What would happen if every blog published posts discussing the same issue, on the same day? It would be: One issue. One day. Thousands of voices. Welcome to Blog Action Day!
I heard about this on Faris Yakob’s blog today. I’ve joined this inspiring initiative and request you to support it as well.
Blog Action Day is championed by three enterprising bloggers – Collis Ta’eed, Leo Babauta and Cyan Ta’eed.
What is it all about?
On Blog Action Day – 15 October 2007, bloggers around the web will unite to put a single important issue on everyone’s mind. This year it is Environment.
Bloggers can participate by publishing a blog post related to environment on October 15 or commit to donating their day’s blog advertising earnings to an environmental charity of their choice.
As of today, 6,273 blogs and websites with a reach of 4,351,246 have signed up for this initiative.I’m happy to contribute my 2-cents to any worthy cause that uses social media to build committed communities that harness collective energies to better our world. I’ll be travelling on the 15th, but will find a way out to publish my post. On 15th, the world will wake up to thousands of different perspectives, viewpoints and personalities thinking, discussing, questioning and talking about the environment. Cool, huh?
One issue. One day. Thousands of voices. I’m in. What about you?
On another note, I presently live in Sultanate of Oman, a country renowned for its spectacular natural beauty and its commitment to protect the environment. I’m reaching out to several bloggers of note in Oman through this post so that they can be a part of this initiative. Click here to sign-up for ‘Blog Action Day’.
We are the cover story of the Dubai-based Khaleej Times ‘Weekend’ magazine today! What an awesome way to celebrate ‘AOC’. KT’s feature writer Pratibha Umashankar pulled out all the stops to write ‘Mind Blogging’, a brilliant story on ‘AOC’ that also explores the following questions:
o What are the advantages of blogging?
o The implications of ‘blooking’ both commercially and from a readership point of view vis-à-vis conventional publishing
o The future of blogging and citizen journalism
o Implications of blogging in terms of news value
‘Mind Blogging’ will expose readers in Middle East not only to ‘The Age of Conversation’ but also to the world of social media and conversational marketing. Click here to read the feature online. Click here to download a pdf version.
When 103 marketing bloggers from around the world teamed up few months ago to co-author ‘The Age of Conversation’, I’m sure nobody would have imagined the magnitude of its implications. We knew it was exciting but we never anticipated the ‘hugeness’ of its ripple effect.
Not only did we create a book that is one of the most authoritative tomes of conversational marketing ever written, but we built a unique community of people from diverse backgrounds supporting common causes. We made new friends; discovered more ways of connecting with each other; explored what the ‘age of conversation’ meant to each of us, made social media and the book popular in our respective countries; generated tons of press coverage and watched the book transform our lives. Our initial commitment was to raise US$ 10,000 through book sales for Variety, the children’s charity. We accomplished that milestone on 9 September 2007.
Mind Blogging, this week’s cover story on Khaleej Times Weekend touches upon the ability of social media to offer diverse audiences the potential to interact, stimulate and engage across cultures. One of my recent ventures ‘ADEATERSPEAK’ attempts to do just such that.
A group of ‘AOC’ co-authors have volunteered to share their expertise in a syndicated media column in Oman which is a unique experiment that is at the cross-section of branded content, publishing and event blogging.
Consider this: The Night of the AdEaters, a world renowned advertising festival is coming to Muscat for the first time ever next month. I’m helping promote it through www.adeatersmuscat.com, an event blog that showcases outstanding ad commercials. The event is also promoted in mainstream print media through advertising and ADEATERSPEAK, a thought leadership column on marketing, advertising and communications in Times of Oman, a leading English daily in Oman.
Through the print column, we present insights from leading experts (the serious stuff) and then lead readers to the AdEaters Muscat blog to get a feel for the AdEaters festival and view some of the world’s finest ad commercials (the fun stuff).
Drew McLellan was the first columnist at ADEATERSPEAK last Tuesday. Drew described a brand as a three-legged stool with the legs being:
1. The company’s vision of the brand;
2. The consumers’ vision of the brand;
3. Where your brand sits in the marketplace.
You can read his article ‘What is branding & why does it matter?’here. We have 3 more ‘AOC’ co-authors chipping in to share their wealth of knowledge through ADEATERSPEAK in the weeks to come. Stay tuned for updates!
Uhmmm, I need a break so badly. It’s been an awesome but hectic time since I got back from India this July. Been involved in lots of challenging advertising campaigns and interesting projects such as event-blogging ‘The Night of the Adeaters’ and ‘Social Media Challenge’. All work and no play make Arun a dull boy, right? (Huh, those who know me will attest to the amount of ‘play’ I have at work!)
