From the category archives:

Twitterville

Yesterday, the sign up site for #tbash, the Twitterville launch party hit 275, our maximum capacity–unless either a new sponsor steps forward. This is unlikely with one week to go before the event starts at 4 pm in Hiller Aviation Museum, San Carlos, CA.

However, Tatyana Kanzaveli, my event producer and I are looking at a few options and we expect we'll be able to squeeze a few more people in and hope to have an announcement later today.

We have already started a waiting list, but twtvite.com, the application we are using, doesn't not let us track sign ups by time and date. It lists names alphabetically by Twitter handle only.

So if you'd still like to go to the party, please email me: shelisrael1@gmail.com . In the subject line, please write "tbash" & your twitter handle. I'll ping you back and tell you your number on the list and your current chances for getting in.

I will add you to the wait list and I will tell you what your number on the list is. I'm sure we will be able to squeeze a few more folk into the museum.

Niagara-falls1

In Twitterville, I quote co-founder Ev Williams as observing, "people are pretty much clueless when they first get to Twitter." He said that back in December 2008, and since then the company has introduced all sorts of features and functionality so Twitterville newbies will be able to find their friends and popular accounts when they first join.

I was absolutely clueless to the value when I first got there. After a few days, I had posted only once, had no picture showing and 45 folks following me. Why were the following me; I wasn't going anywhere? A couple of months later I was in Boston and posted that fact. My friend, and California neighbor,  Jeremiah Owyang turned out to be in Boston as well and ping me. We had dinner and fun that night, and that was the first time I discovered that Twitter can make things happen that otherwise would not have occurred.

That was only a couple of years ago. I could write a book about what I've seen on Twitter since then. In fact I just did.

Last week, I went to Kansas City, where I met with the sales team at Five Star Speakers, my new speaking agency. I was there really, so that they could better understand the product that I wanted them to sell–me. I found it more than a little difficult to figure out what it was I should say to them.

But the night before Steve Gardner had taken me out for legendary Kansas City ribs  at Jack's Stack. Steve and I found each other through Twitter, and I knew that he saw the value to his organization, yet it was also clear that many on his team were new and, as Ev Williams had put it, "clueless" to how Twitter really worked. At dinner, Five Star, bizdev executive had complained at how fast the stream moved when she got there. The next day, when I presented to the sales team,  heard the same observation and saw other heads nod.

It seems that as Twitter newbies my Five Star friends had been dipping into the public stream where the post of millions of people from all over the world go up in rapid succession. Until this morning I had not looked at the public stream since my first days in Twitterville. It isn't at all like dipping your toe into a stream. It's more like immersing your head into Niagara Falls.

The public stream is neither useful nor interesting to most people using Twitter and they usually learn this after a short while. It is your personal stream that matter. This stream contains the content of the people you choose to follow. I like Andrew Lih's observation that who you follow is more important than who follows you. If you follow lots of people then your personal stream will have lots of content. You regulate both the quality and quantity of what goes past you, by choosing wisely who you follow.

Your personal stream is really what will determine the quality of your Twitterville experience. Mixing metaphors, your personal stream becomes you customized, conversational newspaper. What flows there is the value you will take into real life and the conversation that start there are likely to be the most valuable to you in using Twitter.

Besides, it's a lot easier and safer to dip your toes into a little stream than a thundering waterfall.

 

joe thornley by Hyku

                            [Joe Thornley. Photo by Hyku]

My friend Joe Thornley just announced my five-city Twitterville book tour, which he has assembled on my behalf and for which I am extremely grateful. You can see the details here. It will also be the the third birthday for Third Tuesday, a monthly social media meet-up that has burgeoned since September 2006.

Canada is special for me as a speaker. When Joe brought me to Canada to tout Naked Conversations, it was the first time I ever spoke outside of the US. I had been to Canada a few times, and culturally it isn't that different from the US. Not only that but when we are not on the hockey rinks, Canadians and Americans tend to get along pretty well.

But still, I would be speaking in a foreign country. There are differences in nuance and culture. For example, those Canadians actually LIKE cold weather, which I hate. As Joe recently observed, I tend to be a worrier when it comes to writing and speaking. I sweat details in advance, so I can have fun when I'm up on stage.

Joe had arranged a couple of warm=up engagements where I had not be poorly received, but I had not hit it past the goalie by any measures.

So my confidence wasn't overflowing as I got ready for the main reason I had come to Canada, to help Joe launch the first-ever Third Tuesday in Toronto.

My knees were almost shaking when I got on the dais to be interviewed. I muttered my first two paragraphs. Then I started noticing people in the audience seemed happy to see me. Heads were nodding. Folks were smiling. Okay, Canadians tend to be very polite, when hockey is not involved but it helped to feel warmly received.

I felt Third Tuesday went well. I made some friends that night whom remain friends. I look forward to seeing them face-to-face again. "Hell," I thought, "they're just a bunch of social media geeks, just like in the States."

And in that thought was a bigger lesson.

It's not that all Canadians will enjoy or have the slightest interest about what I have to say. In fact, at that time, relatively few Canadians much cared about social media, or  Robert Scoble, never mind the unknown other guy who wrote Naked Conversations. 

There were, however, a few people who cared. It seemed we shared a common topical interest, a shared passion on something new and different that might change the way people communicate all over the world. I, and the American and Canadian social media enthusiasts shared a common interest and it transcended geographic barriers.

These are global neighborhoods. People of the world are using social media to create new spaces built on common interests.

Canada made me comfortable speaking in a foreign country. I've been most fortunate to speak in several more countries in Europe and Asia over the past few years, not to mention diverse corners of my own country.

