What are my needs in term of communication and how can I satisfy them? Landscape, starting from Cluetrain Manifesto and going through some definitions (Social media, in comparison with industrial media, social networks, networked publics).
How to create an effective message: my benefits, why customize and fix, usefulness of groups and habits, the importance of immediacy and schedule, the use of different communication techniques.
Finally we outline which rules are essential:• Conversational and listening rules • Blurring of public and private• Storytelling • Objectives, and how everything is summarized in the editorial plan.
Launch of product/company in term of communication, analyzing Robert Scoble’s recipe; Yellow Pages for startuppers (startup directories, tech magazines, magazines in your field/market, etc.). Discover on/off line resources, what is an incubator and what are certified incubators and which characteristics have public, private and university incubators. A new way to work – coworking - with its italian examples and finally some networking recurring events.
The importance of being communicative (vers. 2014)Frieda Brioschi
What are my needs in term of communication and how can I satisfy them? Landscape, starting from Cluetrain Manifesto and going through some definitions (Social media, in comparison with industrial media, social networks, networked publics).
How to create an effective message: my benefits, why customize and fix, usefulness of groups and habits, the importance of immediacy and schedule, the use of different communication techniques.
Finally we outline which rules are essential: conversational and listening rules, blurring of public and private, storytelling, objectives and how everything is summarized in the editorial plan.
Quali sono i miei bisogni in termini di comunicazione? Lo scenario attuale, partendo dal Cluetrain Manifesto e passando per un po' di definizioni (Social media vs industrial media, social networks, networked publics).
Come creare un messaggio efficace: benefici, personalizzazione, utilità dei gruppi e dei costumi, l'importanza dell'immediatezza e della schedulazione, l'uso di tecniche di comunicazione diverse.
Infine alcune regole essenziali: quelle di ascolto e di conversazione, la commistione tra pubblico e privato, lo storytelling, gli obbiettivi e come riassumere tutto nel piano editoriale.
Launch of product/company in term of communication, analyzing Robert Scoble’s recipe; Yellow Pages for startuppers (startup directories, tech magazines, magazines in your field/market, etc.). Discover on/off line resources, what is an incubator and what are certified incubators and which characteristics have public, private and university incubators. A new way to work – coworking - with its italian examples and finally some networking recurring events.
Coworking, Incubators, & Accelerators - What's the Difference?Paul O'Brien
As our experience with acquiring working capital evolves, from the comfort with risk on the part of VCs in your town shifting over time to the introduction of Crowdfunding as a serious source of capital, entrepreneurs everywhere are trying to understand not just how to connect, network, and collaborate, but how to develop relationships with the right investors. Incubators, accelerators, and coworking spaces are the place to start.
Finding the right fit for you as a person, your team, and your passion, is critical. To wit, the initial Boston operation of Y Combinator was closed out of frustration with New England’s typical investment style; making it difficult for Y Combinator’s consumer, web-based ventures to to receive funding.
Suggesting that where, precisely, matters more than if you get in, no?
To know where and how you fit, you have to explore your community from the 30,000 foot view and first ask why such resources exist. What role do coworking spaces, incubators, and accelerators play in your community? How do they benefit you? And why should you get involved?
Launch of product/company in term of communication, analyzing Robert Scoble’s recipe; Yellow Pages for startuppers (startup directories, tech magazines, magazines in your field/market, etc.). Discover on/off line resources, what is an incubator and what are certified incubators and which characteristics have public, private and university incubators. A new way to work – coworking - with its italian examples and finally some networking recurring events.
The importance of being communicative (vers. 2014)Frieda Brioschi
What are my needs in term of communication and how can I satisfy them? Landscape, starting from Cluetrain Manifesto and going through some definitions (Social media, in comparison with industrial media, social networks, networked publics).
How to create an effective message: my benefits, why customize and fix, usefulness of groups and habits, the importance of immediacy and schedule, the use of different communication techniques.
Finally we outline which rules are essential: conversational and listening rules, blurring of public and private, storytelling, objectives and how everything is summarized in the editorial plan.
Quali sono i miei bisogni in termini di comunicazione? Lo scenario attuale, partendo dal Cluetrain Manifesto e passando per un po' di definizioni (Social media vs industrial media, social networks, networked publics).
Come creare un messaggio efficace: benefici, personalizzazione, utilità dei gruppi e dei costumi, l'importanza dell'immediatezza e della schedulazione, l'uso di tecniche di comunicazione diverse.
