Synchronicity by Peter Westermann | Threyda.com

Engaging Art: How Threyda Deliver

A picture is worth 1,000 words, common wisdom has it. So social media should make it easy for artists to share their work, right? Image galleries, slideshows, done… …except there’s much more to it than that.   Copywriters are valued for a reason and engagement, though a notorious buzz word, is widely heralded on every [...]

Social Media Icons

The Paradox of Choice: Prioritize Your

Last  week I posted more in depth explanations of  the first two points on my original 12 point check list for developing your web presence. Today, we’ll look more at the third point on the list: establishing the priority of your online platforms and the key elements that you’ll need to focus on as you develop them. [...]

Twitter Bird

7 Ways to Amplify Your Creative Reach on

Twitter is now firmly established as a valuable social network in its own niche. For anyone wanting to connect quickly and freely with a wide range of folks, its 140 character limits and open follow model make it the platform of choice. Despite all of this, I still see many dismissive attitudes towards Twitter from [...]

Conquering the Smaller Screen: Twitter’s Impact on Television

This is a re-post of a guest article from Minni Kemp, originally published on a previous incarnation of this site. Having attended a Social Media Week panel on Social TV last week, I thought it about time to resurrect her observations on the rise of social media and its integration with our television experience. 

Minni Kemp is a Midwest freelance editor and writer. In her spare time, she enjoys cooking, running, and reading cheesy romance novels. You can check out her writing at Professional Intern.

I admit that I’m addicted to Twitter.

Twitter & Television

It’s like the world’s largest custom-built chat room—and as long as you cultivate a good list of people to follow, Twitter can be loads of fun. For me, it’s the easiest way to keep up on what’s going on in the world; my timeline is a busy flow of tweets from friends, coworkers, journalists, and almost all of my favorite TV shows.

Even though I rely on my DVR for about half the TV shows I watch on a regular basis, there are a few shows I insist on watching live, just so I can watch with the other folks in my Twitter feed. The real-time conversations about certain shows are often just as good as the show itself.

Now that Twitter is becoming a part of mainstream media, television shows of all types are using Twitter as another way to interact with hardcore fans and to attract new ones.

The Vanishing Fourth Wall

For some shows, Twitter can carry the action and drama beyond the small screen. Twitter accounts often do more than just offer information about the show.

There are feed for a show’s fictional characters (like Barney Stinson from How I Met Your Mother and his @broslife account), for its actors (Neil Patrick Harris’s @ActuallyNPH), or even for a show’s production staff (@HIMYM_CBS). Giving fans a chance to interact with each other—as well as stars or show producers—can create an interactive and personalized television experience.

 

Absence Makes the Viewer Grow Fonder

Waiting for True Blood to return to HBO  sucked, but in a good way. With @truebloodhbo, the folks behind the show keep viewers hooked with contests and sneak peeks of the upcoming fourth season.

They’ve also used Twitter to build anticipation for the new season among diehard fans and Trubie newbies. For fans of the show, it’s become part of the True Blood experience—and it eases the pain until the show comes back on the air.

Community Service

Twittizens have created online communities to tweet about their TV shows in real time. And networks have taken notice: now, several shows offer Twitter feeds for their shows, featuring some of their favorite tweets onscreen during a first-run or rerun broadcast of a show. Using tweets written by real fans is a great form of advertising for a TV show, and is sure to be cheap and more effective than network commercials or e-mail marketing. The line between interaction and advertising continues to blur, but both fans and TV shows benefit.

For a genre that was once threatened by the rise of online entertainment, television has been quick to adapt and to use the Internet to its advantage.

With social media platforms like Twitter, television has become a collaborative experience. What the future of Twitter holds for more interactive television is still up in the air, but with tweeting becoming an integral part of watching TV, the future of entertainment could become more hands-on for viewers.

 

Your Two Cents:

Do you combine your television watching with tweeting? What does it add to your experience?

How do you see social media further developing and integrating with traditional broadcast media?

Your insights are what make the difference, so please weigh in below in the comments or over on Facebook.

Expect more on the social TV phenomenon as I delve deeper into the subjects of last week’s panel. 

 

The 3 C’s of Web Presence Engagement & Interaction

Points of Contact

Recently I posted more in depth explanations of  the first points 1,2 and point 3 on my original 12 point check list for developing your web presence.

