues of everyday data, related to ‘mundane issues’ that people relate to easily, principally because they feature in their everyday lives. This allows for a rethinking of political participation and civic engagement beyond the rather stale ways in which this is measured traditionally. The paper is interested in ‘really useful’ data, which has the ordinary end user firmly in mind. Specifically it highlights these issues through a case study of allotments in the UK, small plots of land rented from the council to grow fruits and vegetables. This case study highlights larger issues concerning the use and value of open data as well as how data driven journalism can play a role in telling these important stories. It highlight this as an open data case study that could embed open data ideas more firmly in the mainstream and take it outside the world of technology. Having an allotment and growing your own food have become incredibly popular in recent years. Due to a real shortage in allotments, lack of creation of new plots, and ever-growing waiting lists, this research is interested in building on and extending previous work in this area, addressing the following questions: How can allotment data be made really useful?; How can open data go mainstream, securing wide use adoption?
This presentation looks at the ways in which the riots were discussed on Twitter, during the four days of rioting in the UK during the summer of 2011. The 'Reading the Riots on Twitter' project examined 2.6 million riot tweets, focusing specifically on the role of rumours, whether incitement was organised on Twitter as well as who the key users were that tweeted the riots. Finally, it looks at how emergency services in particular can improve their social media strategies in the future.
This presentation looks at alternative ways to gauge how people understand flu pandemics. By looking at what is popular on Amazon.com through searching 'flu pandemics' and 'pandemics' it highlights the meeting of a number of important discourses and the emergence of new ones, specifically within fiction. What are the implications of this?
Buy Pinterest Followers, Reactions & Repins Go Viral on Pinterest with Socio...SocioCosmos
Get more Pinterest followers, reactions, and repins with Sociocosmos, the leading platform to buy all kinds of Pinterest presence. Boost your profile and reach a wider audience.
https://www.sociocosmos.com/product-category/pinterest/
Your Path to YouTube Stardom Starts HereSocioCosmos
Skyrocket your YouTube presence with Sociocosmos' proven methods. Gain real engagement and build a loyal audience. Join us now.
https://www.sociocosmos.com/product-category/youtube/
Project Serenity is an innovative initiative aimed at transforming urban environments into sustainable, self-sufficient communities. By integrating green architecture, renewable energy, smart technology, sustainable transportation, and urban farming, Project Serenity seeks to minimize the ecological footprint of cities while enhancing residents' quality of life. Key components include energy-efficient buildings, IoT-enabled resource management, electric and autonomous transportation options, green spaces, and robust waste management systems. Emphasizing community engagement and social equity, Project Serenity aspires to serve as a global model for creating eco-friendly, livable urban spaces that harmonize modern conveniences with environmental stewardship.
The Evolution of SEO: Insights from a Leading Digital Marketing AgencyDigital Marketing Lab
Explore the latest trends in Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and discover how modern practices are transforming business visibility. This document delves into the shift from keyword optimization to user intent, highlighting key trends such as voice search optimization, artificial intelligence, mobile-first indexing, and the importance of E-A-T principles. Enhance your online presence with expert insights from Digital Marketing Lab, your partner in maximizing SEO performance.
Unlock TikTok Success with Sociocosmos..SocioCosmos
Discover how Sociocosmos can boost your TikTok presence with real followers and engagement. Achieve your social media goals today!
https://www.sociocosmos.com/product-category/tiktok/
Telegram is a messaging platform that ushers in a new era of communication. Available for Android, Windows, Mac, and Linux, Telegram offers simplicity, privacy, synchronization across devices, speed, and powerful features. It allows users to create their own stickers with a user-friendly editor. With robust encryption, Telegram ensures message security and even offers self-destructing messages. The platform is open, with an API and source code accessible to everyone, making it a secure and social environment where groups can accommodate up to 200,000 members. Customize your messenger experience with Telegram's expressive features.
Your LinkedIn Success Starts Here.......SocioCosmos
In order to make a lasting impression on your sector, SocioCosmos provides customized solutions to improve your LinkedIn profile.
https://www.sociocosmos.com/product-category/linkedin/
Surat Digital Marketing School is created to offer a complete course that is specifically designed as per the current industry trends. Years of experience has helped us identify and understand the graduate-employee skills gap in the industry. At our school, we keep up with the pace of the industry and impart a holistic education that encompasses all the latest concepts of the Digital world so that our graduates can effortlessly integrate into the assigned roles.
This is the place where you become a Digital Marketing Expert.
Exploring The Dimensions and Dynamics of Felt Obligation: A Bibliometric Anal...AJHSSR Journal
ABSTARCT: This study presents, to our knowledge, the first bibliometric analysis focusing on the concept of
"felt obligation," examining 120 articles published between 1986 and 2024. The aim of the study is to deepen our
understanding of the existing knowledge in the field of "felt obligation" and to provide guidance for further
research. The analysis is centered around the authors, countries, institutions, and keywords of the articles. The
findings highlight prominent researchers in this field, leading universities, and influential journals. Particularly,
it is identified that China plays a leading role in "felt obligation" research. The analysis of keywords emphasizes
the thematic focuses of these studies and provides a roadmap for future research. Finally, various
recommendations are presented to deepen the knowledge in this area and promote applied research. This study
serves as a foundation to expand and advance the understanding of "felt obligation" in the field.
