Tag Archive 'video'

Jun 30 2010

Igniting Communities – Google Fiber Case Study

Published by Amybeth (@researchgoddess) under Social

Last Wednesday, our Bellingham Social Media group met to discuss the recent bid our community made for Google’s Fiber For Communities program. Our presenters and panelists were Scott Pierce, a local content strategist, Nathan Carnes, principal of Carnes Media, and David Wiggs, a marketing professional and founder of Hitch. These three men, along with many other Bellingham residents, each took a keen interest in this project. The city commissioned Hand Crank Films to create a video to send to Google with our interest in this program – the video has stirred emotion in many local residents and was even featured on CBS News. We were fortunate to have Traci Hahn of Trac 2.0 Productions filming this presentation. You can view it in 10 minute segments with the following links:

The purpose of this discussion was for the panelists to share their involvement in this project as well as to discuss some of the bigger lessons that were learned from pursuing this campaign. Overall, the theme was community:  where to reach it, how to get it involved, and what to do next.

Scott shared the importance of reaching community where it already exists. Some of the things the guys learned in developing a grog (group blog) was that there was already a community developing on Facebook to support Bellingham’s bid, and that the platform chosen to host the group blog was a little buggy and made it difficult for people to participate. Scott played a big role in encouraging community participation through various online channels, which included going to this growing Facebook community because that’s where a lot of support had already been established.

David, a traditional marketing professional, encouraged other local creative agencies to get involved and shared with them the benefits of participation – getting their creative work in front of not only potential new clients, but also in front of the eyes of the executives at Google. He also said that it is important to ask your communities what is important to them before you try to decide for them.

Nathan developed a cool site called BellinghamAtlas to supplement the other efforts being put forth by the Bellingham community that was ignited by the campaign. The site is a place for people to upload photos or videos that are geotagged around the city to show why Google should bring fiber to Bellingham. This was yet another online resource where community came together for a singular cause.

What lessons can you learn from this effort for your own community? Whether we’re talking about online communities or actual neighborhoods, many of the lessons are the same. Most importantly, let people know what they’re getting involved in – asking them to participate without letting them know what’s in it for them is like asking someone to give you money without telling them what it’s for. (that’s called robbery in many cases!) Also, make sure you find out what the community wants and don’t just do what you think the community wants. It’s easier to get support for a group effort when the effort encompasses things that the community has share that it wants or needs. And lastly, keep the effort going. Even if Bellingham does not win this bid, those leading the charge have done extensive research into how to actually bring fiber to our community. We’ve got the information and most certainly will do something with it. And, for a city that is nicknamed ‘The City of Subdued Excitement’, to get the community to rally together like this is incredible, so we’re looking to keep the ball rolling!

How has your local or online community come together for a cause? What are some of the actions you’ve taken to get people more engaged in community efforts? I’d love to hear your stories – please share them in the comments below!

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Feb 19 2010

I’m On A List

As T-Pain would say – “Never thought I’d be on a boat….” – except that I never thought I’d be on a list. :) Especially considering how much I really don’t care for lists. I find it ironic that I am now on one.

However, I am humbled and honored to be considered a Top 25 Most Influential Online Recruiter, based on John Sumser’s latest post. I’m actually a researcher, though my colleague Chris Hoyt keeps telling me that there’s more recruiter in me than I’d like to admit (I’ll never admit it!). As such, I guess there’s no denying certain aspects of oneself, so thanks for including me in this list, John!

So while I go grab my flippy-floppies and have some santana champ, I encourage you to check out the others who made the list. Oh, and look at T-Pain On A Boat, just because it’s a hilarious video (send the kids out of the room though because the lyrics are rough!)

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Nov 25 2009

From Current – Linked In… To What?

Published by Amybeth (@researchgoddess) under Social

“We gotta lock-in the Linked In’zzz…” I couldn’t pass on this awesome video from Current, discussing LinkedIn. The song at the end is hilarious (“you got to link yo’ ass up!”) and there are some valid points regarding recommendations and what people actually do/don’t do on LinkedIn. However – I’m disturbed by the portrayal of the ‘head-hunter’… is that how you all really view us recruiting professionals? If so – we need to seriously clean up our act. Enjoy!

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Sep 17 2009

Social Media Revolution

Published by Amybeth (@researchgoddess) under Social

Awesome video, based on research from the new book Socialnomics. One of my favorite stats is the one about Facebook being the 4th largest country in the world if you counted its members as citizens, and yet China’s QZone is larger, with over 300MM users. Wake-up call for those who’ve never even heard of QZone. Social Media extends w-a-a-a-a-y beyond the Western Hemisphere and is much, much more sophisticated and far-reaching than what most of us could have ever imagined.

Of note:

  • 80% of companies are using LinkedIn as their primary tool to find employees
  • 80% of Twitter usage is on mobile devices
  • 25% of search results for the world’s top 20 largest brands are links to user-generated content (if you think you own your brand, you are sadly mistaken!)
  • Only 14% of consumers trust advertisements
  • Successful companies in social media act more like party planners, aggregators, and content providers than traditional advertisers.

This is the future, folks! You can either accept it and try to adapt, or you can get left in the dust. It’s your choice.

This video contains some updated stats from the original Did You Know? video based on research done by Karl Fisch, Scott McLeod, and Jeff Brenman. Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sIFYPQjYhv8]

(hat-tip to my colleague Rowno for passing this along to me)

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