Archive for January, 2009

Presentations aren’t about the slides

A quick tweet exchange with Tim Walker this morning reminded me why slides from good presenters aren’t very helpful to look at in isolation.

If Tim does share his PowerPoint slides on his blog or SlideShare, they’ll probably provide us with a nugget or two about his presentation. But they certainly won’t capture the essence of [...]

Take this survey: Hiring in a Recession

Web strategist Jeremiah Owyang is asking his readers to complete a survey on “Hiring in a Recession.”
Here’s Jeremiah’s motivation:
One of my goals in this new year is to help support the community around me. As a result, I’m launching a survey to find out how people recently got their job, in an effort to understand [...]

Yesterday, as part of a comment thread to a blog post by Dawn Foster about the potential value of corporate blogging, I shared the highlights of LiveWorld’s Social Media Content Guidelines.
It only makes sense that I do the same in this space.
Why we have guidelines
As a company that’s all about online social networking and community [...]

Have you graded your 2008 predictions?

All sorts of 2009 predictions have been popping up on blog posts (and in magazines and mainstream media sites, too) these past few weeks.  I’m guessing you’ve read at least one or two of them? (If not, check out the crystall-ball gazing submissions that Peter Kim compiled.)
But until about an hour ago, I hadn’t read [...]

Unique tagging in Delicious

Jason Falls offers a helpful post today on how to do intelligent tagging on the social-bookmarking site, Delicious, and I thought that augmenting his list with two tricks of my own might be helpful:

Create a special tag for all blog posts you leave comments to. I use Commented (simple enough, right?). This enables me to [...]

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Bryper.com archives

To see the archives of my blog posts from April 2006 - March 2008, visit Bryper.com.

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