Wherever I go, I'm comfortable. I know that most of the people out there care about the things I care about; read some of the same people I read; talk and follow and hear some of the same words and faces and voices that I follow.

My social media neighborhood has gone global and it is really a kick to be part of it and to see how it has grown in so many ways and so little time.

In a new Twitter.com blog post, co-founder Biz Stone says, "The ongoing, massively coordinated attacks on Twitter this week appear to have been geopolitical in motivation."

While Biz names no geopolitical forces I immediately assumed the culprits were supporters of the Iran Election thieves, but FT.com points the finger at a veteran cyberbully–Russia, who apparently has gone after Twitter, Live Journal and Facebook in order to silence an Georgian citizen who charges Russia with all sorts of nastiness in his country.

Russia, was the first country alleged to launch a cyber attack. Back in September 2007, it went after Estonia when the former satellite country relocated a statue salutary to former occupying Soviet soldiers.

In this case a country has maliciously attacked a few Western social media companies who allow people to speak up. Russia seems to think it's justifiable to silence anything that allows voices it doesn't like to be heard.

This is really scary.

TBASH, the Twitterville book launch party, scheduled from 4-8 pm, Sunday Aug. 23 at the Hiller Aviation Museum will open for public registration at 9 am today.

 It will be on a first-come basis. Just go to the twtvite page and enter your twitter handle. If you plan to bring a guest who does not have a Twitter handle, re-enter yours and add the word guest.

There are just 142 open spaces left. The first 133 spots have been taken by people who are in th book, people who helped me find stories for the book and a small handful of close personal friends.

The number of people who can attend is regulated almost entirely by sponsorship revenue. We are grateful to UpTake.com a new travel search
engine that searches reviews, ratings and information from 5000 of the top
travel Websites that helps people decide where to go, where to stay, and what to do
when you get there stepped up as a sponsor and we could add another 25 spaces.

We are hoping for more sponsorship. When we get it, we will open registration to more people. If you know of a company that can help, please contact TBASH producer, Tatyana Kanzaveli.

I will be monitoring and authenticating registrations today. If you run into a problem, please tweet or email me.

It is has been a long and sometimes difficult pregnancy, but I think the result is a beautiful baby. Please join me in celebrating the birth of my new book, Twitterville, how businesses can thrive in the new Global Neighborhoods.

tBASH, the Twitterville book launch party will be held from 4-8 pm, Sunday, Aug. 23 at the Hiller Aviation Museum, San Carlos CA. The first 300 copies of Twitterville will be on sale, ten days before it becomes available at most places that sell books.

tBASH will be attended by at least 25 of the people whose stories are told in the book.They are coming from all over the country. Among those who planning to attend are Richard Binhammer, Chris Brogan, Shel Holtz, Beth Kanter, Erica, O'Grady, Sam Lawrence , Lionel Menchaca, Jeremiah Owyang, KD Paine, Robert Scoble, Brian Solis as well as other prominent Twitterville folk.

But for me the cherry-on-the-cake is in the people who you may never have met or heard of, people who gave me great stories for the book, many of them traveling some distance to be part of tBASH.

They include:

They include: Sodexo's Arie Ball, who tweets to recruit executive talent;  Aneta Hall who is a social media change agent for Pitney Bowes the postage meter company; Bill Ferris who played a driving role in the first live tweeted surgery; Janis Krums, who was on a ferry to New Jersey, when a plane landed near him on the Hudson River; Stacey Monk who used Tweetsgiving to raise funds for a Tanzanian school and continues to make Epic Change; Howard Lindzon and Soren Macbeth, co-founders of Stocktwits the Twitterville fast-growing investment community; Matthew Arevalo, a Mac-loving geek who helped raise funds from Hollywood stars for charity:water and a few others who are still trying to deal with budget and logistics to get out here for the party.

There are a lot of people in Twitterville, not just those whose stories I tell, but people who reached out to me via Twitter, pointing me to the stories that are at the heart of the book. Over the last few weeks I have been reaching out and inviting each of them to reserve an advanced space at TBASH before I open it to the public. But time has run out and I haven't contacted everyone. If you are mentioned in Twitterville, in the book itself or in the acknowledgments, please tweet or email me before 9 am tomorrow, Aug. 4 and I will reserve a space for you.

At about 9 am Pacific tomorrow morning I will open [currently closed] signups to anyone via twtvite. Space is limited to 250 people for now, and at this moment there are 160 open spaces.

I will announce when signups go public on Twitter and then it will be first-come, first registered. You need to enroll with a Twitter handle. If you are bringing a guest who doesn't have one, use your own a second time and add the word "guest."

We have enough sponsorship to throw a great party for 250 people. We would like to make it a greater party for more people and to do that, we are looking for more sponsorship.

If you you can help in that area, please contact the phenomenal Tatyana Kanzaveli, an event impresario and sales & marketing consultant who has stepped up to produce tBASH and has done a remarkable job in a short period of time.

If you help support us, you'll be in good company. So far we've lined up:

Premier Sponsors

  • Dow Jones,
    a News Corporation company is a leading provider of global business news and information
    services and the
    publisher of  The Wall Street Journal.” They will hold a drawing for an
    iPod Touch at the event.

  • Network Solutions  a leading provider of products, services and resources to help small businesses start, grow and manage online.
  • Radian6  focused on building the complete monitoring and analysis solution for PR and advertising professionals so they can be the experts in social media.”