Infine alcune regole essenziali: quelle di ascolto e di conversazione, la commistione tra pubblico e privato, lo storytelling, gli obbiettivi e come riassumere tutto nel piano editoriale.
Launch of product/company in term of communication, analyzing Robert Scoble’s recipe; Yellow Pages for startuppers (startup directories, tech magazines, magazines in your field/market, etc.). Discover on/off line resources, what is an incubator and what are certified incubators and which characteristics have public, private and university incubators. A new way to work – coworking - with its italian examples and finally some networking recurring events.
Coworking, Incubators, & Accelerators - What's the Difference?Paul O'Brien
As our experience with acquiring working capital evolves, from the comfort with risk on the part of VCs in your town shifting over time to the introduction of Crowdfunding as a serious source of capital, entrepreneurs everywhere are trying to understand not just how to connect, network, and collaborate, but how to develop relationships with the right investors. Incubators, accelerators, and coworking spaces are the place to start.
Finding the right fit for you as a person, your team, and your passion, is critical. To wit, the initial Boston operation of Y Combinator was closed out of frustration with New England’s typical investment style; making it difficult for Y Combinator’s consumer, web-based ventures to to receive funding.
Suggesting that where, precisely, matters more than if you get in, no?
To know where and how you fit, you have to explore your community from the 30,000 foot view and first ask why such resources exist. What role do coworking spaces, incubators, and accelerators play in your community? How do they benefit you? And why should you get involved?
Creative Commons Open Business Models, Case Studies, & FindingsPaul_Stacey
Presentation given at Open Education Conference 2015 in Vancouver British Columbia, November 19, 2015.
Description: In March of 2015, with support from the Hewlett Foundation, Creative Commons launched an open business model initiative aimed squarely at showing how Creative Commons licenses can, and are, used by business, nonprofits and governments. This initiative emerged out of a need to show how organizations and creators can produce OER and other Creative Commons licensed works in a way that generates social good in sustainable and financially sound ways.
Creative Commons open business model initiative is being done in an interactive community-based way using an open business model canvas and an online community for sharing and discussion. Creative Commons directly collaborates with organizations using a process that supports both autonomous and collaborative design, development of open business model designs, and ensuing analysis of the results.
In this panel presentation, organizations who worked with Creative Commons to generate an open business model will share their experience. They will describe their motivations, explain how they engaged in the Creative Commons open business model process, outline what they learned, and reveal new opportunities and directions they took as a result.
Creative Commons will describe the tools and processes it used and how those tools and processes evolved and changed through community interaction. Latest versions of tools and process will be compared to starting ones and made available to all participants. Analysis insights from both panel organizations and Creative Commons will be shared.
Creative Commons will outline open business models lessons learned, the types and categories of open business models that emerged, and summarize key findings. Next steps, opportunities for participation and future plans will be described.
Attendees of this session will gain:
- an understanding of the open business model initiative and process
- hands on access to the open business model canvas and other tools they can use to develop their own open business model
- knowledge and insights into how open business models work
- strategies and tactics they can incorporate into their own open business model initiative
- the opportunity to get involved in the initiative in an open and collaborative way
Nos desglosa como crear un Coworking eficiente con el ejemplo de Xindanwei (nueva unidad de trabajo), un Coworking establecido en Shanghai. Nos explica la experiencia de este centro y nos detalla que acciones han tomado para llegar hasta donde han llegado.
Open business models workshop for tech startups and companies at University of Porto Science and Technology Park in Portugal on October 22, 2015. Done as a citizens lab workshop in conjunction with futureplaces.
Without model foster open collab and resp business modelsWithoutModel
To face current challenges, new business models emerge. They are opened, collaborative and responsible. Without Model is an action tank dedicated to foster such models
These slides were shown at the CAMentrepreneurs Launch in Cambridge on 24th October 2019
https://camentrepreneurs26.eventbrite.co.uk
which was described like this.
This free event is to launch CAMentrepreneurs in Cambridge. Since our launch CAMentrepreneurs have had 23 meetups around the world, in Dubai, Edinburgh, Glasgow, London, New York, Sydney and Warsaw. Now we are launching in Cambridge. For our global entrepreneurial diaspora, we will be showcasing some of the many pro-enterprise people active in the Cambridge Entrepreneurial Eco System. For the thriving Cambridge based pro-Enterprise Community we will introduce entrepreneurs from around the world and help explain how they can benefit from the CAMentrepreneurs network.
www.alumni.cam.ac.uk/group/camentrepreneurs
The study was based on qualitative interviews to different members of the startup community, including entrepreneurs, mentors, investors, incubators, event organizers and government officials.