Today, we’ll look more at the fourth and fifth points on the list: the touch points of your platforms and using them to form two way conversation with your fans.

Photo Credit: David JW Bailey

These considerations follow on logically from the previous task of selecting your key platforms. Knowing where you’re going to be expending most of your efforts, you can now decide the ways in which you’ll communicate with fans on those platforms, as well as how to involve them in the process.

In short, this is engagement and interaction time!

 

Compelling. Concise. Content.

 

There are always a few memory aids to guide your work in any field. Social media is no exception and you will see these 3 C’s crop up time and again as you read further into the effective use of platforms. As overall way points, they will serve you well.

Compelling. Concise. Content

Content is anything from a sub-140 character tweet to an in-depth blog post on your site. To start on the long road to fan engagement, each piece of content needs to be of interest to your target audience. Be it informative, amusing, or something that stirs their passion, hitting the mark consistently (another ‘C’!) is where your content becomes compelling.

Content lies at the core of your web presence. It is the factor that decides whether visitors keep coming back for more, or are uninterested and leave, never to return. The other adjectives really only serve to emphasize key factors in making sure your content achieves the return value that you’re looking for.

Although a given platform will determine the depth of your content (try getting complex in a tweet….ouch!), conciseness will serve you well in almost every piece you post. By all means, explore the intricacies of a topic beyond 500 words in a blog post. Just don’t use a paragraph when a sentence would suffice. Attention spans are short on the web and the average visitor decides in under ten seconds whether or not they will stay.

Having eye catching headlines and visuals to draw people in, followed by the quality content that will keep them interested, is a sure fire way to keep your visitors engaged and coming back for more.

 

Conversation?Join The Conversation?

The cacophony encouraging us to “join the conversation” grows ever louder by the day. In reality, this is a catch all phrase that wants a more general response from us: interaction.

Once engaged by your content and creations, the next objective is to draw a visitor deeper into your creative world. This extends beyond mere discussion, delving into the realms of building emotional connections to your art, gathering feedback, involving visitors in the creative process, adding game mechanics to content, or any number of new and emerging techniques to develop a stronger bond. A bond that, as it builds, turns uncommitted visitors into excited fans of your work.

Although the application of these concepts has the potential to become quite complex, the core idea is simple: offer your fans a compelling, two-way experience with your art, in addition to the traditonal one-way consumption.

How to do this?

Think about what your most passionate fans say about your creations. What do they love about what you do?

For a writer, it could be the characters of your stories that pulls readers into the world you’ve created. How can you give those characters a new lease of life across social media? Furthermore, how can you weave your readers into the story, so that their experience moves from passive to interactive?

For a musician, perhaps your listeners have certain songs that really speak to them. Ask for their interpretations, or comparisons to other artists. Bring to the fore their thoughts and opinions about the subjects of your songs, valuing their additions to the discussion. Fans now create videos and other spin-0ff art in response to their favorite music, so embrace these creations and encourage visitors to pursue their own answers to the questions posed by your songs.

The more that your fans become involved and invested in what you create, the more they’ll support you for the long haul. Sharing as they go, the power of social networks can begin to work for you as your creations are spread far and wide, offering opportunities to repeat the process of engaging and interacting with new fans.

Over To You…

 How have you geared your web presence to keep new visitors interested? 

Once you have their interest, what steps have you taken to interact with people and turn them into fans of your work? 

Your insights are the truly valuable element here. The real world examples are where we really gain an idea of how to put all this into practice, so please feel free to share your own brilliant successes here in the comments or on Facebook.

Leave links so I can visit and put your fan-making process to the test!

 

 

7 Ways to Amplify Your Creative Reach on Twitter

Amplify YourselfTwitter is now firmly established as a valuable social network in its own niche. For anyone wanting to connect quickly and freely with a wide range of folks, its 140 character limits and open follow model make it the platform of choice.

Despite all of this, I still see many dismissive attitudes towards Twitter from artists. Be it the simplicity or perceived echo chamber effect of the platform, a lot of creators are missing out on a channel that offers an outstanding way to connect with new fans from all walks of life. Even those that do take the plunge tend to simply feed through updates from other social networks, creating a very robotic profile with little chance of winning new fans.

 

So what can be done?