General Sponsors

  • Intuit Inc. is a leading provider of business and financial management solutions.
  • MyWay Interactive hosts a free social contact manager that provides the capability to organize, sort, search and add notes to your Twitter friends.

Media Sponsors

Association Sponsor

  • SNCR, the Society for New Communications Research

Social Cause Sponsor

Food & Beverage sponsors

  • Cameron Hughes Wines You'll be paying $3 a pop for wine and beer, but you'll be enjoying a higher quality because of the deal Cameron Hughes has provided us. [Soft drinks will be free.
  • Sabra foods, makers of healthy foods for caring people
  • Pretzel Crisps, Gourmet pretzel crackers from the people who used to own New York-style Bagels Co.

Needless to say, this is an important event for me, and I hope you will be able to join in celebrating the imminent arrival of my new baby.


Last week Jeff Jarvis tweeted the other day that it is time for Twitter to discontinue 'Trending Topics,' that list of what people in Twitter are most following. I could not agree more.

The feature takes up a lot of space, which is Twitter's greatest constraint and could be used for better things.

There was a time when Trending Topics was helpful. "People are pretty much clueless when they first get onto Twitter," Ev Williams has said and he was right of course. The feature was first offered last year in an effort to help people find interesting topics of conversation and it worked well in accomplishing that for a short while.

But now people are less clueless. Nw, when they join the friends they have help guide them along and assist them in finding new colleagues. They can easily discover topics that interest them and join neighborhoods based on those topics.

But Trending Topics, has become all-too-often a list cluttered and dominated by banalities, contests and silliness that is of no interest or use to a great many people, particularly those of us who use Twitter for business, or to learn about events in the world; nor is not useful for actually meeting new people with whom you share common interests.

Trending topics is easy to game. Just create a quiz, invite people to discuss pet peeves or a sex-related topic; be a movie star who dies under questionable circumstances and it will push subjects like the Iran Election right into oblivion.

Obviously, there are more people who like the topics that are making the list than those who do not–or the list would not have picked up the TV Guide quality that it has assumed. But it seems to me that it is bring broadcast media technique to a social media venue.

This may seem like a trivial topic, but it is not. There was a time when thinkers had great vision for television. NBC pioneer David Sarnoff envisioned bringing opera and symphony into America's living rooms. News pioneer Edward R. Murrow thought that the distribution of news on television  would level abuses by tyrants and corrupt public officials. Educators dreamed of using television to educate the masses.

And we ended up with American Idol.

Twitter is the fastest growing computer-based technology in history. There is no end to that growth trend in site. It has the potential of letting each of us find others who share our interests and passions without intermediation by bosses, government, advertisers or anyone.

Twitter can be perceived in more ways than the blind men saw the elephant.

"We become what we measure," my friend KD Paine, the social media measurement expert often says. My belief is that if Twitter focuses on measuring Trending Topics, it will become something far less than it could become.

NOTE: With permission from my publisher, Portfolio, I am posting Twitterville's entire Introduction as it will appear when the book is published on Sept. 3. I certainly hope you like it.

INTRODUCTION

James Buck Gets Out of Jail and Inspires This Book

James Buck’s tweet was but a single word: “Arrested.”

That tweet would get him out of jail, and inspire me to write Twitterville. But neither of us knew that at 9:33 AM on April 10, 2008, when Buck was in the backseat of a police car and being taken to a holding cell in the Nile Delta city of Mahalla, Egypt. 

Buck was a graduate student at the University of California, Berkeley, majoring in photojournalism. He had come to Mahalla to photograph the food strikes in this manufacturing-agricultural city of four hundred thousand. 

Days earlier, the streets had turned violent. Fires were started, and people got hurt. Police clubbed and arrested several protesters. On April 10, Buck took a cautious approach. He stayed back from the crowds, using a telephoto lens to capture his story. 

He got busted anyway. 

I knew something about Egyptian police. In 2007 I had interviewed Wael Abbas
(@WaelAbbas), as part of my Social Media Global Reports blog post series. Abbas is an Egyptian citizen journalist who kept posting videos on YouTube of uncharged “suspects” being tortured in Egyptian police stations similar to the one where Buck was heading.*

It was when I saw the word “arrested” on Twitter that I realized how much bigger this new social media communications tool had become—more than I had previously thought possible. I didn’t know James Buck. I didn’t follow him on Twitter
until that one-word post. I didn’t even know that I connected
with him.

When a “tweeter,” as someone who posts on Twitter is called, reads something posted by another tweeter and thinks that it’s worth repeating, he or she adds the letters RT and posts it again. Someone else may then read it, and repeat the process. This is called retweeting and it is the essential process that makes word often travel so far and fast on Twitter. 

Retweeting is an important part of Twitter’s magic: you may follow—or be followed by—just a small handful of people. Yet even if only one person follows you, through just a few degrees of separation you are connected to the growing millions of people who tweet all over the world. 

James Buck was a new tweeter. He only had a few followers; as I already mentioned, I wasn’t one of them. But a friend of his retweeted the “arrested” post and added a brief explanation. A friend of mine saw that and retweeted it. I was four steps removed from Buck. I saw the post about thirty minutes after he had posted from the police car.

A few weeks earlier, while saying good-byes to friends in Berkeley, one had turned Buck on to Twitter. Th e friend thought it might be good to have on his Blackberry in case some emergency popped up.

While Buck sat in the cell, the one-word message he sent to Berkeley friends via Twitter kept moving. For some reason, the Egyptian police let him keep his Blackberry and he kept tweeting. His small personal network kept retweeting. Word spread on Twitter. Someone contacted the U.S. State Department, which swung
into uncharacteristically quick action. 

