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HUBS FOR COMMUNICATION AND COLLABORATION:BLOGS AND WIKISDanielle Mirliss, M.A., Ed.M.November 23, 2013
Social Media CertificateSeton Hall University
BLOGSA web site that can be individually edited using just a web browser
Web 2.0 and new social media has opened up many new sources for communication and collaboration.
The Influencer Network Is Changing
Advertisers
Publishers
Media BloggersEditors
Journalists / Reporters
“Consumers turning to each other online is not a fad anymore. Companies opening up to customers
isn’t that different from the risks associated with doing business every day,” -- Forrester Research
Industry Analysts Customers /
Consumers
Trusted Bloggers / Twitters / Social Connections
Traditional Media
Why Blog?
• Establish your personal brand
• Enhance your career• Establish/Strengthen your SME credibility
• Expand your personal network
• Improve your communication skills
Why Blog?• Attract an audience• Inform and interact, learn from your audience
• Share news stories and detailed information• Influence and educate others
• Retain your audience• Understand the needs of customers and constituents
• Energize your audience and motivate action• Refine key messages and selling points• Sell more product
• Recruit help, contacts, employees• Respond to stories and customers
• Clear up misconceptions in the market
Blog vs…• Website – static pages of information or sales letters• Newsletter – Information sent to inbox, drive action• Forum – Conversation and interaction
Blogs combine elements of all of the above
http://blog.sironaconsulting.com/.a/6a00d8341c761a53ef0120a91f6818970b-800wi
Getting Started: Research• Search for other bloggers
• Google blog advanced search options lets you fine tune your search for the blogs that are specific to your topic area
• Technorati search is another tool to help you find relevant blogs
• IceRocket is a popular blog and social search tool• Twithority can also help you identify influencers for your
topic area • Search.twitter• Social Bookmarking sites
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Understand that being a blogger is similar to being a journalist who writes a daily/weekly/monthly column in a newspaper or magazine
Activities include:
Researching topics to write about
Writing & posting updates to your blog
Reading blog posts by others and commenting there
Respond to comments posted on your blog
A good blog is one where posts are fresh and new posts are frequent.
What to Blog About• Talk about topics you are:
• Comfortable with• Happy to discuss with a wider audience• Have knowledge of (unless asking for information)
Be prepared for responses
What to Blog About• That conference you recently attended• Product announcements• Product feature previews• A press release that was just issued• An analyst report that ranks your company highly (or low)• Your thoughts on an interesting blog post or article you just
read• The customer visit you’re flying back from• A debate the product team is having on whether to include
feature A or feature B• What are you thinking about right now?• What will be important in your professional area 5 years from
now? 10 years from now?
Be a thought leader• Share personal reflections,
perspectives and ideas on issues and current events (be smart, but be yourself).
• Have deep discussions on important emerging trends.
• Connect with thought leaders - engage in their blogs and communities.
• Link to other thoughtful blogs in your posts. Talk back and forth.
• Be provocative. Take a stand.
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Stickiness• Images = Great Idea!
• Google Image Search and Flickr (http://flickr.com) – but pay attention to reuse rights
• Videos = Yes!!• Tags = Lots of tags help others find your blog entry• Links = Lots of them, too
• The more you link to others, the more others will link to you• Promote your company
• Use Surveys and Polls• Formstack • Polldaddy• Contact
What should you not write about?
• Anything that can only be shared under a non-disclosure agreement (NDA)
• Revenue or sales figures
• Other than what is officially reported by your company
• Disclosing customer information
• If they have not agreed to be a reference
• Making commitments about product futures
• Anything that goes against your company’s social computing guidelines or business conduct guidelines
• Anything that you would not want to see reprinted on the front page of the Wall Street Journal.