KEYWORDS: Felt Obligation, Bibliometric Analysis, Research Trends
Grow Your Reddit Community Fast.........SocioCosmos
Sociocosmos helps you gain Reddit followers quickly and easily. Build your community and expand your influence.
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This tutorial presentation provides a step-by-step guide on how to use Facebook, the popular social media platform. In simple and easy-to-understand language, this presentation explains how to create a Facebook account, connect with friends and family, post updates, share photos and videos, join groups, and manage privacy settings. Whether you're new to Facebook or just need a refresher, this presentation will help you navigate the features and make the most of your Facebook experience.
Improving Workplace Safety Performance in Malaysian SMEs: The Role of Safety ...AJHSSR Journal
ABSTRACT: In the Malaysian context, small and medium enterprises (SMEs) experience a significant
burden of workplace accidents. A consensus among scholars attributes a substantial portion of these incidents to
human factors, particularly unsafe behaviors. This study, conducted in Malaysia's northern region, specifically
targeted Safety and Health/Human Resource professionals within the manufacturing sector of SMEs. We
gathered a robust dataset comprising 107 responses through a meticulously designed self-administered
questionnaire. Employing advanced partial least squares-structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) techniques
with SmartPLS 3.2.9, we rigorously analyzed the data to scrutinize the intricate relationship between safety
behavior and safety performance. The research findings unequivocally underscore the palpable and
consequential impact of safety behavior variables, namely safety compliance and safety participation, on
improving safety performance indicators such as accidents, injuries, and property damages. These results
strongly validate research hypotheses. Consequently, this study highlights the pivotal significance of cultivating
safety behavior among employees, particularly in resource-constrained SME settings, as an essential step toward
enhancing workplace safety performance.
KEYWORDS :Safety compliance, safety participation, safety performance, SME
This tutorial presentation offers a beginner-friendly guide to using THREADS, Instagram's messaging app. It covers the basics of account setup, privacy settings, and explores the core features such as close friends lists, photo and video sharing, creative tools, and status updates. With practical tips and instructions, this tutorial will empower you to use THREADS effectively and stay connected with your close friends on Instagram in a private and engaging way.
EASY TUTORIAL OF HOW TO USE G-TEAMS BY: FEBLESS HERNANEFebless Hernane
Using Google Teams (G-Teams) is simple. Start by opening the Google Teams app on your phone or visiting the G-Teams website on your computer. Sign in with your Google account. To join a meeting, click on the link shared by the organizer or enter the meeting code in the "Join a Meeting" section. To start a meeting, click on "New Meeting" and share the link with others. You can use the chat feature to send messages and the video button to turn your camera on or off. G-Teams makes it easy to connect and collaborate with others!
4. Some positive and negatives (Lupton, 2014)
• Connecting, establishing networks
• External to academia
• Promoting openness
• Sharing information
• Publicising research
• Development of research
• Receiving support
• Lack of privacy
• Blurring of boundaries
• Personal/professional use
• Risk of jeopardising career
prospects
• Lack of credibility
• Quality of content
• Time pressures
• Social media becoming an
obiligation
• Target of attacks
• Too much self-promotion
• Possible plagiarism
• Commercialisation of content
• Copyright issues
9. • Academic – working on social media and Big Data (methods)
• Have been studying social media for nearly a decade
• Sometime data journalist for The Guardian
• Co-author of the Data Journalism Handbook
• Led social media analysis of ‘Reading the Riots on Twitter’ (2.5M)
• Fellow recipient of inaugural Data Journalism Award (for Twitter
rumour visualization as part of Reading the Riots)
• Now: verification – spread on (mis)information online
• Key concern for the World Economic Forum (top ten trend for 2014)
• World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council for Social Media
• Border runner – talk/work across academia | government |
industry
• Advising various research councils on funding social media research
• New projects: Picturing the Social and Visual Social Media
Lab
• MA module (semester 2): Researching Social Media (40 students
2012/2013; 65 students 2013/2014; 75 students 2014/2015)
10. Picturing the Social: transforming our
understanding of images in social media and Big
Data research
ESRC Transformative Research grant
(18-months, started in September 2014)
Main aim: trying to understand new social worlds
12. The project topic screams out for interdisciplinarity!
Farida Vis (PI) – Media and Communication
Simon Faulkner – Art History/Visual Culture
James Aulich - Art History/Visual Culture
Olga Gorgiunova – Software Studies/Sociology
Mike Thelwall – Information Science/software
Francesco D’Orazio – Industry/Media/software
+ Anne Burns – Visual Culture / Media Studies
14. Creating social media content for the project
• News of funding confirmed: April
• Start of the project: September
• What needs to happen before September?