Within twenty-four hours, Buck’s government had intervened. He was released from jail and was about to be driven to the airport where he would receive a free trip home. Before he stepped into the car, he stopped to type in another
single-word message, or tweet as they are universally called.
The message said “Free.” 

This changed my personal view of Twitter. Until then it was something fun to use, occasionally useful for business purposes. Tweeting had landed me some paid speaking engagements. I had friends who lived in other countries and it was a faster, easier way to keep in touch. 

But the James Buck incident took my breath away. I realized that this Twitter phenomenon had bigger implications than I had understood. I started paying closer attention and taking notes. 

Dramatic Moments 

I began to notice that now and then Twitter has very dramatic moments. In the coming months, this would include a Dutch student in a bookstore in South China who would report the first deadly rumble of the Szechuan earthquake. A team of surgeons in Detroit tweeting real-time progress to medical professionals at a Las Vegas conference as a robotic device removed a tumor from a patient. A young entrepreneur on a ferry on the Hudson River, witnessing a passenger jet skid to a halt nearby, then start to sink. 

And it would be easy to have written a book just about those moments of life and death. There are enough of them that unfolded, and there will undoubtedly be many more.

But drama is not the entire story.

Much of the time, Twitter is just about everyday people discussing everyday things. Increasingly, it has become a highly effective tool of business communication. This book chiefly focuses on telling you how people use Twitter to get closer to customers and constituents.

Twitter is also about stumbling into old acquaintances. On the day that James Buck typed in "arrested," I was sitting comfortably at home, having crossed paths with an old friend on Twitter. We were sending little spoonfuls of conversation to each other, details of jobs and travel, pets and grandchildren, catching up on the past thirty years since we’d lost each other.

Equally, Twitter is about meeting new people who are relevant to you, in business or whatever else interests you. You can find them easily, start a simple conversation and watch how quickly and deeply it can develop. 

Ultimately, this is a book about what Twitter can do for you. I’m
going to tell you what others have done and are doing and my hope
is that it will give you a few interesting or useful ideas. 

Telephone Metaphor 

As Chris Brogan, one of Twitterville’s most respected pioneer-champions, likes to say, “It’s very much like a telephone.” He’s right, and the telephone is a good starting point, but it seems to me that Twitter is more than that. 

Brogan maintains that Twitter, like the phone, is a personal communications tool. And you can use it to conduct any conversation you choose to discuss. 

Those conversations, however, are usually private on the phone. You can talk privately in Twitter through a feature called direct message, or DM. Yet in most cases, Twitter works best when it is public and anyone can see what you are saying, so that anyone can respond to what you say or retweet it. 

Twitter is also superior to a telephone for meeting new people. When a stranger calls you on the telephone, it is usually to try to sell you something you don’t want. The practice got so out of hand on the telephone that laws have been created to constrain telephone peddlers. 

But on Twitter, meeting strangers can be both enjoyable and valuable. If you meet someone you’d prefer to avoid, there are filters and functions that work relatively well at keeping that person away from you. It is almost always an easier experience than receiving a cold call. 

People use Twitter for personal or business reasons. Many of us find we cannot help but mix the two together, just like many folks do on the phone or face-to-face.

I’ve been asked why any employer in her right mind would allow workers to tweet on company time. The answer is simple, and again it’s like using a telephone at work or, for that matter, e-mail or a fax: you use Twitter to communicate. The topic is up to you. 

The Blog Metaphor 

Twitter is as much like a blog as it is like a telephone, except that you need to picture a very small blog post. In fact, Twitter is the leading software in a category called microblogging. You publish what you have to say, and people respond if they wish. You publish to one person or to the whole world, and people respond in the same manner. 

Space is limited to just 140 characters; therefore, messages must cut to the chase. Shorthand necessarily becomes part of tweeted language; it’s more egalitarian than full-size blogs because people respond in equal length and equal placement on Twitter pages or “tweetstreams.” The constraints of size lead to speedy conversation. Twitter moves faster than any blog. 

There are several books that will tell you how to use Twitter and why you should. This book does a little of both, but neither is my central focus. I share with you the stories of people using Twitter in the home office and in the global enterprise. People tweet to raise money for causes; to make government more responsive; to find and distribute news; to build personal or business networks; or to just
kill a little time with people you enjoy. 

I believe that many of us learn best from other people’s stories. If I tell you about someone who has used Twitter to improve his personal brand or to get more customers into a coffee house or to shop in one market over another, my hope is you will read one of these stories and adapt Twitter to whatever it is you do.

Twitter is a pretty simple tool. Most people can pick up the mechanics just by fiddling with Twitter for a few minutes. Once you start talking with people, they tend to be pretty generous in helping newcomers fi nd their way around. Before you know it, you’ll be helping others who have followed you into Twitterville. 

A Tool for All Seasons 

I am beginning this book in the toughest economic climate since the 1930s. I hope that we will have entered better times before you start reading it. 

I could argue that Twitter is ideally suited for tough times. At a time when economic constraints are causing most businesses to make painful cuts, they still must interface with customers; Twitter is the most efficient and effective way to do it this side of a face-to- face meeting.
 
It’s not just customers, it’s your entire business ecosystem—your prospects, partners, employees, investors, analysts, and media. You’ll probably find many of them are already in Twitterville when you arrive, already having conversations relevant to your business. The sooner you join the conversations, the faster you may get out from under the business pressures you are facing.

But when you think about it, Twitter is not just a tool for tough times, but for all times. Th ere is no economic situation in which businesses do not need to interact with constituents. Th ere are very few instances when the most economic way of doing it is not the wisest course to take. 