The resulting report provided a comprehensive view of the state of entrepreneurship in Costa Rica including determinants such as culture, the startup community, the entrepreneur, the startup and funding.
Role of the business accelerators in smart startup development. Results of MB...Riga High Tech University
10:00, 14 July 2015, Altum conference room, 4 Doma laukums, Riga
Half-day conference
Venture Capital for tech startups in Latvia 2015. Demand vs supply
Details:
http://www.labsoflatvia.com/events/venture-capital-for-tech-startups-in-latvia-2015-demand-vs-supply-2
The Center for Entrepreneurial Innovation (CEI) is a leading business incubator in Phoenix, Arizona, providing services and support to tech entrepreneurs in the region. This presentation, from Susie Pulido of the Maricopa Corporate College, will showcase how to build a incubation program and facility that offers relevance for startup companies for optimal impact and also diversified revenue streams for sustainability. *Note: This presentation was first given at the National Association for Community College Entrepreneurship (NACCE) 2015 Annual Conference in Houston, Texas; October 2015.
Innovation is everywhere - Hong Kong Innovation Ecosystem and Startup SceneInnovation is Everywhere
Hong Kong is dubbed "Asia's world city", and would also love to be the tech capital of the most dynamic and populous region of the world, halfway between the North Asia giant (China, South Korea, Japan) and the fast-growing South-East Asia (Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam...).
With 8m inhabitants, a British past and a recent come-back into China, can Hong Kong be the hub it is already financially? To be true, there's a world between Hong Kong and China, and it makes of the city-island-state-special administrative area quite an isolated dot.
Of course, the manufacture and financial history and expertise of the city can be seen quite vividly in its startup scene, where "fintech" is quite advanced.
In this review, you will see how Hong Kong has turned into an innovation hub mostly thanks to a small community of determined entrepreneurs, its best practices as an ecosystem, and its strengths and weaknesses as well.
Read more about us as we roam the world to explore the emerging markets startups scenes, from Iran to Chile, from China to Nigeria.
Reach us at: martin@innovationiseverywhere
www.innovationiseverywhere.com
Sandra Schön (Salzburg Research) presents the paper co-authored by Christian Voigt (Zentrum für Soziale Innovation) and Radovana Jagrikova (Youth Pro Aktiv) "Social innovations within makerspace settings for early entrepreneurial education - The DOIT project" at the international EDmedia conference in Amsterdam on 2018-06-28.
Innovation is Everywhere - Hong Kong innovation ecosystemAgence Tesla
Hong Kong is a very particular place in China. After a long British rule, it's "Chinese" again, but keeps its identity as the financial hub of Asia.
How Hong Kong is trying to become a startup Hub for both China and Asia? What are the best practices of the local tech ecosystem? What are the startups to remember?
Mixing an analysis of the history of technological innovation, present-day trends and identifying both top connectors and good ideas to foster entrepreneurship, this report aims to give a broad overview of what's happening in Hong Kong right now in 2014.
Innovation is Everywhere is a project where we visit one country per month to discover, explore and share stories on local innovation, startup, and the tech ecosystem.
Follow us on www.innovationiseverywhere.com to get more reports, we also publish our news in tech blogs here and there.
Creative Commons Open Business Models, Case Studies, & FindingsPaul_Stacey
Presentation given at Open Education Conference 2015 in Vancouver British Columbia, November 19, 2015.
Description: In March of 2015, with support from the Hewlett Foundation, Creative Commons launched an open business model initiative aimed squarely at showing how Creative Commons licenses can, and are, used by business, nonprofits and governments. This initiative emerged out of a need to show how organizations and creators can produce OER and other Creative Commons licensed works in a way that generates social good in sustainable and financially sound ways.
Creative Commons open business model initiative is being done in an interactive community-based way using an open business model canvas and an online community for sharing and discussion. Creative Commons directly collaborates with organizations using a process that supports both autonomous and collaborative design, development of open business model designs, and ensuing analysis of the results.
In this panel presentation, organizations who worked with Creative Commons to generate an open business model will share their experience. They will describe their motivations, explain how they engaged in the Creative Commons open business model process, outline what they learned, and reveal new opportunities and directions they took as a result.
Creative Commons will describe the tools and processes it used and how those tools and processes evolved and changed through community interaction. Latest versions of tools and process will be compared to starting ones and made available to all participants. Analysis insights from both panel organizations and Creative Commons will be shared.