Photo Credit: The Paradigm Shifter

First Impressions

Get over the first impression of Twitter, for a start. Yes, indeed, it starts out a pretty lonely place. Few followers, and uncertainty of how to start conversations to build a following, both contribute to the early drop out factor that can plague the network. But persevere, get over that hurdle, and really start conversing with friends, fans, and followers will flock to you in a relatively short period.

Once you get going, you’ll be eager to amplify your tweets, spreading them farther than your own core following by connecting with other groups. Here are 7 pointers to get you sharing your messages far and wide:

1. Use hashtags: In tweets you want to emphasize & share more widely, research relevant hashtags that others are already monitoring and tailor your tweet to fit that tag.

2. Spread tweets & repeats: It’s okay (and indeed important) to repeat your key tweets at different times though the day, as people are online at different times and tweets are fleeting. Tweak wording and delivery to maintain variety, but be sure your core message gets acoss.

3. Ask for help: If something is truly important, don’t hesitate to ask for a retweet or for your followers to recommend to their own following. Don’t ask too often, but don’t be scared to ask, either.

4. Retweet others. Often: When you’re asking for help from others, it helps if you’ve already done the same for them in the past. Sharing the work of others that you enjoy not only adds variety to your Twitter stream, it builds goodwill for others to do the same for you.

Twitter Bird

5. Strategic @’ing: The @ mention has a more ‘personal inbox’ feel to it for most of us, so it can be used to get the attention of someone you’d ideally like to read and share your tweet. Use it sparingly and with subtlety for promotional tweets, though, as it’s easy to cross the line into spam. This is also 10x more true if you barely know the person to whom you’re tweeting.

6. Join communities: …or build your own! Again, hashtags tend to lend themselves to communities – #oTable, #UsGuys, #TweetDiner, to name just a few – as do chats and trending topics sometimes. Find the areas that others gather and begin to participate. If the crowd gathered there is a good fit and it feels comfortable to do so, you can begin to recommend your art or content to members of these communities. In addition, you can explore tools such as Triberr, which joins you to other like-minded content producers and their followers.  

7. Interact and influence: The first and last tenet of Twitter being that the more you tweet in, the more you’ll get out. Participate on a wide range of subjects, in a wide variety of ways, to both build your following and amplify your reach in the longer term. Join in with other established influencers in fields that interest you to boost your message still further.

 

Start Building

Twitter amplification is a strange beast.

In theory, it takes a slow and steady build up of relationships and reciprocation to have a significant audience sharing your messages. In practice, the serendipity of just one well placed tweet, attached to a valuable message or content, can take off like a bottle rocket and explode into all the results you desired.

Your best bet is to follow the tips above, tweet quality regularly, and enjoy the relationships that you build…all the while anticipating that one explosive tweet that shares your glorious creativity to the world!

What ways have you found to extend the reach of your tweets?

Engaging Art: How Threyda Deliver Stunning to Social Media

Synchronicity by Peter Westermann | Threyda.com

Synchronicity by Peter Westermann - Visit Threyda.com for more

A picture is worth 1,000 words, common wisdom has it.

So social media should make it easy for artists to share their work, right? Image galleries, slideshows, done…

…except there’s much more to it than that.

 

Copywriters are valued for a reason and engagement, though a notorious buzz word, is widely heralded on every social media blog from New York to New Zealand.

For artists, creating a visually stunning piece is just the first step on the road to sharing.

 

Social Success Story

Threyda, an arts collective based in Wisconsin, is one of the first visual artwork organizations that jumps to mind when I think of in terms of social savvy.

From a simple Twitter follow early last year, I’ve been prompted to move through to their Facebook page, from which I’ve regularly checked out the gorgeously presented artwork showcased on their website. Having not yet taken the plunge to buy a piece, I’m almost certain to do so at some point this year, as soon the right deal pops into my inbox via their regular, though not  annoyingly so, e-mail updates.

In summary: Threyda gets it. And they’ve got me.

 

The Whys & Hows

Caught In A Web - Fabian Jimenez - Threyda.com

For a relatively small group of independent artists, Threyda’s army of 11,000+ fans on Facebook and thousands of Twitter followers is impressive in itself.

Digging deeper, there are a number of practices that make the company a shining example to anyone seeking a wider audience for their art.