Some Additional Don’ts• Don’t Me-Me-Me – It’s not all about you• Don’t force it if it isn’t working• Don’t over-sell – give first• Don’t use business talk – and don’t assume• Don’t try to control the conversation• Don’t ignore your audience
Single Author vs. Multi-Author Single Author Blog•Personal connection•Readers know what to expect
Multi Author Blog•Random reading - variety of topics and writing styles•Quality may vary between blog authors, but this approach typically produces much more volume of posts than a single author blog•Readers may not connect with the writer
A better approach to setting up a Multi Author Blog is to setup a Single Author Blog and to invite guest writers.
Additional Blogging Tips• Write about what you know and what you truly care about• Know your audience, talk about things they want to learn about,
discuss and find valuable• Link when appropriate to other relevant blogs and materials• If you quote another blogger be sure to credit the creator• When commenting, always be transparent about your identity and
affiliation• Don’t be corporate or overly formal; strive for communication in a
natural and authentic tone• Take the time to know people you want to connect with by reading
their blogs• Start, build upon, contribute to discussions on topics of interest
amongst the other bloggers• There is no "off the record"; any communication with bloggers may
end up on their blogs• Follow your company’s Social Computing and Blogging Guidelines
BUILDING A BLOGPlanning is a key step to building an effective blog
Blogging PlatformsBlogger WordPress Tumblr
Free Free Free
Casual Blogging Professional Blogging Microblogger
Easy to Use Complex Easy to Use
Less Customizable Customizable with Coding
Many Stunning Themes
Free Domain Mapping Domain Mapping with Fee
Free Domain Mapping
Uses Google AdSense for Monetization
Many plugins and gadgets
Mobile Friendly Interface
Wordpress.com vs. Wordpress.org• Wordpress.com
• Hosting platform that makes it easy for anyone to publish online• Do not have to download software, pay for hosting, or manage a
web server• Has hundreds of themes and includes the functionality of many
plug ins, but you cannot upload your own plugins or themes
• Wordpress.org• free software that you can install on a web server• Can install on a web server• Can upload and install themes and plugins, run ads, and edit the
database.
One in every six web sites runs on WordPress, the most popular blogging platform in the world
Anatomy of a Blog
http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5295/5504198659_5e75c4dcba.jpg
Posts vs Pages
Posts
• Entries listed in reverse chronological order on the blog home page or on the posts page
• Sticky posts will appear before the other posts.
• Can be found in the Archives, Categories, Recent Posts, and other widgets.
• Displayed in the RSS feed of the blog.
Pages
• Static and are not listed by date.
• Do not use tags or categories• Can be displayed in the
sidebar using the Pages widget, and some themes display pages in tabs at the top of the blog.
Categories vs Tags
Creating a Post
http://blog.dakno.com/files/uploads/Anatomy_of_a_Real_Estate_Blog_Post.png
Adding Pictures and Media• Can upload to the Media Library (3GB space)• Add images using a URL• Upload video directly to Wordpress using the VideoPress
upgrade ($60 per year per blog)• Embed YouTube or Vimeo
• Copy and paste link directly into post
• Slideshare• Special code for wordpress.com blogs
http://en.support.wordpress.com/slideshows/slideshare/
• Flickr• http://en.support.wordpress.com/images/flickr-photos/
• Instagram• http://en.support.wordpress.com/images/instagram/
http://en.support.wordpress.com/videos/
Social Network Integration: PublicizePublicize makes it easy to share your WordPress.com posts on Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Linkedin, and Yahoo!.
• To set up publicize on your WordPress.com blog please go to Settings -> Sharing in your site Dashboard.
• Once you’ve approved a connection to any of the below services, you’ll see a Publicize section in the Publish box on your post writing screen each time you write a new post.
• If you want to opt out from any of the Publicize services for a specific post, just click the Publicize Edit link. You can then uncheck whichever services you want. You can also customize the message that gets sent by typing it in to the Custom Message box.
http://en.support.wordpress.com/publicize/
Social Network Integration: Sharing
Sharing - At the bottom of each post and page you can now include sharing buttons for your readers to share your content across a range of social networks/services.
• Go to Settings -> Sharing page in your dashboard• Buttons for Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, StumbleUpon, Reddit,
Pocket, and Digg may also be displayed in “Official” mode. Which will display the number of shares in real-time on your blog, as reported by the specific service.
