What Would You Do?

cornish adventure centre

I’ve been thinking a lot recently about how we can get more people involved with more things that touch the Social Media Mafia. It’s always been one of my aims, to be as inclusive as possible, to facilitate a community that actually “does stuff”. I think we’ve done that time and time again with various events over the years, what with all the unconfrences we’ve held. But, now, I’m thinking more about differing ways to get the community involved on-line.

When I started the Social Media Mafia many years ago I used to give the community (or, The Family, as it is affectionately known) a mission every now and then. Often this mission would take the form of “Digg” this page (remember that service?) or pop along and leave a comment here or there. In actual fact I think this type of activity was pretty well received and enjoyed by a large percentage of The Family, certainly judging from the responses each time.

So, yes, I really do believe a community does actually want to take part, to get involved and to “do stuff”.  So with this in mind I will endeavour to ask the community for their thoughts on real-life businesses we have links with.

Some friends of The Family have a Cornish Adventure Centre, which is a water-sports activity centre located on the south coast of Cornwall, UK. Elemental UK offer a whole variety of activities for kids and adults alike, ranging from kayaking to Sailing. They have a website which outlines the various water-sports in cornwall they offer and they also have a recently constructed facebook page that they intend to use to build a digital community.

YOUR MISSION

Your mission as a family member (or general reader of this blog) is to offer advise below as a comment in how they could adopt social media to aid them in building a community, what could do they with their facebook page, how could they use twitter? They do not have a budget for this so be realistic in your suggestions (can’t have people parachuting down for PR stunts).

Over to you, don’t be overly strategic, just plain practical ideas they could do.

 

LegalIT 5.0 – Reputation Management Law

Presentation by Omar Ha-Redeye at LegalIT 5.0, Reputation Management Law: The Next Big Thing

Social Media for the Public Sector

Training session on social media for the public sector by Omar Ha-Redeye on Wednesday, March 9, 2011, for the Masters Certificate in Public Management at the Schulich Executive Education Centre (SEEC).

Social CRM

I’ve not had a look at the tool this video is discussing, but I wanted to post it here as it is a really good example of what a business really does need in terms of Social CRM. If it does what it says it can do, in such a simple, easy and streamlined fashion this is smart stuff for any company.

Social Media Mafia Blogging Policy

We have a blogging policy document which indicates what a blogger on the Social Media Mafia website may or may not do.

Having read through countless blogging and social media policies (no really we did) we decided to take a leaf out of the book of Hill & Knowlton. Rather than re-invent the wheel we have adapted their policy for our own needs and published it below, we therefore extend our gratitude to Hill & Knowlton.

Any person who becomes a blogger for SMM must be informed of the following:

    • Most weblogs publish RSS feeds that others can subscribe to, so remember that others, including your colleagues, may be actively reading what you write.
    • Think of what you say in your weblog in the same way as statements you might make to the media, or emails you might send to people you don’t know. If you wouldn’t include it in those, don’t post it on your weblog.
    • Never disclose any information – including textual or visual material – that is confidential or proprietary to Social Media Mafia, Audana Ltd or any related company brand, or any third party that has disclosed information to you (e.g.clients, journalists, suppliers, etc.).
    • Talking about our revenue, future plans, will get you in legal trouble, even if it is just your own personal view, and whether or not you directly identify yourself as an employee/affiliate of SMM or Audana Ltd.
    • You may not sell any product or service that would compete with any of our company’s products or services without permission in writing from the CEO. This includes, but is not limited to events, training, books, products, and freelance writing. If in doubt ask!
    • You should make it clear that the views you express are yours alone.

    In addition, we include some advice on best practice:

    • Link, link, link – The web is all about links. When you find something interesting and relevant, link to it. You’ll be helping your readers, and you’ll generate links back to your blog.
    • Be on topic – keep your content themed around social media mafia content. Straying into life-style areas is OK, it presents you as human, but always look for ways to make it fit contextually with our site. And remember that your blog is a public place so try to avoid embarrassing your readers or others.
    • Check your facts – Even though your blog postings will be primarily made up of personal opinion, do your research well and check that your facts are accurate. Make sure you have permission to post any copyrighted items (e.g. images) to your blog, and be careful about posting or linking to items that may contain viruses.
    • Write about what you know – The best way to be interesting is to write about what you know. If you have a deep understanding of something, talk about the challenges and issues around it. Try not to rant about things you don’t understand, as you’re more likely to get embarrassed by a real expert.
    • Quality matters – Use a spell-checker and keep things clear and concise.

    Thanks for your understanding.

    sıɥʇ ǝʞıן ʞooן ǝןıɟoɹd ʞooqǝɔɐɟ ɹnoʎ ǝʞɐɯ

    Facebook is notorious for constantly making changes. Supposedly it keeps the users interested.

    There’s a new beta language setting that might be of interest to users. You can now change your preference to English (Pirate).

    Sean Malarkey demonstrates in this video:

    ˙sıɥʇ ǝʞıl ʞool ƃuıɥʇʎɹǝʌǝ sǝʞɐɯ ɥɔıɥʍ ‘ƃuıʇʇǝs (uʍop ǝpısdn) ɥsılƃuǝ uɐ uǝʌǝ s,ǝɹǝɥʇ

    Both of which would make for a great prank if you get access to a friend’s profile.

    Cross-posted from OmarHa-Redeye.com