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Guest Post by Gaurav Mishra: The 4Cs Social Media Framework

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Instead of getting distracted by the tools and the terminologies, I focus on the four underlying themes in social media, the 4Cs of social media: Content, Collaboration, Community and Collective Intelligence. The Second C: Collaboration. Collaboration can happen at three levels: conversation, co-creation and collective action.

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Putting the Public Back in PR - New Book from Brian Solis

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Get granular - figure how how many unique visits a particular blogger sent, a Facebook Event, or Digg. . The chapter identifies a new area for PR folks to measure - education, participation, and collaboration. Simplified ROI Process: It sort reads like logic model to me. Mentions an alternative tool to Feedburner - Pheedo.

Public 50
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NpTech Tag Summary: Voting Deadline at Netsquared Extended, NTC Pipe, and More

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Gregg Swanson from HumaniNet picks out a few projects that are based on collaboration/partnership and a track of record of doing projects like the one proposed. Here's Steve Wright modeling his ). Creative Commons points out the projects that support free culture and open content on their site and on.

Nptech 50
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Podcamp Session on Social Media Metrics: Thank You Jeremiah

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Mapping is the process of developing a map of all things you are doing to generate conversation, sharing, and collaboration as a social media maker. The emphasis is on collaboration, sharing, and conversation. (If A logic model. (I Think Nielsen Ratings ). source: Chris Brogan). The Web is changing! Avinash suggested Technorati.

Metrics 56
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Sharing Power, Holding Expertise: The Future of Authority Revisited

Museum 2.0

letting museum visitors contribute and collaborate in museums), I now see this as a crucial issue also for more democratic and inclusive practice (i.e. There are many models as well for what we do with user-generated content in the museum. While I originally wrote this post to advocate for more participatory practice (i.e.