Remove Content Remove Examples Remove Knowledge Remove Taxonomy
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Strengthen Your Community with a Knowledge Sharing Network

NTEN

Perhaps you already provide them with relevant content through a website, e-newsletter, e-mails, or social media channels. Consider how you can support more robust knowledge sharing. By providing your stakeholders with a dedicated place to share knowledge with one another, community building happens naturally.

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What is the scaffolding for learning in public?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

The content doesn’t only include “finished&# reports, but also works in progress like the the Goldmine Research project. The Goldmine Project is sharing a, well, goldmine of knowledge around what makes for a successful nonprofit consultant and organization relationship.

Public 103
professionals

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Building Blocks of Social Media - Webinar slides and notes

Amy Sample Ward

.&# Even if you don’t read the post that comes in your RSS Reader, that content isn’t lost and the knowledge is still at your footsteps. You can search within your reader and find content that came through that you might be looking for, even if you didn’t read it the first time. How do you create a tag?

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Social Architecture Part 2: Hierarchy, Taxonomy, Ideology (and Comics)

Museum 2.0

Jeremy Price offered a comment on my last blog post with a link to an excellent article by Lee Shulman on the uses and abuses of taxonomies in educational theory. As she puts it: Taxonomies exist to classify and to clarify, but they also serve to guide and to goad. … So here’s a reenvisioning of this hierarchy as a taxonomy.

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A Lightweight Framework for Building An Association Data Strategy

Association Analytics

For those struggling to find the time or knowledge to get started, building out a lightweight framework can help combat both those obstacles. Here are a few example questions to consider asking: What systems do you use today, and what would we like to have in the long term?

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Will It Take a Village to Bring Our Communities Online?

NTEN

By hard coded, I mean in the legal policies you've adopted, the features you've released and prioritized, your data taxonomies, your site map and information hierarchy. Do we need more user generated content? Some checklists of stuff to think about, and examples of people who are already doing it well. Of what sort?

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Pew Internet Report on Tagging Use

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Here's an example of "social search" in action. A December 2006 survey has found the at 28% of internet users have tagged or categorized content online such as photos, news stories or blog posts. On a typical day online, 7% of internet users say they tag or categorize online content. taxonomies.??? robotics???

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