I’m gonna take off on a backpacking trip to Thailand and Malaysia for a week come October 10th. Actually, I haven’t had the time to figure out what I will be doing as I have been hard pressed for time to do travel research. I will be spending most of my time in Malaysia and running from airport to airport – I have 8 flights to catch in 7 days, kewl huh?
It’s my second time in Thailand – I hope to get back to the Sri Racha Tiger Zoo in Chonburi where I had such a good time feeding tiger cubs and volunteering in the Elephant circus in 2005. My friends like to rub it in once in a while about how I got my ‘privates’ massaged not by one, but five elephant cubs in the Elephant circus. Would you believe that I never took a camera last time I went? So this time, photography and travel writing top my agendas. And throw a lot of beaches, trains and solitude into it.
If any one of you is going to be in these places and would like to meet up, please give me a shout-out. We’ll have a ball.
As of now the plan is: Bangkok & Pattaya – 11th and 12th of Oct
Phuket – 13th of Oct
Kuala Lumpur and elsewhere – 13th to 16th of Oct
Phuket – 16th and 17th of Oct
Any interesting places / activities in these places that you recommend?
My first Social Media Challenge was an attempt to explore social media from a broad perspective and understand the elements that constitute it.
For Social Media Challenge-2, I would like to focus on blogs. These days, I have had quite a number of people asking me about blogging and I think it helps to set up a ‘Blogging Resource 101’ for newbie bloggers who want make their mark in the blogosphere and have a very rewarding and enriching experience while doing that.
GETTING STARTED:
What is a blog?
A blog, or weblog, is a regularly updated journal published on the web. Blogs are among the most influential social media tools. If you want to have a general intro to blogs and some of its interesting features, I recommend starting off by downloading this e-book titled ‘What is Social Media’ authored by Antony Mayfield.
I also recommend reading this Technorati guide on Blogging Basics for every blogger newbie. It answers questions such as:
1. What are blogs?
2. Why are blogs important?
3. What are common misperceptions about weblogs?
4. How is a weblog different from a website?
5. Are weblogs a business or a hobby?
6. What is RSS, permalink, syndication, blogroll, inbound and outbound links?
7. Why is linking so important?
Here’s a compendium of blogger resources from about.com.
Categories include:
Blogging Basics, Blogging Platforms, Blogging Tips , A Blogging Reference , Blogs of Note , Blogging Tools, Professional Bloggers, Monetizing Your Blog, Building Traffic, Blog Ethics
MOVERS & SHAKERS IN THE BLOGOSPHERE:
Check out this impressive list of 50 most influential bloggers in the world. Who are these movers & shakers?
WHAT DO YOU GET OUT OF BLOGGING?
There are many reasons why people start blogs. And many things happen once you are in the blogosphere. If you want to read blogging experiences of some eminent bloggers around the world, I suggest reading Toby Bloomberg’s Blogger Stories. BS chronicles the stories of how the blogosphere has touched people’s lives and, in doing so, opened the door to new way of creating relationships and opportunities.
Sun Microsystems CEO Jonathan Schwartz is one of the world’s most prolific bloggers. Read this interview on his blogging experiences and his perspective on CEO blogging.
What is the single greatest point of value you receive from blogging? CK asked this question to several successful marketing community bloggers and compiled the results in this interesting post.
CREATING VALUE FOR YOUR BLOG:
Rebecca Blood has a very useful article here on 10 tips for a better blog.
A HAPPENING BLOGGER-MEET:
How about an amazing opportunity to meet and mingle with some of the greatest marketing bloggers in the world? Head to Blogger Social ’08 happening at New York city from April 4-6, 2008.
This post will be continued… I’ve got more stuff for you in part 2 which I should be posting in a day or two. So stay tuned 🙂
My 10-hour Social Media Challenge is on. My mission today is to go on a social media trail on the blogosphere from the perspective of a social media beginner.
My efforts will include:
1. Answering the questions – What is social media? What is its impact and opportunities?
2. Connecting with leading social media bloggers and their great work.
3. Identifying learnings, insights, best practices and trends.
4. Having a great time on the social web.
You can team up with me in this Challenge in the following ways:
1. Ping me about post(s) on your blog which will be of interest to a rookie social media enthusiast who wants to know more. Send me a comment in this blog or email at arunjoboy (at) yahoo (dot) com and I will link to / highlight the same.
2. You may also recommend interesting blog posts / work that you believe is worthy to be part of the social media discovery challenge. I will give you credit for being a great guide.
