Mar
10
2010

Session 1 – How to Become a Social Media Guru and Make WordPress your Bitch
Sabrina Dent – @sabrinadent
Sabrina kicked day two off with her talk on a managible approach to social media using WordPress as a platform. As she later admitted herself, being the first speaker up after three hours sleep in the previous 72 was probably not the best idea in the world, but nevertheless she delivered a very nice presentation.
Sabrina’s talk concentrated on the big three social media sites: LinkedIn, Twitter and facebook, and how you can use your WordPress blog as the hub between all three.
- Linkedin more focused than other social media sites. Unless you have your own domain, it’s likely that your LinkedIn page will be the first result in google results. For that reason, be sure that your LinkedIn profile is as you want it.
- You can pull feeds from WordPress blog to your LinkedIn profile. Everybody should do this. This is one of the best ways to let your LinkedIn connections know that you have a blog. Can get traffic from LinkedIn page to blog.
- LinkedIn groups? Useful for some applications, but often not for many others. Very few groups done well. If you’re going to use groups, make sure that you’re the group owner, rather than just a member. Build your own community rather than join somebody else’s.
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Mar
8
2010

Here are my notes from the various sessions that I attended on day one at the recent (excellent) WordCamp Ireland event, which was held at Langtons in Kilkenny.
Session 1: Building Online Communities
Leo Ibanez and Loughlin O’Nolan – @CommunityStorm
Leo and Loughlin had the unenvious job of being first up on Saturday morning. I had high hopes for this talk. I was hoping to come away with a bunch of specific actions that I could take to help to build and grow an online community using WordPress and other online tools. Unfortunately, I found the presentation was a little unfocused and lacked a clear message. The first half (or more) of the talk was given over to a protracted history of online communities, back to email and Usenet in the late ’60s and early ’70s – unnecessary and irrelevant.
The meat of the presentation revolved around using facebook, Twitter, YouTube, commenting on forums and your blog to develop reputation and a community. The presentation could have greatly benefited from real, practical examples of what steps to take, and what a developer/site owner can expect to achieve.
One interesting takeaway from this presentation was the observation that comments on blogs peaked around 2007, and that since then the conversation has moved elsewhere. That is, rather than leave a comment on your blog your visitors are more likely to post a link and a comment on Twitter or facebook. Because the conversation has moved elsewhere, you have to too.
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Mar
8
2010
WordCamp Ireland finished up yesterday afternoon at about 3pm. I took copious notes over the weekend, which I hope to edit down into something vaguely intelligible over the next few days.
In the meantime, huge congratulations are due to Sabrina Dent (@sabrinadent), Katherine Nolan (@doChara) and their team, who put together a packed programme, and a fabulous event with a great vibe.
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