Good-bye, Broadcast. Hello, Conversation

We live in an era when what used to be considered best practices are not so good as they used to be. Methods that have been in place for years, refined and optimized over time, just aren’t getting the results they used to. Among them are customer support, traditional marketing, and product research. 

My previous book, Naked Conversations, coauthored with Robert Scoble, assailed the excesses of marketing. In 2006 that seemed a revolutionary idea to some. Now it seems pretty obvious. Marketing programs are too expensive, and they produce diminishing results. 

Twitterville examines the inefficiency of traditional marketing. It argues the case for using social media instead of ads. It argues that from a business perspective, Twitter is the most effective tool yet delivered into the growing arsenal of social media tools. 

But Twitter alone is limited. It is too shallow in its constrained space. It is not visual. It is limited in its ability to conduct safe transactions or hear someone’s voice. A carpenter building a home would have to use a hammer—but not just a hammer. This book shares numerous stories of how Twitter works best with other social media tools, particularly blogs. 

When considering Twitter, this book advises you to consider an entire toolset, which in fact can lead to an entirely new way to conduct your business.

In Naked Conversations, Scoble and I predicted the death of a so-called Broadcast Era, and the birth of a new Conversational Era. Twitterville looks upon the three years between books as a transformational time. This transformation has accelerated during this recession because businesses now understand that they need to explore new avenues. Those avenues seem to converge on Twitterville’s Main Street. 

The Generosity of Crowds 

I have often written about social media being built on a “cult of generosity.” Tweeters have been more than a little generous with me in the process of writing this book. 

As I started each chapter, I posted on Twitter what I was covering, and requested people tell me good stories on the various topics explored in each chapter. My cup overflowed with results. I received several hundred suggestions. Tweeters generated about three-fourths of the stories reported in Twitterville. The process I
used is called crowd sourcing, which I find to be better for research than anything else, including Google.

In Google you enter a keyword, and a “spider” crawls all over the Internet’s data to give you results. That’s a pretty remarkable process. But by crowd sourcing in Twitterville, I got people I know and trust to give me information, insights, and specific examples, which this book shares with you. 

The way in which I wrote this book confirmed to me my very best thoughts about Twitter. Twitterville has its darker streets, as I will discuss, but it is dominated and culturally shaped by a cult of generosity. The people who are most generous in Twitterville are among its most influential members. 

Why Call It “Twitterville”? 

I am not sure whether or not I was the first to coin the term “Twitterville.” I came up with it after Laura Fitton  described her “Twitter Village” in a very thoughtful blog post in January 2008. I had not previously heard the term, and I’ve been using it ever since. 

Twitterville connotes a certain homey, small-town feel, a place where you meet people you know as you stroll down familiar streets. These are people with whom you share common friends, interests, and ethics. When you meet a stranger here, chances are you have mutual friends or interests. 

While Twitterville has millions of people in it, and is growing faster than the world’s largest megalopolises, it still feels cozy to most of its residents and visitors. It still feels safe for the most part. This is due, in my opinion, to Twitterville’s most important characteristic, something I have named Global Neighborhoods. The con-
cept came to me several years ago, while I was having coffee with Charlene Li, who wrote the foreword to this book.

She told me geography is becoming irrelevant because of social media. 


For Charlene it seemed to be a throwaway thought. But for me, it was a very large idea. It gave me the sense of global neighborhoods, which became the name of my blog and has been my central focus since ccompleting Naked Conversations

Through social media, society is being rearranged very fundamentally and at a faster rate than many people realize. Until the Conversational Era came along, people were constrained by geography. We really could not get to know people we did not encounter face-to-face.

When you think about that, you realize that each of us has been denied access to billions of people, many of whom share similar passions and interests, some of whom can help us, some of whom we can help. 

By no means have the barriers disappeared. Everybody simply cannot know everybody else on the planet. But the barriers between people have been lowered through social media. Doors have been opened. Restrictions are being reduced as people start discovering there are others like themselves all over the world. It has   potential to reverse the combination of suspicion and ignorance that peo-
ple of one culture feel about people of another. 

We no longer need airplanes to meet new people who are  physically far away from us. We can now go online and visit a virtual place to do this. That place may not be tangible or even real.  But the people you meet there are real, and so are the relationships you form there—and Twitterville will hopefully show you their
value. 

In her foreword, Charlene Li writes that Twitter is “a conversation,” a reference to The Cluetrain Manifesto, the fountainhead book of the social media revolution. She is right, of course. Markets are conversations, Cluetrain taught us. Twitterville is a marketplace, and the conversations are meaningful to a growing number of businesses. 

So I fully agree, but I see something even more promising. Twitter lets us behave online more closely to how we do in the tangible world than anything that has ever preceded it. And we find neighborhoods that suit us. If we love to talk about politics, we can find many neighborhoods where everyone cares about just that. The same with hummingbirds, cooking, sports, or needlepoint. You can find a neighborhood where you can hang out to learn and share and chat about the topic.
You can join as many or as few as you like. These are global neighborhoods, yet they are small and personal and cozy at the same time that they make your world far bigger.

I hope you enjoy reading Twitterville as much as I have enjoyed writing it. 

 —Shel Israel
 January 21, 2009

Most of us have had an experience involving someone we love and cancer. Even when the beast is defeated there simply nothing funny about cancer. About 13% of all people who died in 2007 were taken by cancer.