• Recruit an RA
• Start promoting the project
• Start developing an engagement strategy
• We want to share our work as widely as possible!
• Build a website
• Set up various social media accounts (+ Gmail)
• First conference in early November! Yikes!!!
18. In June: basic Blogger (still working on it!)
• Lab set up specifically
for engagement
purposes
• Different stakeholders
• Picturing the Social is
the Lab’s first project
• Lab will outlive project
• Interdisciplinary team
• International profile
20. Quick recap: what have we done so far?
• In run-up to project launch, we have:
• Set up some social media profiles
• Created some content and extra info
• Have launched the Visual Social Media Lab
• Have started engaging with key stakeholders
• Have started building community
• Have started engaging as early as
possible!!!
• Part of engagement strategy: tracking content
21. Using bit.ly to customise and track your links
Link Date # of shares
bit.ly/PtS_pressrelease 18 June 447
bit.ly/PicturingtheSocial_proposal 18 June 225
bit.ly/PtS_RApost 9 June 639
bit.ly/VisSocMedConf 6 October 362
bit.ly/VisSocMedConf_guide 31 October 194
bit.ly/VisSocMedConf_images 15 November 93
27. Turning attention to the conference
• Used EventBrite
• Included links to press
release and proposal
for info
• Easy to communicate
with participants
• Made a bit.ly link
• Event fully booked
within day of release
28. Turning attention to the conference
• Hired a graphic
designer to design:
• Conference poster
• Logo for the Lab
• Postcards for the Lab
• Conference booklet
• Shared all of this via
social media in run up
to conference
31. Set up further social media accounts
• Pinterest: to share images
• SoundCloud: to share audio files
• Storify: to share curated social media stories
• Slideshare: to share presentation slides
• NB – specifically linked to conference activities!
• For all: VisSocMedLab
• All through same Gmail account
• All same profile image and bio
32. Key conference engagement strategy
• Use social media to engage wide community
• Use social media to increase visibility
• Make active use of social media throughout
• Get as much help as possible (@SheffSocScience)
Some additional strategies
• Hire a photographer to take high quality images
• Invite bursary recipients to write blog posts
• Invite a conference ‘reviewer’ (high profile)
• Make a plan for wrangling all this content!
33. Key conference engagement strategy
• Aim 1: Share conference audio, slides and images
within 2 weeks of conference.
• How did we do? Uploaded audio and images!
• Due to huge popularity: will transcribe all talks.
• Aim 2: Get all content curated with 4 weeks of
conference. Write overall report and blog posts.
• How are we doing? Ok-ish. Should be doable!
* NB! Ask yourself if you have time to do all
this! *
34. Crucial: start promoting your hashtag early!
#socmed = anything to do with social media
#Shefsocmed = Sheffield research community
#wefsocmed = World Economic Forum council
#vissocmed = Visual social media research
#VisSocMedConf
35. #VisSocMedConf
• Use in all conference related bit.ly links:
• Eventbrite link: bit.ly/VisSocMedConf
• Made a list of all speakers’ Twitter handles
• Used Eventbrite to send final message to
participants: highlighted the hashtag, Twitter list
and promote the conference guide.
• Promoted the hashtag:
- Across social media accounts
- On the poster and in conference booklet
- On the day itself – first slide of conference!
44. Important to know upfront
Useful rule: Twitter data disappears after 7 days!
Collect your data straight away!
You can then process it when you have time
But… don’t wait too long to do this!
54. Beyond basic report: further analysis
Going beyond the basic engagement metrics
What are the key themes that were tweeted?
What did specific (important?) individuals tweet?
Any tweets/comments from people not at event?
How was event received? Any positive feedback?
55. Post event engagement: straight away
Publicly thank your speakers, audience and fellow
organisers, University, funders etc!
Seems obvious, but important not to forget!
Positive feedback: thank! Negative: address issues!
Manage expectations: when will content go online?
Anyone who missed out might be keen to know this!
79. Key things to think about
What can you do in the run up to your event?
Are you comfortable using social media?
If not, who might be able to help you?
Is your audience on social media?
80. Key things to think about
What do you need to do on the day of your event?
What are your engagement aims?
What is your time-frame for delivering these?
What do you need to do immediately/week/month
later?
81. Some of our outstanding jobs: with a month
Finish curating data on Storify (key archive)
Finish collecting all slides
Get all audio transcribed
Compile and share conference report
82. Some of our outstanding jobs: end of year
Finish our website!!!
Build database of key stakeholders
Send out first newsletter (MailChimp)
Write up report of engagement around first event
83. *** Save the date! 19 January 2015 ***
All day social media workshop
Social Media for engagement
Blogging for beginners
Measuring engagement
Altmetrics
Optional: Social media analytics for research