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Social Media 101 TweetChat Recap: Tagging

Tech Soup

Adding tags to content, whether blog post; video; photo; and so on, helps content creators organize content and, more importantly, helps your intended audience find it on the Internet. Social bookmarking sites include well-known sites such as Delicious, Digg, Stumbleupon, Reddit, and Technorati. Tagging Tutorials - Part 1 Flickr.

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How Much Time Does It Take To Do Social Media?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

In A Museum? Participate: Is joining the conversation with your audience. Buzz tools include FriendFeed, Twitter, StumbleUpon, and Digg - and of course you add many others to this category that are found in other categories. Here's a question I get all the time: How much time and resources does it take to implement social media?

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Best of Beth's Blog 2008: Finding The Top Ten Posts In Less Than Five MInutes!

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

It takes your RSS feed and applies engagement metrics, analyzing the types and frequency of an audience's interaction with your content. Should There Be A Social Actions Category on Digg? Microblogging in a Museum Context. The Best Free Sources of Social Media Audience Research. Twitter As Charitable Gift Spreader.

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NpTech Tag Summary: Scarcity Thinking, Social Network Fragmentation?, and Engagement Strategies

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

context: How are museums encouraging stickiness and user investment in their proposed and in some cases, already developed, post 2.0 situation unless museums can get the ???stickiness??? factor right with their target audiences. Seb Chan, of the Fresh + New Blog, raises an interesting question about web site stickness in a web2.0

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2.0 Culture Wars: Luddites and 2.0topians

Museum 2.0

If we want to work with directors, trustees, and other skeptics to evolve museums and other content providers alongside Web 2.0, They don't just keep bookmarks, they Digg things and save them to del.icio.us. And even if you understand what a site does, what can it do for your museum? To many people, the culture of Web 2.0

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The Future of Authority: Platform Power

Museum 2.0

I have a lot of conversations with people that go like this: Other person: "So, you think that museums should let visitors control the museum experience?" Other person: "But doesn't that erode museums' authority?" If the museum isn't in control, how can it thrive? Me: "Sort of." and my emphatic response is YES.

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Groundswell Book Club Part 5: Embracing

Museum 2.0

Charlene and Josh define two distinct reasons why embracing audience participation is useful: to develop better products, and to develop them faster. How many museums have stacks of comment books that are only culled for the gushing quotes that belong on annual reports? But getting information from visitors is not enough.

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