Creative Commons will outline open business models lessons learned, the types and categories of open business models that emerged, and summarize key findings. Next steps, opportunities for participation and future plans will be described.
Attendees of this session will gain:
- an understanding of the open business model initiative and process
- hands on access to the open business model canvas and other tools they can use to develop their own open business model
- knowledge and insights into how open business models work
- strategies and tactics they can incorporate into their own open business model initiative
- the opportunity to get involved in the initiative in an open and collaborative way
Nos desglosa como crear un Coworking eficiente con el ejemplo de Xindanwei (nueva unidad de trabajo), un Coworking establecido en Shanghai. Nos explica la experiencia de este centro y nos detalla que acciones han tomado para llegar hasta donde han llegado.
Open business models workshop for tech startups and companies at University of Porto Science and Technology Park in Portugal on October 22, 2015. Done as a citizens lab workshop in conjunction with futureplaces.
Without model foster open collab and resp business modelsWithoutModel
To face current challenges, new business models emerge. They are opened, collaborative and responsible. Without Model is an action tank dedicated to foster such models
These slides were shown at the CAMentrepreneurs Launch in Cambridge on 24th October 2019
https://camentrepreneurs26.eventbrite.co.uk
which was described like this.
This free event is to launch CAMentrepreneurs in Cambridge. Since our launch CAMentrepreneurs have had 23 meetups around the world, in Dubai, Edinburgh, Glasgow, London, New York, Sydney and Warsaw. Now we are launching in Cambridge. For our global entrepreneurial diaspora, we will be showcasing some of the many pro-enterprise people active in the Cambridge Entrepreneurial Eco System. For the thriving Cambridge based pro-Enterprise Community we will introduce entrepreneurs from around the world and help explain how they can benefit from the CAMentrepreneurs network.
www.alumni.cam.ac.uk/group/camentrepreneurs
The study was based on qualitative interviews to different members of the startup community, including entrepreneurs, mentors, investors, incubators, event organizers and government officials.
The resulting report provided a comprehensive view of the state of entrepreneurship in Costa Rica including determinants such as culture, the startup community, the entrepreneur, the startup and funding.
Role of the business accelerators in smart startup development. Results of MB...Riga High Tech University
10:00, 14 July 2015, Altum conference room, 4 Doma laukums, Riga
Half-day conference
Venture Capital for tech startups in Latvia 2015. Demand vs supply
Details:
http://www.labsoflatvia.com/events/venture-capital-for-tech-startups-in-latvia-2015-demand-vs-supply-2
The Center for Entrepreneurial Innovation (CEI) is a leading business incubator in Phoenix, Arizona, providing services and support to tech entrepreneurs in the region. This presentation, from Susie Pulido of the Maricopa Corporate College, will showcase how to build a incubation program and facility that offers relevance for startup companies for optimal impact and also diversified revenue streams for sustainability. *Note: This presentation was first given at the National Association for Community College Entrepreneurship (NACCE) 2015 Annual Conference in Houston, Texas; October 2015.
Innovation is everywhere - Hong Kong Innovation Ecosystem and Startup SceneInnovation is Everywhere
Hong Kong is dubbed "Asia's world city", and would also love to be the tech capital of the most dynamic and populous region of the world, halfway between the North Asia giant (China, South Korea, Japan) and the fast-growing South-East Asia (Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam...).
With 8m inhabitants, a British past and a recent come-back into China, can Hong Kong be the hub it is already financially? To be true, there's a world between Hong Kong and China, and it makes of the city-island-state-special administrative area quite an isolated dot.
Of course, the manufacture and financial history and expertise of the city can be seen quite vividly in its startup scene, where "fintech" is quite advanced.
In this review, you will see how Hong Kong has turned into an innovation hub mostly thanks to a small community of determined entrepreneurs, its best practices as an ecosystem, and its strengths and weaknesses as well.
Read more about us as we roam the world to explore the emerging markets startups scenes, from Iran to Chile, from China to Nigeria.
Reach us at: martin@innovationiseverywhere
www.innovationiseverywhere.com
Sandra Schön (Salzburg Research) presents the paper co-authored by Christian Voigt (Zentrum für Soziale Innovation) and Radovana Jagrikova (Youth Pro Aktiv) "Social innovations within makerspace settings for early entrepreneurial education - The DOIT project" at the international EDmedia conference in Amsterdam on 2018-06-28.