3. You can send me a comment or buzz me to check if I’m dozing or on with the live-blogging effort 🙂 I’ll be online in Windows Live Messenger, Facebook & Orkut. If there is some new tool we can use to connect, just let me know.
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Update 2: 5.30pm (Mct)
I start the Challenge by googling ‘social media’. Among the top search finds is this interesting e-book titled ‘What is Social Media’ by Antony Mayfield who is Head of Content and Media at Spannerworks. Antony has over ten years experience in online communications and blogs at Open (minds, finds, conversations).
This 33-page e-book is a short sweet summary of social media and is a must-read for media, marketing and communications people with an interest in the subject.
This e-book:
• Defines social media
• Describes 5 characteristics of social media
• Introduces and explains 6 types of social media tools and how they work
• Talks about changes in media production and distribution brought about by social media
• Explains social media’s effectiveness and reasons for its popularity
In fact, I have done some value-addition of my own by just creating a PowerPoint that explains the gist of this e-book using the visual metaphor of ‘hands in action’. I’ve mailed Antony this presentation and am awaiting his feedback.
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Update 3: 6.00pm (Mct)
In this post titled ‘What is social media?’, popular blogger and tech evangelist Robert Scoble says that he prefers calling social media as Media 2.0 and compares it with old / traditional media such as newspapers, radio and TV. He defines social media as ‘online media with interactive capabilities’.
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Update 4: 6.30pm (Mct)
I followed the comments trail in Robert Scoble’s post on social media I discussed in the previous update and here’s what I landed up with.
In the post ‘What is Social Media? No, really, WTF?’, Chris Heur discusses the 3 significant Cs of social media: Context, Communications and Collaboration.
Excerpts:
“The context of what we are trying to accomplish and why we are passionate about it is the starting point for our conversations and the basis of everything else. Communications in its traditional and emerging forms, references how we come to understand and connect with each other. Collaboration is about how we work together for our common and individual interests within the various contexts in which we invest our attention.”
Social Media Club is an interesting online community that shares best practices, establishes ethics and standards, and promotes media literacy around social media.
I dug up a few interesting posts on social media 101 from SMC.
According to him:
1. Social Media will become more of a business, but will retain the power from its personal passion, unlike new media in the big dotcom boom.
2. More individuals will band together in networks small and large, changing the very notion of freelancing and employment.
3. The corporation will be forever changed, traditional media will adapt before dying completely and all companies will become media companies thereby shrinking the advertising pie.
4. Social Media will be a primary catalyst in saving the world… or bringing about our demise.
On his blog ‘Ether Breather’, Jiyan Wei discusses traits, types, features and advantages of social media. ‘Getting started with social media’ is very similar to Antony Mayfield’s ‘What is social media’ e-book in Update 1.
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Update 6: 7.45pm (Mct)
I’m taking a quick break now! Will be back and there’s more stuff to explore. Stay tuned!
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Update 7: 8.45pm (Mct)
Just back from my break. I’ve ordered for Cheese-Labneh-Chicken Pizza from the Turkish restaurant next doors. Promises to be yummy! Here are a couple of pearls from Christopher Kenton, President of MotiveLab at the ‘Unica Marketer’s Consortium’ blog. In ‘The Meaning of Social Media’, Christopher Kenton dissects and defines the terms ‘social’ and ‘media’ in social media and tells us that social media has transformed broadcast marketing to conversational marketing. And let me quickly plug this in, if you haven’t heard about ‘The Age of Conversation’, a recent path-breaking book on conversational marketing, you might want to visit www.ageofconversation or click here.In ‘Getting Started with Social Media’, he offers 3 specific nuggets of wisdom to organizations who wish to jump into the social media bandwagon.
In short, they are: (1) Focus on an initiative with minimal investment in time and money. (2) Choose an initiative that would engage others in the organization in the project. (3) Choose something fun and engaging.In ‘Social Media Metrics’, Kenton explains how conventional marketing metrics may not be good enough to measure effectiveness of social media. He urges marketers to embrace innovation over immediate performance returns to get a long-term competitive advantage.
Excerpt:
The lack of robust metrics makes a lot of marketers gun shy. If you can’t demonstrate clear ROI, how can you justify the budget? I don’t want to be flippant about this, but I think marketers need to bring a little balance to the justifiable demand for performance accountability. We do need to be accountable, and we do need to show that we’ve thoroughly vetted the investments we’re making. But when you’re in a competitive market that demands innovation, you have to get in the trenches to help innovation along, instead of just throwing up knee-jerk stop signs to every project that doesn’t come with a business case tied up in a neat bow. It makes me think of a prehistoric fish in a receding inland sea saying to an amphibian “so, what’s the business case for legs?”