Here are just some of those best practices:

  • A Competitive Streak - Regular competitions that couldn’t be easier to enter. Post a new piece, have fans ‘Like’ the post, random winner picked. Hundreds of likes (which feeds into how often fans see their posts in the ‘Top News’ stream - more on that here) and plenty of attention for new creations, even from those that don’t win. Competitions encourage participation and return visits.
  • Adopt & Adapt – They’ve learnt along the way that each social media channel has its own potential and limitations. Initially posting to Twitter only through Facebook automation, this tweet showed their intention to adapt to a more interactive, Twitter-friendly approach. Though they still have some work to do on interacting with followers, the adoption of Twitpic and @ mentions to friends show the importance of learning and developing…
  • A Place To Call Home – Despite the many outposts, the (not so) humble website is the central hub of a web presence. These folks seem to get that, with a powerful and visually striking site that is clearly the best place to check out all the creations of each artist. The outposts of Facebook, Twitter et al then feed into this, offering tantalizing thumbnails and Twitpics of the work as a draw to view more angles and full archives back on the website, where visits can be accurately measured and sales more easily driven.
  • Call To Action – Threyda posts always let you know what their intention is. From transactional (“Save 50% at checkout”) to inspirational (“It’s never too late, go create!”), there is a reason for what they put out there and they explicitly state it at the close of their piece. Clear calls to act drive engagement and sales.
  • More Than a Feeling - Other than quoting 80′s power ballads, the reason I include this intangible quality is that Threyda create an aura around their web presence. In truth, it is principally fueled by their other-wordly artwork. But their supporting content, such as this blog reflection on a night snapshot from Cleveland, feeds into the ambiance that they exude. Aligning your style to your social media makes the whole experience feel consistent for fans across multiple platforms.

There are always new, innovative steps that we can take to develop our web presence and improve social media efforts. First, however, the foundations need to be set up strongly and the platform hierarchies clear. In looking at the web presence of Threyda, I find a solid base and flexible approach to new media that I think helps them better deliver their stunning art to the world.

 

And your good selves? What artists or collectives do you see utilizing social media channels effectively?

What aspects of Threyda’s example do you think could be improved?

Papering the Cracks? Why Adele’s 2011 Album Sales Mean Nothing

 

We’re back!

Adele '21' Cover

Adele’s ’21′ sold more than 5.8 million last year, with 1.8 million being full digital album sales. These are sales numbers that arrest a six year downward trend in album sales, since the year Usher sold a few million more of his ‘Confessions’ album.


The record industry is dead; long live the digital record industry!

In the snarky parlance of these Twitter-ing times: #NotSoMuch.

 

 

Exceptional Exceptions

In no way am I demeaning the achievements of my homeland heroine. On the contrary, the widespread mainstream acceptance of a bona fide musical talent, at a time when Simon Cowell’s mediocrity manufacturing line dominates the pop landscape, affords me renewed hope for the future of popular music.

But it is the very fact that she’s exceptional that makes Adele the exception, rather than the new rule for the recorded music industry.

Consider the wider environment of the year in which ’21′ broke:

  • CD sales continued to decline, down another 6% by Sound Scan’s 2011 numbers.
  • Digital sales were up and passed 100 million album downloads, yet the lower price point of these sales – sometimes as low as $1 or $2 – still sees downloads struggling to compensate for falling sales of physical product.
  • Streaming music sites, based on a subscription, ‘all you can eat’ model, began to spring into mainstream consciousness around the middle of the year. Albums popped on and off of sites such as Spotify, as artists like Coldplay and, indeed, Adele, decided whether or not such services cannibalize album sales.
  • Another massive sales story, Lady GaGa’s ‘Born This Way’ release, sold millions in a first week promotion at the deep discount price of just 99 cents on Amazon.com. This further diluted the validity of digital music sales as a barometer for the course of the record industry, with Billboard revising their chart conditions as a direct result.

 

Beyond this, there lie also the questions of cloud storage, digital lending, matching services such as Apple’s proposition (which can be seen as legitimizing past illegal downloads in user music collections), and myriad other digital services that will straddle the increasingly gray area between legal listening and infringing copyright.

In summary, 2011 saw massive upheaval in the ways we can listen to music, with many potential business models emerging but none clearly taking the lead. Against that backdrop, a few wildly successful individual albums can be seen as more of a life jacket for record sales, rather than the rescue helicopter that some make it out to be.

 

The Future

Future Music? Baby with headphones

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo Credit: [(O)] Photography

 

So, where are we heading?