Innovation is Everywhere - Hong Kong innovation ecosystemAgence Tesla
Hong Kong is a very particular place in China. After a long British rule, it's "Chinese" again, but keeps its identity as the financial hub of Asia.
How Hong Kong is trying to become a startup Hub for both China and Asia? What are the best practices of the local tech ecosystem? What are the startups to remember?
Mixing an analysis of the history of technological innovation, present-day trends and identifying both top connectors and good ideas to foster entrepreneurship, this report aims to give a broad overview of what's happening in Hong Kong right now in 2014.
Innovation is Everywhere is a project where we visit one country per month to discover, explore and share stories on local innovation, startup, and the tech ecosystem.
Follow us on www.innovationiseverywhere.com to get more reports, we also publish our news in tech blogs here and there.
This Power Point presentation will give you the basic guidelines as well the main and most important aspects to be considered when testing and evaluating Grammar among your students.
a presentation to discuss the role of an english teacher in a communicative language teaching class, especially one teaching functional english to graduate students.
A brief summary of the Test Methods and Test Facets affecting testing performance (Source: Fundamental Considerations in Language Testing - Lyle F. Bachman)
Why should I communicate? Which are my needs?
We analyze the current landscape, starting from Cluetrain Manifesto, through some definitions (Social media vs industrial media, social networks, networked publics).
How we can create an effective message: personalization, groups, behaviours, communities, immediacy, perfect timing, different techniques and styles.
Then some essential rules, regarding listen and conversation, the blur between public and private, storytelling, goals and how I can sum it up in my editorial plan.
Digital Space Consulting presentation for LHH - Dallas, Texas. Digital marketing approach including social media, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, SEO, content marketing, content strategy, market intelligence, social amplification, social listening, online media budget, and social strategy.
Connecting and Communicating in the New Media Landscape – all the tools you need to succeed in the world of Twitter, Facebook, Linked in and more.
Also visit: http://masstrafficleads.com
All professionals must plan their social media strategy. If you are not an active participant or knowledgeable about the world of social media, how will you respond to needs, stay current, and brand yourself offline? Is this approach possible or effective? Are you aware of how or if your organization uses social media analytics? Innovative businesses are always looking for new ways to encourage loyalty, build relationships, and respond to customer needs. Social media analytics gives organizations a snapshot of these needs with insights gained from online conversations. New technology has the capacity to capture customer information with remarkable power to impact and drive revenue. Social Media Analytics uses social listening and predictive analytic techniques that help corporations manage the brand and reputation of products and services. This workshop will increase your knowledge and awareness of social media analytics and explore new and innovative social media strategies that impact professional and business productivity.
Learning Outcomes: This workshop will explore effective tools, for building, interpreting and using social media to increase professional and corporate effectiveness
At the end of this workshop, participants will be able to:
a) Explore how social media helps corporation predict trends
b) Examine how information and data is analyzed
c) Identify which types of industries can benefit from social media analytics
d) Explore trends and innovation around social media for business outcomes and professional development
Nicholas Standage - PAU Education - Blogging, µicroblogging and the top 3Web2LLP
Second session of the Web2LLP pilot for the online training course on web strategies and maximising the social media presence of Lifelong Learning Projects.
Topic: Selecting and choosing social media tools
Author: Nicholas Standage
Website: web2llp.eu /training/pilot-online-session-2-tools
My talk from the Construction Leadership Network's Inaugural Conference on May 16, 2016. Two common objections to initiating an aggressive social media strategy are 1) the amount of time they expect to invest, and 2) the inability to find or create content. This presentation eliminates those objections with clear and easy to follow "hacks", as well as tips and rules to make sure that the time spent on a social media strategy will yield maximum results.
Session 2: Nicholas Standage (PAU) Blogging, µicroblogging and the top 3Web2LLP
Second session of the Web2LLP online training course on web strategies and maximising the social media presence of Lifelong Learning Projects.
Topic: Blogging, µicroblogging and the top 3
Author: Nicholas Standage (PAU Education)
Website: http://www.web2llp.eu/training/online-session-2-tools
Online communication channels and how social media working now days. Best way to do digital marketing with the selection of correct audience and approachable social sides. Don't forget to follow 3E's of marketing for positive response.
Recap on storytelling.
We analyze the current landscape, starting from Cluetrain Manifesto, through some definitions (social networks, networked publics).
How we can create an effective message: personalization, groups, behaviours, communities, immediacy, perfect timing, different techniques and styles.
Then some essential rules, regarding listen and conversation, the blur between public and private, goals.