• To configure which services you are using, simply drag and drop them from the Available Services to the Enabled Services section.
http://en.support.wordpress.com/sharing/
Links (Blog Roll)
Create a Page• Used to present timeless information• Organize and manage any content• Examples include:
• About• Contact• Copyright• Disclosure• Company Information• Accessibility Statement
• Cannot be associated with Categories and cannot be assigned Tags
http://codex.wordpress.org/Pages
Setting Up a Menu• If you have a theme that supports the Custom Menus
feature, you can create and arrange a group of navigation links for your visitors to find the important parts of your site faster.
• Creating a custom menu allows you to do the following things:• Change the order of pages in your menu, or delete them!• Create nested sub-menus of links, sometimes referred to as “drop-
down” menus• Create links to category pages allowing you to collect together
posts based on that category• Add custom links to other sites, such as a link to your Twitter or
Instagram profile
WidgetsWidget is a fancy word for tools or content that you can add, arrange, and remove from the sidebar(s) of your blog. Widgets make it easy to customize the content of your sidebar(s). You can access your widgets from the Appearance → Widgets screen in your Dashboard.
Facebook Badge• Visit the Facebook Profile Badges page, and select the
information you would like to display on your badge by clicking Edit this badge and Save.• http://www.facebook.com/facebook-widgets/profilebadges.php• Next, click Other to get your badge HTML code
• Add a badge to your blog sidebar• Copy the HTML code and paste it into a text widget on your blog.
Design Considerations• Choose from over 200 themes
• http://theme.wordpress.com/• To change your theme, head to Appearance → Themes in your
site’s Dashboard
• Custom Header Image• Go to Appearance -> Header in your blog’s dashboard. If you do
not see the option, this means that your current theme does not support the use of a custom image header. Only .jpeg, .gif, and .png files can be used.
• Flexible Headers• If theme supports a flexible header, go to Appearance → Header
→ upload an image and click the “Skip Cropping, Publish Image as Is” button. The header image will be added without any cropping.
WIKISA web site that can be individually or collaboratively edited using just a web browser
More on Wikis
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dnL00TdmLY
http://www.webdesignerdepot.com/2009/12/wikipedia-redesign-whats-in-store/
Wiki Features
Wikis are great collaboration tools because they:•allow more than one person to edit each page.•allow many people to add to and edit the same content. •allow you to easily connect between pages inside the wiki.
Other great wiki features:•expandable structure – you can add as many pages as you need. •NON-LINEAR - you can jump around easily from page to page or section to section.•allow folders as well as pages - great for more complex projects with lots of sections. •store FILES – upload .doc, .xls, .ppt, .jpg, etc.
Why Use a Wiki• Project Management• Tracking Industry News• Setting Meeting Agendas• Content Management System
• Posting Corporate Policies• Creating Strategy Documents• Technical Documentation
More Idea for Outside Community:• Wikis are a great way to get patrons/colleagues to
participate in building a Web space• Resource guides• Conference • Book reviews• Area guides
• You can learn a lot from your patrons and colleagues!
Example: http://prodinstres.pbworks.com/w/page/29501523/FrontPage
Wiki Options
Wiki Structure• All wikis start off as a single blank page• Pages are created and connected by hyperlinks• No ownership of pages; anyone can change the work of
others• Pages community members can add to or edit (example)• Discussion area for each page• List of all of the changes made to a particular page
(version control)• List of all changes made to all pages.
Wikis vs Blogs
Wikis
• No one owns content• No specific organization
(hyperlinks)• Anyone can edit other
people’s work• Perpetual work in
progress• Good for collaborative
group work
Blogs
• A person owns their post• Organized in reverse
chron. order• Only author can edit their
own work (others can comment)
• Posts are permanent• Good for disseminating
info/starting a dialogue
Why Not Wiki?• Too open (trust issues)• Concerns about ownership of content• Disorganized• Vandalism and spam
Wikis aren't for everyone. If control is a major issue with the site you're developing, then a wiki may not be right for your project.