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Update 8: 9.30pm (Mct)
I emailed Chris Kenton saying Hi and then downloaded a free MotiveLab Marketing Brief titled ’12 Essential Tips for Success in Social Media’. I will quickly outline the 12 tips and to read more about them, I suggest you download the e-book here.
1. Establish Clear Business Objectives and Metrics
2. Reframe Your Notion of Marketing Communications
3. Clarify Your Positioning
4. Identify the Influencers
5. Listen Before You Launch
6. Integrate Social Media with SEO
7. Engage Your Audience
8. Engage Your Employees
9. Engage Your Customers
10. Be Honest and Up Front
11. Define Metrics According to Business Objectives
12. Fail Quickly. Fail Cheaply
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Update 9: 10.00pm (Mct)
I just read about the demise of the Business 2.0 magazine on NYTimes.com via www.socialmedia.biz. It’s a pity this amazing mag is going to be shut down after October. Interestingly, there was a campaign on Facebook to save the mag. Also read an interesting post ‘Are you on Facebook yet?’ by Ann Handley, fellow co-author at ‘The Age of Conversation’ at Marketing Profs Daily Fix Blog again via socialmedia.Biz. Quite a number of AOC co-authors have also commented on that post. Though I regret that I don’t get enough time to play around with Facebook, I’ve no doubt that it is one of the hottest social networking scenes to be seen at today. And it’s increasingly being used to connect professionally with much success. Click here to read Judi Sohn’s post ’12 Ways to Use Facebook Professionally’. The September issue of Business 2.0 features ‘The Facebook Economy’ – how the world’s No. 2 social network is fast evolving into a new kind of software platform with custom social media applications.
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Update 10: 10.30pm (Mct)
In between all this talk about social media, I want to share this awesome commercial for Virgin Atlantic’s Upper Class Suite with you. Enjoy!
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Update 11: 11.15pm (Mct)
I picked up this interesting visual that explains the rise and emergence of mass social media on Dion Hinchcliffe’s Web 2.0 blog post‘Social media goes mainstream’. Dion provides a round-up of social media definitions and introductory information and tops it by 5 ground rules.
1. Communication in the form of conversation, not monologue.
2. Participants in social media are people, not organizations.
3. Honesty and transparency are core values.
4. It’s all about pull, not push.
5. Distribution instead of centralization.
Check out this interesting ‘World Map of Social Networks’ at Valleywag. Which network is popular in your country? And for the unidentified patch that is Oman in the Middle East – I can tell you that Orkut is very much popular among the Indian expat community while Facebook is more used by Omanis and other foreign expats.
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Update 12: 1.00am (Mct)
Back from another break. Here are a few good resources on social media via Unica’s Marketing Consortium Blog. Consumer Generated Media 101, Word-of-Mouth in the Age of the Web-Fortified Consumer – A white paper from Nielsen BuzzMetrics with a very solid and concise background on social media and the specific content vehicles that directly impact consumer purchasing decisions.
I had to submit information at this request form to access the whitepaper and surprisingly Oman was missing from the list of countries! So, I went ahead and selected United Arab Emirates, our next door neighbour. Now, how cool is that?
Have a look at the SEOmoz roundup of 30 social media tools that marketers should be familiar with, including Digg, Flickr, Technorati, JotSpot, StumbleUpon, and many more.
Or check out the more extensive“Seth Godin’s List” of social media tools.
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Update 13: 2.15am (Mct)
Ryan Karpeles talks about how social media is an invaluable asset to companies who choose to embrace it.
New to social media and looking for a blogger role model? Ryan showcases over 35 amazing bloggers in this excellent post that links bloggers to specific competences and qualities. Yes, bloggers make outstanding teachers.
Top blogger & branding expert Drew McLellan offers you a smart Blogger Toolbox – blog sites that a new blogger should visit, explore and study. Here’s his pick: Converstations (chock full of practical tips) CK’s blog (compelling blog post examples) Viral Garden (demonstrates how to build a community) Lonely Marketer (teaches marketing tools) Successful & Outstanding Blogs (bloggers who spotlight newbies)
My first ever Social Media Challenge comes to an end and I’m so ready to conk-off. It was fun, 10 hours of trolling my way through the blogosphere searching for info and insights on social media. Will be back soon! Now it’s another trip to snoozeland.
Inspired by his efforts, I’m going on a ’10-hour Social Media Challenge’ tomorrow (Thursday, 6 September 2007). The mission is as follows: Get on a social media trail on the blogosphere from the perspective of a social media beginner.