The only concrete positive to be taken from Adele’s example, in relation to recorded music sales, is that mainstream listeners will still flock in their millions when they hear true talent and passion in pop music. When an artist truly connects on a deeply human level.

What we can’t say is that digital download sales will save the day. Or that listeners are flocking back to music purchases after a decade of litigation from the major players in the industry.

What did offer hope in 2011 is that innovation and new modes of delivering music finally started to gain some traction. From streaming subscriptions to storage in the cloud, no one can say for certain that any of the providers will win out as the successor to physical recording sales.

But after over ten years of taking one step forward, two steps back, it’s encouraging to finally start accessing legal music through channels that befit the 21st century. Let’s hope it brings still more success for the likes of Adele, not to mention the thousands of artists eagerly playing away to follow in her footsteps.

 

And you?

How do you feel about the state of the record industry? Do you see a new business model emerging any time soon?

I’d also love to hear who still buys physical records, who downloads, streams etc. How do you prefer to get your music?

The Paradox of Choice: Prioritize Your Web Platforms

Hitting the bullseye

Last  week I posted more in depth explanations of  the first two points on my original 12 point check list for developing your web presence.

Today, we’ll look more at the third point on the list: establishing the priority of your online platforms and the key elements that you’ll need to focus on as you develop them.

Photo Credit: wockerjabby

The Paradox of Choice

There are simply more platforms than you could ever hope to maintain. Whether websites, blogs, personal social networks, fan pages, Wikipedia entries, professional directories, or any combination of those, the choice is rather overwhelming…and it keeps growing every day!

The good news is that you really only need to choose and fuel a handful of these, perhaps even just a couple, to start building a web presence that will deliver tangible results.

How?

Pick the right platforms, then use them in the most time efficient and effective ways. 

What qualifies as the ‘right platform’ depends very much on your content, communication, and most importantly your end objective. Often, as in the paradox of choice, less can be more. It certainly makes sense to set out with only platforms that

For help in this area, tweet with the #CreatorQs hashtag or ask away on Facebook. Myself – or a cohort, of equal or greater value – will get back to you pronto (cowboy talk for within 24 hours).

Once your platforms have been decided upon, it’s time to move on to the key elements you choose to build into them. Identifying these will help concentrate your web presence development efforts on the factors that matter most, minimizing time and maximizing results.

Social Media Icons

In Your Element

How do you know what these key elements are?

This can be difficult to prioritize, especially if you haven’t spent a whole lot of time around social media, so here are some question sets to guide you:

Outcomes

  • What is the primary result that you want from your web presence?
  • From this, can you track back through the process of achieving it and extract secondary element goals?
  • At the start of that process, what inputs will a given platform need to get things rolling?

Example: You’re an artist with striking visual pieces available for purchase. The primary goal is to showcase your works and make sales. Tracking back from the sale, you’ll obviously need clear, simple transaction buttons in order to prompt and process payments. But people need to be stimulated to start that process, so you’ll also want elements that ensure prominent placement of high quality images, such as gallery sections or the ability to quickly pop images out to a larger version. And perhaps potential buyers would like to see what’s popular with others, as they make their decision, so a further element to add could be a rating system or a social network plug in that shows comments for each piece.

ToolsTools

  • What flexibility do you have with your ability to edit content? 
  • Will your ability to edit content limit the elements you can select? Do you need to enlist help to incorporate the key elements?
  • Have you explored the available tools (e.g. WordPress widgets, Facebook social plug ins, embedded media) so that you know what can be achieved? 

Extra Tip: Researching other sites in your field will allow you to draw out the best and worst of what can be done with your web presence. It may also make clear an area that has been critically overlooked by your industry, giving you a clear priority to exploit as you plan out your key elements. 

Photo Credit: Vitamin Sea

 

The big picture here: be present in as many of the online locales inhabited by your audience as time allows, as long as you can put enough into the platform to offer that audience some value.

If you can’t commit the required level of work to any given platform, better to have no profile there at all than an out of date one that leaves fans feeling abandoned. Concentrate your efforts on growing the core platforms that you select, using the key elements that drive towards your long term web presence objectives. By having a clear understanding of what moves you in the right direction and what is simply window dressing, you’ll be making the most of the time investment that goes into your online world.

