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Social Media Monitoring in 30 Minutes or Less

NetWits

Monitor what’s being bubbled up about you on Digg. The little orange image is a good indicator. Click on the image and/or link then grab the URL from your browser address bar. Backtype allows you to watch what’s being said in blog comments around the web. Please start asking in the comments below. Pretty simple eh?

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WeAreMedia ToolBox: This Week We're Working Crowdsourcing, Micro Media, and Lifestreaming Tools

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

  We're talking about tools like Digg, Stumbleupon, Reddit and others.  Micro Media: Any form of concentrated content created using social tools that broadcast text, voice, images, or video to targeted Web and mobile communities. .    Which ones are you using, what are the best tips and resources?

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The Conversation Graph: The Social Life of A Blog Post

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

From Comments as Group Discussion by Skelliwag. In the early days of social media, when blogs were the centerpiece of the conversation graph, we focused on using our blogs to promote conversation and community in the comments as David Wilcox and Michelle Martin. The Conversation Graph Has Gotten More Complex.

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Free Ranger Rick

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Ranger Rick Image from Facebook profile. Email: appeals-comment@facebook.com and ask them to let Ranger Rick exist on Facebook! Institutional spokespeople who cultivate a useful reputation within a community like Facebook or Digg while acting on behalf of their employer are building a very personal equity.

Free 56
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Reflection and Analysis: Gnomedex Real-Time Social Fundraising Experiment

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Click to see the larger image. Integrate quick email interviews as you say thanks with donors, pattern analysis of comments or blog posts. Although I did learn from a commenter on Katya's post that I'm not alone - Flower Dust raised 1800 of it in 18 hours, 800 in 15 minutes). It got 189 diggs. So, this is rough.

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Web Analytics Webinar from Idealware

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Click through for larger image. As long as that number is growing, I can get some indication of the topics I'm writing about are of interest and that the time I spend responding to comments and leaving comments elsewhere helps build the regular readership community. Chris Brogan has also written about the Digg effect.

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How To Think Like A Nonprofit Social Marketing Genius: What's Your Brilliant Thought?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Fear about letting the public comment back "publicly". There are many different tools to support this - from leaving comments on blogs or using twitter. Buzz tools include FriendFeed, Twitter, StumbleUpon, and Digg - and of course you add many others to this category that are found in other categories.