The age of artificial intelligence, deep dives on machine learning and deep learning. Machine perception and applications. How company use AI in their businesses. Case study: Netflix.
Storytelling fundamentals (from Propp to Andrea Fontana) and examples. Marketing perspectives on storytelling. Storytelling with data techniques. Hints and examples
Visual communication of qualitative and quantitative data (v. 2021 ITA)Frieda Brioschi
Visual systems and preattentive attributes. Quantitative data visualization, chart selector. Some useful tactics. Qualitative data definition and examples. Qualitative metaphors. Data visualization & journalism. Common kinds: mind maps, flow diagrams, words cloud, user journey, tube map, maps. Qualitative chart chooser.
Survivorship bias applied to information. Cognition, how we learn, sensation and perception, experience. Human sight and visual perception, visual memory. Gestalt principles. Machine perception.
Linked Data and examples, why they matter. Data driven strategies. Data mining: laws and applications. Data aggregation and fundamentals of data representation (table, bar chart, histogram, pie chart, line graph, scatter plot). Data science definition and job roles (who does what).
Introduction to data classification. Back to origins: history of libraries and their classification methods. Some examples of classification in different areas.
How to collect and organize data (v. ITA 2021)Frieda Brioschi
Overview on data collection methods and a deep dive on data (primary Vs secondary, qualitative and quantitative). Bias. Data processing and structured, unstructured, semistructured data. Example of personal data tracking.
The age of artificial intelligence, deep dives on machine learning and deep learning. Machine perception and applications. How company use AI in their businesses. Case study: Netflix. Basic tools for data manipulation and data visualization.
Recap on storytelling.
We analyze the current landscape, starting from Cluetrain Manifesto, through some definitions (social networks, networked publics).
How we can create an effective message: personalization, groups, behaviours, communities, immediacy, perfect timing, different techniques and styles.
Then some essential rules, regarding listen and conversation, the blur between public and private, goals.
Storytelling fundamentals (from Propp to Andrea Fontana) and examples. Marketing perspectives on storytelling. Storytelling with data techniques. Hints and examples
Visual communication of qualitative data (v. 2020 ITA)Frieda Brioschi
Qualitative data definition and examples. Qualitative metaphors. Data visualization & journalism. Common kinds: mind maps, flow diagrams, words cloud, user journey, tube map, maps. Qualitative chart chooser
Visual communication of quantitative data (v. 2020 ITA)Frieda Brioschi
Quantitative and qualitative data recap. Visual systems and preattentive attributes. Quantitative data visualization, chart selector. Some useful tactics.
Survivorship bias applied to information. Cognition, how we learn, sensation and perception, experience. Human sight and visual perception, visual memory. Gestalt principles. Machine perception.
Data mining, phases of the data mining process and its laws (according to Thomas Khabaza). Classical data aggregation, summary statistics and fundamental representation (tables, bar charts, histograms, pie charts, line graphs). Introduction to data science: definition, applications, process and roles.
Linked Data and examples, why they matter. Data driven strategies. Data mining: laws and applications. Data aggregation and fundamentals of data representation (table, bar chart, histogram, pie chart, line graph, scatter plot). Data science definition and job roles (who does what).
Introduction to data classification. Back to origins: history of libraries and their classification methods. Some examples of classification in different areas.
How to collect and organize data (v. ITA 2020)Frieda Brioschi
Overview on data collection methods and a deep dive on data (primary Vs secondary, qualitative and quantitative). Bias. Data processing and structured, unstructured, semistructured data. Example of personal data tracking.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
Synthetic Fiber Construction in lab .pptxPavel ( NSTU)
Synthetic fiber production is a fascinating and complex field that blends chemistry, engineering, and environmental science. By understanding these aspects, students can gain a comprehensive view of synthetic fiber production, its impact on society and the environment, and the potential for future innovations. Synthetic fibers play a crucial role in modern society, impacting various aspects of daily life, industry, and the environment. ynthetic fibers are integral to modern life, offering a range of benefits from cost-effectiveness and versatility to innovative applications and performance characteristics. While they pose environmental challenges, ongoing research and development aim to create more sustainable and eco-friendly alternatives. Understanding the importance of synthetic fibers helps in appreciating their role in the economy, industry, and daily life, while also emphasizing the need for sustainable practices and innovation.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
We all have good and bad thoughts from time to time and situation to situation. We are bombarded daily with spiraling thoughts(both negative and positive) creating all-consuming feel , making us difficult to manage with associated suffering. Good thoughts are like our Mob Signal (Positive thought) amidst noise(negative thought) in the atmosphere. Negative thoughts like noise outweigh positive thoughts. These thoughts often create unwanted confusion, trouble, stress and frustration in our mind as well as chaos in our physical world. Negative thoughts are also known as “distorted thinking”.