Complete Control: Owning & Scaling Your Web Presence

Reaching for the Sky: Construction at WTC site, NYC

Earlier this week I posted my 12 point check list for those of you seeking to develop your web presence this year. The list itself was drawn from a guest post I wrote some months ago, the 12 Most Crucial Web Presence Considerations.

As promised, we’ll start to dive into more detail for each point

Today, we’ll kick things off with ownership and the ‘span’ of your online platforms.

Own It

Ownership boils down to the simple need to control the hub of your online existence. This will usually be a traditional website, though it can also apply to blogs, photo galleries that form your online portfolio, or anything else that you consider your central base of operations on the web.

In a hub & spoke approach to building your online presence, elements like social network pages and third party platforms branch out from the aforementioned hub, adding value and functionality without detracting from the allure of your main platform.

But these are all third party players.

Your hub should be under your ownership and control.

This means registering your domain name of choice, directing any previous and related sites through to this domain, and plugging in analytics tools that give you visibility of what’s happening. It also allows you greater control over end goals such as building a contact list and selling your wares.

Every site will have limitations, except your own. Being able to change design elements, content, and structure, as well as using deep analytics to measure what your site is delivering, are all key reasons to not put your most valuable eggs (you know, the organic, cage-free, reared-on-a-diet-of-truffles hen eggs) in someone else’s potentially rickety basket. A Tumblr site is great, until it goes down for maintenance and someone important can’t find your contact details the one time they visit. A Facebook page is certainly important, but your ability to influence people to take action there is limited, as is its design flexibility.

Width & Depth

Width & Depth of Span - Angel of the North

I summarized this one into the following two questions:

How widely will you spread your web presence?

How much time can you set aside for each element?

If you’ve ever seen those bands that have a presence on every social network, you’ll probably have wondered when they find the time to actually, you know, write music. Chances are that either: a) they’ve neglected a large proportion of those sites, or b) the music is appalling, so they’re focusing on every marketing channel to make up for it. Possibly both.

The reality is that we all have limited time in the day, so tough decisions need to be made in terms of where you commit your resources. How much time and effort you can invest in your web presence will vary according to many factors, from whether you are a solo creator to the requirements of what you need to set up.

The crucial consideration? Don’t over extend yourself from the outset.

Decide roughly how much time you can devote each week to the following activities, many of which will apply to each platform:

  • Creating and posting content
  • Curating content
  • Design and structure tweaks
  • Interactions with fans and community
  • Monitoring key metrics (& making improvements based upon them)
  • Basic maintenance and admin

Once you understand the time requirements, you can apportion the duties accordingly to other creative members, assistants, employees, and anyone that helps you share your creative wares. Assign appropriate tasks to those most suited, such as the ever-gregarious drummer taking up starting conversations on Facebook, or that detail-obsessed assistant digging into the numbers and trends of your website traffic. The more natural a fit the duty is to someone’s existing skills and interests, the more likely they’ll be to keep it up.

A series of abandoned or barely maintained platforms in your web presence can mean a bad first impression, frustrated potential fan, or even lost sales/business opportunities, if the visitor can’t quickly find the information they’re looking for. By all means experiment with new platforms, but ensure you have a plan for them or close them down if they don’t elicit the results you desire.

The next post will naturally flow from this point,  focusing more detail on prioritizing your various platforms and understanding which are best for engaging your audience.

Photo Credit: The Angel of the North (Christine Matthews) / CC BY-SA 2.0

 

How much time a week do you dedicate to your web presence?

 

Please, share your tips and tricks below!

 

12 Crucial Considerations For Your 2012 Web Presence

Sagrada Familia - Barcelona, SpainA couple of months back, I wrote a piece for the excellent site 12 Most, looking at the key considerations for developing a web presence. 

As many of us are looking to redesign – or create from scratch – our online real estate at the start of this new year, I thought that the overall points would be a useful check list to guide our efforts.

I’ll be diving into each point in more detail throughout January and in the meantime you can read more detail on these points over on the original 12 Most post here

Here are my 12 most crucial considerations for developing your web presence in 2012:

 

1. Own your domain and content

2. Width & depth – spread out across multiple channels

3. Prioritize the key elements & platforms

4. Have multiple points of engagement

5. Make it interactive

6. Put your value front and center

7. Move towards mobile / smart phone access

8. Link it up to your social networks

9. Divide (workload) and conquer

10. Set objectives

11. Monitor it

12. Continuous improvement

 

Where do your web presence priorities lie this year? 