In the US in 2008, some 11 million people were afflicted by cancer. Drew Olanoff, 29, a Philadelphia-raised developer became one of them, when a lump on his neck turned out to be lymphoma, one of the most treatable of all cancers when caught in early phases. Except Drew’s cancer was detected in Stage 3, which is not an early phase. It had first appeared on his neck but had spread into his chest and abdomen.

It meant Drew would have to cancel plans to move to Los Angeles where he had just been hired as online communities director for mobile text pioneer GOGII. Instead, he moved in with his mom in Swedesboro, NJ where he immediately began chemo treatment and neulasta shots every 2
weeks.  He has completed 4, and has 5 to
go.

Drew is a self-admitted geek, known and popular in the Web 2.0 community and long active, particularly in social media and Twitter. Like many people with cancer and other chronic and threatening diseases, Drew turned to social media for support.

What is different for Drew is his injection of humor. He created a Twitter hashtag called #BlameDrewsCancer. Read through that list of thousands of tags, and I’m wagering you will have no choice but to smile if not bursting out laughing. Then you stop and think, “Wait, I’m laughing about some guy’s cancer.”

Your entertainment helps Drew. It supports and encourages him to fight the fight he has to face. He knows he is not alone. He knows people are on his side.

Drew started what has become a Twitter meme, by blaming his cancer on his missing keys or yet another loss by his beloved Phillies. Soon others joined in. Among them is cancer survivor Lance Armstrong who blamed Drew’s cancer for a sore shoulder. This has led to Drew’s increasing involvement in LIVESTRONG, Armstrong’s online cancer-fighting community.

Drew has guest blogged at LIVESTRONG. When people blame Drew’s cancer at LIVESTRONG they are requested to donate a dollar per complaint. Drew is searching for a corporate sponsor to match the funds.

Here are my questions for Drew and his answers.

Q1 When you first noticed you had a lump, what was your initial response?
When you showed it to your mom, what was her response? How did the
doctor break the news of cancer to you?

I first noticed I had a lump a
week or two before I left San Francisco.  I took pictures of it and my
mom’s response was “it could be anything.”  I already knew I was coming
home to visit before I headed off to LA and GOGII, so it seemed
reasonable.  When I got the diagnosis, the doctor called me into the
office.  I knew it wasn’t good.  He was direct, and scheduled my first
chemo treatment right then and there.

Q2 What were your first thoughts when you discovered you had cancer?

“Dammit.”
Probably because I knew deep down something was not right.  Because of
the tests and the feedback from the doctor and surgeon, I knew it was a
probability.  (Lymphoma of some type, Hodgkin’s being the easier to
treat of the two)  When I got “the call” I broke down.  Both of my
parents were there at the time, luckily.

Q3 What made you decide to turn to social media?  Were you aware of other people in social media with cancer?

I
always feel like I want to share.  Not because I want attention, but
this is my chosen profession.  If I’m going to share something funny,
great, or sad … then I better keep things real.  And this was as real
as it got. I have a lot of friends on Twitter and various other
social networks … even if I haven’t met them in person.   I wasn’t
aware of that many people who were that public.  In retrospect I was
wrong.

Q4 How did you get the idea for #BlameDrewsCancer?

I
started blaming things on my cancer a week before I was diagnosed
officially.   The doctor had said it looks like a lymphoma so I took that
as my diagnosis. I blamed things on my cancer, and my mom’s initial
response was “You don’t know that its cancer,” to which I’d respond
“Yes, I do.”  I wanted to turn it into a site since I’m a geek.  Ran
it by my longtime mentor Micki Krimmel and she said “Do it.”  So I
called Mike Demers whom I worked with for a long time in Seattle, and
not only one of my best friends, but a Hodgkins survivor.  He said yes
immediately and built what you see today.

Q5 What has #BlameDrewsCancer done for you? What about social media in general?

For
me, it has allowed me to talk about cancer in a way that not many
people can.  Cancer scares people, and rightfully so. But there are
things that can be done, and are being done. You see it every day with
LIVESTRONG and other foundations.   What it does for social media is
prove the medium even more.

Q6 What are some of your favorite anecdotes from #BlameDrewsCancer?

Blaming
my cancer for Nickelback still makes me laugh.  But when I woke up to
Lance Armstrong blaming my cancer for his shoulder injury, I knew that
I struck a chord.   An unintended chord as far as reach, but a chord
none the less.  I’ve also woken up to people blaming my cancer for the
death of loved ones.  Difficult, but real.

Q7 Can you share with me some comments–pro or negative, the hashtag has caused.

Zero
negative whatsoever.  Do I know that things can be misused either for
spam or nastiness?  Yes.  It’s a part of the territory.  But I’d say
that 99% of the tweets come from the heart or the funny part of the
heart and that’s a wonderful thing.

Q8 What advice do you have for other people with serious or chronic diseases and using social media?

Reach
out.  You’re not alone.  If ONE person comes back to you with a sign of
support, or an offer of friendship, you’ve won and the disease has lost.

Q9 How did you become affiliated with LIVESTRONG and Lance
Armstrong? How much money have you raised? Just how does it work and
how do people contribute?

The day that we launched the
site, LIVESTRONG’s CEO and community team reached out to me.  They
asked me if I needed support, needed anything … and asked me how I was
feeling.  It meant a lot.   To date, we’ve raised $600 solely for
LIVESTRONG, but have raised over $3,000 for the American Cancer Society
and $500 for the Make-A-Wish Foundation.

People can donate directly to
LIVESTRONG via a link on http://www.BlameDrewsCancer.com or through our Facebook Cause Page.  http://bit.ly/bdcfb – The support has been amazing.  But I won’t rest until I find sponsors to donate $1 for each unique blamer to LIVESTRONG.