The French Revolution, which began in 1789, was a period of radical social and political upheaval in France. It marked the decline of absolute monarchies, the rise of secular and democratic republics, and the eventual rise of Napoleon Bonaparte. This revolutionary period is crucial in understanding the transition from feudalism to modernity in Europe.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
The Art Pastor's Guide to Sabbath | Steve ThomasonSteve Thomason
What is the purpose of the Sabbath Law in the Torah. It is interesting to compare how the context of the law shifts from Exodus to Deuteronomy. Who gets to rest, and why?
2. Course program
1. Italian Startups
2. Set up a startup in Italy
3. I've got an idea. And now?
4. Value analysis
5. Business model
6. Communicate, communicate, communicate
7. Being net
8. Find your market
9. Funding: venture capital, business angel and other
ways of financing
10. Pitch
3. Today's table of content
1.Needs
2.Landscape
3.Effective message
4.Rules of engagement
5.Editorial plan
4. Business model: quick recap
During last lesson we discussed what is a business
model and how fulfill a business model canvas,
looking into each part:
1.Value proposition
2.Customer segments
3.Channels
4.Customer relationship
5.Revenue streams
6.Key resources
7.Key partner
8.Key activities
9.Cost structure
5. Business model: quick recap
Then we detailed some wellknown companies business
model:
• Coca Cola (glass bottle!)
• Financial Times
• LinkedIn
• Groupon
• Twitter
• Facebook
• Blockbuster
• Google
6. Business model: quick recap
In the end we touched community business model
(geographically based, professional and online
communities) and what is a business plan and how is
diverse from a business model.
8. Discuss & test my idea
[mini]marketing approach to Rich Aberman’s “How to
(In)validate Your Startup Idea”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZ0s1gbMlcI
http://blog.wepay.com/2010/12/17/how-to-invalidate-your-startup-idea/
10. Where are we?
"A powerful global conversation has begun. Through the
Internet, people are discovering and inventing new ways to
share relevant knowledge with blinding speed. As a direct
result, markets are getting smarter—and getting smarter
faster than most companies."
Cluetrain Manifesto, 1999
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluetrain_Manifesto
11. Social Vs industrial media
Some parameters:
1.Reach: global audience
2.Accessibility: government or corporate (privately
owned)/generally available to the public at little or no cost
3.Usability: specialized skills and training/anyone with access
can operate the means of social media production
4.Immediacy: instantaneous, days, weeks, or even
months/instantaneous
5.Permanence: cannot be altered/can be altered almost
instantaneously by comments or editing
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_media
12. Social media
Online technologies and practices that people use to share
text, image, video and audio.
Andreas Kaplan and Michael Haenlein define social media as
"a group of Internet-based applications that build on the
ideological and technological foundations of Web 2.0, and that
allow the creation and exchange of user-generated content."
They represent a change in how people learn, read and share
information and contents: a blend between sociology and
technology takes place and it tranforms a monologue (1-to-
many) into a dialogue (many-to-many) and information result
democratized, transforming persons from users to editors.
13. Social network
Danah Boyd and Nicole Ellison define a social network as "a
web-based services that allow individuals to
1.construct a public or semi-public profile within a bounded
system,
2.articulate a list of other users with whom they share a
connection, and
3.view and traverse their list of connections and those made
by others within the system.
The nature and nomenclature of these connections may vary
from site to site.”
http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol13/issue1/boyd.ellison.html
14. Networked publics/1
According to Danah Boyd, social network sites can be
understood as networked publics which are simultaneously
• the space constructed through networked technologies and
• the imagined community that emerges as a result of the
intersection of people, technology, and practice
http://www.danah.org/papers/TakenOutOfContext.pdf
15. Networked publics/2
Four properties:
1. persistence
2. searchability
3. replicability
4. scalability
Three dynamics:
• invisible audiences
• collapsed contexts
• the blurring of public and private
http://www.danah.org/papers/TakenOutOfContext.pdf
29. Why?
If I write in a well-aimed and simple manner, I can
obtain a double effect since:
• my contents are shared by my followers and can
reach a wider audience
• my pagerank, and generally the presence of my
brand on search engines, will increase
30. Customizing
Pages and profiles should always be customized and
complete, since they're my public presentation.