What would you add or take away from this list?

Better Blogging: To Serve & Respect

Old vs New ModelsAfter taking a look at my three words for 2012, it struck me that we could all benefit from a closer inspection of what they will mean for this site.

Today, let’s examine the first and most important to this arena: SERVE.

Superior Service

My objective with Above The Static is to provide you artists and creative types with the information that you need to build a web presence that stands out and gets you noticed.

Having streamlined (demolished?!)  this site, I now need to build a platform that delivers on that goal. It needs to be easy to navigate, regularly updated and, most importantly, consistently packed with relevant, practical advice that you can act upon immediately to improve your online presence.

This is how I will serve you better this year, by systematically and reliably helping you to develop a superior web presence.

Width & Depth

Of course, the three words concept extends further and deeper than just blogging.

Woven into the fabric of ‘Serve’ will be all manner of other applications of the word, from more finely honed content curation across my social media channels to more one-to-one contact  (Skype me [stebirkett], G+ me, send me a carrier pigeon…) with those that are in the most need. It will guide work prioritization, decision making, and plenty of miscellaneous items in between.

The beauty I find in this is the simplicity it allows right from the start. Every relevant action can be quickly filtered through an easy to remember, yet deeply meaningful system. The word ‘Serve’ will be at the forefront of my mind as I make choices for this site, content, investments of time and money…all sense-checked against a term that is anchored in my overall objectives.

In Your Own Words?

What will be the language of your year? Can you pin it down to just three guiding words?

Nick Kellett made me aware of hundreds of people who are doing just that with this list of My Three Words posts. It makes interesting reading, with plenty of smart perspectives and insights, but mostly it provides a catalyst for thinking about your own direction.

Which words matter the most to you this year?

Photo Credit:  trp

Words As Ways to Win the New Year

Words Guide The Way

Original photo by: Elena Martinello

The turn of the year is a paradoxical time, filled to varying degrees with the relaxation of a quiet week packed with holidays, alongside the feverish preparation for a running start to the New Year.

We excitedly plan out resolutions for everything from better health to increased productivity. Yet often our own enthusiasm proves to be our downfall, so heavily do we pile on the new practices in what amounts to a few days of preparation.

In short, our intentions are well placed, but our application is often found wanting.

Words Influence Ways

One practice that I’ve found useful in recent years is to focus more on new guide markers rather than wholesale direction changes. To that end, adopting Chris Brogan’s ‘Three Words’ concept has been helpful.

As with most things, its power lies in its simplicity: just pick three words that you’ll use as an overriding guide for your decision making and actions in the year to come. You can take this to a deeper level by loading the words with varied synonyms and imagery. The main goal though is to choose meaningful words that have the power to inspire you to think and act.

My Words For 2012

In addition to guiding my actions this year, I hope my words provide you insight into the direction I intend to take with both this site and my extended work through Above The Static.

My three words for 2012 are:

  • Serve: At the forefront of everything I do here, I’ll question whether it adds value to you, the reader. My aim is to help creators develop a stronger web presence and get noticed. My articles, posts, videos, and e-mails should each deliver that in some way.
  • Tackle: Multi-tasking is overrated. The more we focus on the million and one potential things we could be doing and divide that time down, the less anything truly significant can be achieved on any one activity. This year I’ll get to grips with individual tasks that are high priority and put everything into the tackle.
  • Dispatch: I spent plenty of time on brainstorming, conceptualizing, and all kinds of other ‘ideas work’ in 2011. No bad thing, unless it dominates the landscape to the detriment of actually moving on those ideas. This year I’ll focus on balancing this out, moving ideas through more quickly and dispatching results for those that have legs.

From this base of three, I feel confidently rooted to guide my decisions for this site (and more…I need to be organized for a new arrival this Spring!). I’ll build these out into concrete advice and actions, in a coherent manner that moves everything towards my end objective.

And You?

Are you on board with this style of moving into a New Year?

Or do the old resolutions work just fine for you, thanks very much?

Either way, I’d love to hear how you’re sizing up 2012 and what your hopes are for the coming year. Spill the beans in the comments, on Facebook, Twitter, or wherever else you’d like to connect with me.

It’s going to be an outstanding year for you, just wait and see :)