Q10 additional comments?

Cancer picked the wrong people to mess with.

Just about every author I’ve shared notes with see a cart horse relationship between writing books and speaking. Most of us do better on the fame side of the fame-fortune continuum but we need both speaking and books to make a decent living.

My author friends who do the best financially from speaking engagements, invariably use speaker agents. Until a few weeks ago I have not followed suit, although I was aware that I was not doing well on the paid-speaking circuit as several of my peers.

This is because the speaking agents and bureaus I’ve spoke with have not made me comfortable on three simple areas. I want to feel like anyone representing me understands who I am, what I talk about and can help find audiences that want to hear what I have to say in the style I deliver it.

The first agent I ever spoke to was right after Naked Conversations was published. I suspected we had a mismatch when he advised me that he would not use the title of the book in pitching on my behalf. “Naked,” he advised me, would turn off some of the corporate audiences that he would sell me too.

Other agencies have told me how great the agencies were.  Others could not fathom that I was not a technology speaker and so on. My conversations with other bureaus got less frequent and shorter, until I decided to go my own route.

I didn’t do badly, but with a new book, I thought I would give it another try. I actually found two that understood social media and even Twitter.  One was in Boston and represented several of the most respected social media speaker authors, people I look up to, but that agency failed to convince me that they understood where and when I was unique versus another name on the list.

About then I asked for recommendations on Twitter.  I have obvious faith in Twitterville and I have always trusted the opinions of people I know more than Google searches or what organizations say about themselves on a website.

So when Wallace Wilson recommended Steve Gardner, CEO of Five Star Speakers in Kansas City, I paid attention. When Wallace said he had actually used Five Star, I paid closer attention and when I discovered that Steve actually tweeted I started getting downright optimistic.

Steve has spent well over two hours talking with me on the phone. We have exchanged over 30 emails. We have discussed aspects of our personal life. During all that Steve convinced me that he knows who I am, what I have to say and why people might want to hear it.

I share all this because some of you may need to retain an agent or a consultant. Others of you may be consultants. I thought it might be useful or interesting to share the process and what factors got me to decide to go with Steve and Five Star.

One other note. My "turning pro" does not eliminate the selected free speaking engagements that I have done. I love speaking to the social media community itself. I have just completed a new book and I want to talk about it. Instead, it vastly expands the audiences that I hope to reach.

In fact, there are several ways it may be easier for me to participate in community events, by getting me to cities and venues, where sponsorship might not otherwise be available.

I completed final proofing of Twitterville on June 12. Many authors, myself included, love to conclude a book with a demonstration of some form of Big Picture vision. Mine was a final chapter that explained how on Twitter, we can easily form global neighborhoods-virtual spaces where people all over the world can come together to share information, ideas and passion on any particular subject.

Twitterville concludes that these global neighborhoods lets people in different places and of different cultures talk directly with intermediation of governments, media or employers. When we do that we start to notice our similarities and can find them more compelling than our differences.

It was supposed to be a big thought, a vision of instances that would happen far into the future. But on June 12, in Iran, a country that I knew little about an election was held. By the next morning results of 30 million ballots had been allegedly hand-counted and the incumbent anti-West, pro-terrorist regime declared itself a winner by an overwhelming majority.

The speed and the count defied credibility. Details revealing some districts had counted more than 100 percent of the registered voters led to questions. Unopened ballot boxes photographed in libraries led to expressions of disbelief, spurred by protests from defeated candidates, respected clerics and reasonable people everywhere.

Those who had hoped to see change; who believed they lived in a country that provided them a choice at the ballot box felt they had been robbed of that choice and they took to the streets do demonstrate their disbelief, which soon erupted into outrage.

For the most part, traditional press was hamstrung. It was not that they were shirking responsibilities, but years of budget cuts had thinned the ranks of stringers, correspondents and reporters for mainstream media. Plus the Iran government plays games with journalist visas. Worse when government "requests" are ignored, the leaders of this republic responded by detentions, expulsions, and occasional arrests and perhaps charges of disruption or spying both of which can result in being slowly hanged to death [they raise you by the neck, so that you strangle, rather than just drop you through a trap door so your neck quickly breaks].

This onerous and successful suppression of traditional journalism has worked in many countries all over the world. When certain governments kick the press off a story, it almost always means ugly things are going to happen; unarmed people will suffer, voices for change will be silenced.

But this time there was some new force coming into play; something that had not occurred before. The voices of people on the streets could now be heard on Twitter, where people who supported them could amplify what they had to say by retweeting. Twitter became the voice of the street. It also worked in tandem with YouTube and Flickr to serve as the eyes.

These video not only showed us smoking guns of evidence, it showed us the victim of these smoking guns, such as the sniper killing of Neda Agha-Soltan a 26-year-old student. Twitter filled the void created by the traditional media's inability to report the news and it did it in a grassroots, ad hoc manner that made many news organizations wince.

First off was the issue of sourcing. It was dangerous to Iranian tweeters to identify them. On Twitter, we just agreed to not post names. Many of us also changed our own addresses o appear as if we were in Iran, and we encouraged authentic Iranian Tweeters to say they were from elsewhere–to confuse government investigators.

For the press, who is disciplined to at least attempt some level of objectivity this was a problem. While as a Tweeter I get to say what I think, a professional journalist is trained not to do that, but to attribute a quote to a  credible source.

But second, was the issue of factual credibility. As had been the case in events like Mumbai, the Schezuan Earthquake and Gaza-Israel, there was a huge amount of misinformation being circulated. It was hard to verify and during the days when the story was moving rapidly from streets, to rooftops; from embassies to hospitals and was a definite challenge to determine what was actually happening and to do so with reasonable speed.

