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How I Used LinkedIn For the Final Leg of My Social Search Action Research Experiment

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

style and tolerance for change, I decided to do a seperate action learning experiment on my own dime and reflect in real time along with doing the work: What are some useful techniques social search techniques that might yield richer leads and connections? What thinking shifts are needed to make your social search more successful?

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NTEN Communities of Practice FAQ

NTEN

We want you to know that we've heard you, and we want to quell any fears about the loss of the NTEN Discuss list (it is not going away) or the many valuable resources that have been collected in various Affinity Groups (also, definitely not going away). Where does the CoP “live”? How will the CoP members interact?

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10 Steps to Extension Professional 2.0 Remix

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

looking at the ten steps and overlaying these themes in search of examples! Guide your students to conversations and resources. Use Technorati , a blog search engine. Technorati is very easy to use, no more difficult than typing in a few words and hitting search button. Here's how to search on Technorati.

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Finding the Best People: Strategies for Effective IT Hiring

NTEN

What capacity gaps can be observed between our current resources and both our immediate needs and our projected future needs? In addition, the TechSoup Learning Center has a great resource designed to help nonprofits conduct needs assessments. Once you have answered these questions, map identified needs across functional roles.

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Research Friday: A Case for Content Curation

ASU Lodestar Center

Where do nonprofit leaders, managers, volunteers, donors, and other stakeholders go when searching for information pertinent to their roles? The Chronicle of Philanthropy , Nonprofit Times , Social Innovation Review , and Nonprofit Quarterly are a few industry specific publications that are considered "go to" sources of knowledge.

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ExhibitFiles: Interviews with Initiators Jim Spadaccini and Wendy Pollock

Museum 2.0

The artifacts are reaccessioned, the labels (hopefully) recycled, but what happens to the knowledge? NSF requires grant applicants to build on prior knowledge--where do you get it? The other thing we found early on is that the profiles pop up very high on a google search for a person's name. That's all very deliberate.

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Wikis: What, When, Why

Museum 2.0

While there are some criticisms of its consensus-based model for information-vetting, there's no doubt of its success as a collaborative knowledge-creation project. Woody launched it with an email to the ASTC listserv--a good group to target for his content. There's one primary way to navigate to pages: the search bar.

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