Efforts will include:
1. Answering the questions – What is social media? What is its impact and opportunities?
2. Connecting with leading social media bloggers and their great work.
3. Identifying learnings, insights, best practices and trends.
4. Have a great time on the social web.
Expected Outcomes:
1. Create a mini social media hub on this blog linking to a wealth of connections & knowledge that will be of use to social media learners as well as experts.
2. Expect the unexpected.
You can team up with me in this Challenge in the following ways!
1. Ping me about post(s) on your blog which will be of interest to a rookie social media enthusiast who wants to know more. Send me a comment in this blog or email at arunjoboy (at) yahoo (dot) com and I will link to / highlight the same.
2. You may also recommend interesting blog posts / work that you believe is worthy to be part of the social media discovery challenge. I will give you credit for being a great guide.
3. You can just send me a comment or buzz me to check if I’m dozing or on with the live-blogging effort. I’ll be online in Windows Live Messenger, Facebook & Orkut. If there is some new tool we can use to connect, just let me know.
The Challenge kicks off at 5pm Muscat time (1pm GMT – click here for timings around the world) and will end at 3am Muscat time (12noon GMT – click here for timings around the world).
See you at the 10-Hour Social Media Challenge tomorrow!
My hard copies of ‘The Age of Conversation’ finally got here yesterday! 9 of them – and I thought I’d welcome them with a new ‘hair-do’. Don’t know how well the ‘do’ has turned out to be. But the book is a real smashing beauty in print 🙂 Click here to read more about ‘AOC‘ or visit www.ageofconversation.com.
Another Onam passed by. And I was just thinking that every year it just gets better and better. Before I get into details, here’s a little backgrounder on Onam for a lot of my blogger friends who may not know about this festival.
Onam is an annual harvest festival, celebrated mainly in the south Indian state of Kerala. It is a popular festival among Malayalees, and falls during the month of Chingam (August-September as per the Gregorian calendar), the first month of the Malayalam calendar and lasts for ten days. Traditionally celebrated as a harvest festival, mythologically it is linked to Malayalee-Hindu folktales. However Onam is celebrated by people of all religions.
In Muscat, I celebrate Onam twice. One is a private celebration on the actual Thiruvonam day (August 27). This is the day I come to work dressed in the traditional clothes (shirt and mundu mostly). A good part of the day is spent in connecting with near and dear friends around the world and exchanging greetings. Come afternoon, I’m ready to tuck into the best lunch of the year – the Onasadya or the Onam feast which is a delightful spread of some of yummiest Keralite vegetarian dishes served on a green plantain leaf.
This was my first course of Onasadya this year. It was followed by three more servings and helpings of two kinds of payasam (dessert). Boy, I can eat. Hats off to Rakesh and Bina – my very endearing hosts this year. For dinner, I had another sadya, but this time a more toned down celebration of food.
Enjoying the Onam feast…
The second celebration was a few days later, in fact on the first Saturday after Onam. (1 September). That’s when all the Malayalees at my work get together and give the rest of the crew an Onam treat every year. There are 10 of us in a total team of 120. This year was no different. We started preparing for the celebrations the previous evening. I’m the caterer, the treasurer, purchasing and chief cheering officer for this operation.
A gang of us teamed up at Nirvana (our chill-out den at work) and prepared Pookalam (a floral spread which is one of the many ways in which Onam is celebrated). Flowers are hard to get in Muscat and I still remember a lot of us running around last year plucking flowers from any plant we could lay hands on. This year, it was different. We had a surplus of flowers, specially procured from Mumbai, India.
You can see some of us sorting out the flowers.
And here’s our Pookalam. A truly fascinating sight to behold!
The next day, Onam is on at UMS. Diyas (lamps) are lit on the floral spread. A traditional vilaku (lamp) is placed next to the spread. Onam songs are floating in the background. The full troop marches in. After all, they are going to be served a fabulous South Indian breakfast with idlis, vadas, sambar, chutney and vermicelli payasam (dessert). The celebrations begin when the lamp is lit by Sandeep, our head honcho. And then Rekha – who is our ‘Voice of Kerala’, goes on to give a small spiel on the legend behind Onam.
The Gang of Malayalees…
And then everybody tucks into the sumptuous breakfast. It seems that the vermicelli payasam is outstanding. Shamir, who is our Head of IT, is seen discreetly downing glasses of this delectable dessert while serving rest of the team. Mr. Nair, who is the overseer of this celebration, is always doing the rounds ensuring things are on smoothly.
Everyone is happy and the spirit of Onam is truly in the air.
Myself with Rakesh (Rocks / Rocky)…
It’s an amazing morning – a day when you feel you’re back home in Kerala and not in Muscat. Onam rocks!