I need to include at least:
• a photo (my logo?)
• a cover image
• some information about me/my company.
31. Fixing
I can always modify my post: if (when!) I discover an
error, I must fix it as soon as possible.
Besides, remember to add "content" to your posts, by
including your opinion/doubts and not just publishing
useful links.
32. Continuity
Try to publish fresh news at least once a day...
...but not too often.
Information overflow is a problem!
33. Groups
Join groups, since there you may:
•Find useful info
•Take part in discussions
•Find customers/partners/etc.
Don't use groups ONLY as an adverting place,
spamming is unfair (and often backfires).
34. Habits
Learn local habits and adopt them, or help in creating
new habits.
Such as...
• Friday on Twitter is Follow Friday #FF.
• Thursday on Google+ is the moment to share
interesting circles.
35. Immediacy
Try to create immediate content: text and images are
quick, few videos are ok, watch out for external links.
36. Time & day
During early morning and after dinner the online
information flow is lower: I've more chance that my
message reach my public.
For the same reason, Sunday is a great moment for
publishing new contents.
But, mind!...
37. Time & day /2
...That is not always true!
Some social media (Reddit, Friendfeed) rely on word
of mouth to keep the focus on a news piece.
If you write when too few people is there to read and
“up” your post, it will fade out quickly.
Be aware that some websites have more public during the working
hours, some are more active in the night, some are more
continuous (especially if they have a worldwide community).
38. Concise
Pay attention to lenght!
The message should be clear but not too long.
Length is related to which medium I'm using.
•Twitter: 140 chars
•Facebook: Few lines
•Blog: Few paragraphs
•Newspaper: Few pages
39. Diversifying
Remember that you can use as many ways of
communicating as possible: beyond text/image/video,
you can involve people with photo galleries and polls.
In some settings, sound, lights and movement are
great attention catalysts.
Think of Steve Job's Keynotes!
40. URL shortener
Better avoided.
With a visible link, the user knows what to expect
once he clicks.
If they are really needed, use an URL shortener that
allows to give a custom name to your links.
Consider that some security systems blocks URL
shorteners and redirects in order to prevent malware
exploits.
44. Listening
Listening is not only a matter of courtesy, but a powerful
instrument that can let you:
• Discover the environment and its opinion leaders
• Measure the “sentiment” of a brand/product and its
competitors
• Improve the management of communication, especially on
social media
• Enhance CRM
45. Roles
Present yourself with an official profile whenever needed.
If you want a more direct and involving communication, set up
some personal profiles for your key figures.
Human relations are more pleasant and well received.
47. Rules
External
Rules of engagement for my readers
• Moderation
• Etiquette
• Stay in topic
Internal
• Your communication must be uniform
• Decide who decides what
• Keep a regular schedule
• Make clear who should answer
48. Spreading
The channels I oversee (not necessarily the channels I own)
must be advertised and the word spread: on your website,
newsletters and events.
Linking a company profile to a “person” (true or fake) profile
could be a plus.
Your employees/partners could be your best presentation.
49. Press release
Include your social channels in the press releases!
(mostly FB and Twitter)
Text should be thought out to be shared, too.
50. Objectives
To make measured evaluations, you need targets:
• Increase the number of followers
• Increase the daily interactions
• Increase the percentage of readers coming to the website
from Social Networks
• Increase the number of subscribers coming from SNs
51. Tecniques
• Observe and copy what you think interesting
• Answer. At least once a day. Readers must not always be
the first to interact, must they?
• Sometimes, share informations not strictly correlated to your
business
• Be personal, impersonal is not sexy
• Keep in mind that a question mark every now and then is
important.
52. Storytelling
Use SNs to tell stories, not only the core of your business.
If you set up an event, tell something about it, its background,
challenges, successes etc.
Create expectations (and meet them).
Narrate the everyday life of the company: a photo of the team,
a personal touch...
53. Get a plan!
To make a good plan, you need:
1. Analysis
2. Strategy
3. Action
3bis. Luck!
54. Analysis
Is anyone talking about me online?
Where? How?
(is the presence on that channel worthy?)
What do my competitors do?
What they do well?
What can I learn from them?
55. Strategy
What channel I decided to oversee?
What are the targets for each channel?
BE SMART (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant,
Timed)
56. Actions
Actions must not be unrelated from each other.
Integration is the word: newsletter, websites, events, all the
ways of communications must be coordinated.