For me the Internet posted photos and videos were the verifiers. For the press, posting such content without knowing who took these visual renderings was a challenge.

But the press had been locked out for the most part. They could go talk to some Iranian now sequestered in the safety of a Western university or they could trust the story emanating from the streets of Iran.

After a few days of confusion, much of the press turned to Twitter and social media to report the story. They added some professional vetting that discounted many of the early stories that were seemingly manufactured to overstate an otherwise credible case.

Twitter came first. It told a story that the word is likely to have otherwise overlooked. Tweeters were the feet on the street who wrote the story. They were the videographer and photographers and these citizen journalist did so at great personal risk–as have professional journalist been doing for centuries.

The longer, deeper, more balanced and accurate stories were written by the great traditional institutions such as The New York and Los Angeles Times.

But something new has been happening ever since the China Quake when much of the Western press first learned about a tremor that killed 50,000 people because a Dutch teenager named Casper Oppenhuis de Jong was an eyewitness with WiFi access. The press went with the unknown guy whose feet happened to be on the street and at that point, the strands between citizen and traditional journalism began to intertwine.

This evolved into a full-fledged braiding of traditional and social media by the time Janis Krums used an iPhone to photograph US Air 1549 landing near his passenger ferry on the Hudson River.

By the time Iran erupted, it was becoming clear that to get some stories there needs to be a convergence of of these two reporting systems. In Iran, traditional media started to bend some of its rigid and perhaps outdated rules, simply because they would not have participated in a story that held great interest to many people all over the world.

There are many things that can be said about Iran. There are also many disparaging comments any of us can make bout social and traditional media. But it is becoming clear that we are moving in a direction in which journalism braids, and in so doing people who care can find out more news about events in more places–large and small than has previously been the case.

For a very long time, media institutions have looked disdainfully, even contemptuously on social media coverage. There are more of those days behind us, it seems to me, than there are in front of us.

Events of the last years have varied greatly. But the strands of braided journalism are growing stronger and broader with each passing event.


The frustrating part of writing a book like Twitterville is that great stories keep happening after the book gets locked up and before it gets to the bookshelf. I wrote an entire chapter about users taking control, talked about classics like Motrin Moms and Pepsi's offensive suicide ads, but perhaps my favorite was about David Alston, the Radian6 marketing executive who Tweeted that U-Haul had treated his wife rudely and discovered a global community of unhappy former U-Haul customers.

Today David sent me a link to the above YouTube clip, which had over 120,000 views in its first 36 hours. If you skipped it, it depicts Dave Carroll and the Sons of Maxwell, singing a clever ballad about how United Airlines freight handlers broke his guitar and took a year before refusing to make good.

In days of yore, Carroll and other customers who felt they were poorly treated had little or no recourse. But now, as HistoryBlitz, one of the 1200 commenters noted: "YouTube is the Consumer's Weapon."  He or she is absolutely right, but it is not just YouTube. People are using Twitter, blogs, Facebook, Flickr and podcasts to fight back. [BTW, I could not find a single defender of UA among those 1200 comments.]

Suddenly companies that do not apologize for poor customer treatment and play odds that most customers have neither the wherewithal nor the patience to litigate will just fade away.

They're wrong of course. Companies that do not understand that individuals can use social media to raise concern, ire and awareness. Companies that continue to ignore this, I predict, are the ones that will fade away and sooner than they may think.

Sandbox2 It has been a little over three weeks since I finished proofing Twitterville and sent it off to my publisher for the last time before I see the thing in hard cover.

Since then, I have been kicking back more than I usually do, playing in my garden, with my wife, dog, cat and a few friends who I've missed during the reclusive process I require to write a book. It's nice to get out.

It's also scary, when I wrap up a project that took so much time and attention. There is a feeling that I have touched the top of a mountain and have stepped into a vacuum, a bubble where my work and focus have been excluded.

But I have a great number activities coming up. And for a three-week rest period, there has been a lot of planning and thing and doing.

First, I am going to do everything I can, and go everywhere that time and budget allows me to promote Twitterville. I feel good about the book. I think the stories I've told about the incredible people I've met in Twitterville are stories worth telling and sharing.

I'm planning a big party sometime in August. I have begun to invite people who are my close friends and people who are in the book. My friend Tatyana Kanzaveli has agreed to produce it for me and we are currently raising sponsorship, which we of course need before we can open the floodgates to the public. So far, Network Solutions and Intuit have kicked in, so we are well on our way. I'll tell you more about that when I have more to tell and I hope that will be soon.

Next, I am thrilled, THRILLED to announce that BurrellesLuce, the media planning, monitoring and measurement service for social media, online and print has signed up to sponsor this blogsite starting July 15, and I have agreed to pst at least once weekly–thus the title of this post.

This bog has served me as a sandbox, I play in it, try things out and watch how they develop.  I allow myself to stray and wander to cover whatever interests me.

Since 2005, the core focus for me in this sandbox has been social media and how it is changing the lives of people and the structures of institutions. Essentially, what I do is I talk to people about how social media changes their work, play and cultures.

Over these past few years I have interviewed more than 400 people in 38 countries about how they use social media. A majority of these interviews have been in the section called the Social Media Global Report. Projects that start there have resulted in two hardcover books, Naked Conversations, Twitterville; The Conversational Conversations, a Dow Jones, eBook and contributions to BusinessWeek.com, as well as FastCompany.TV.

For a while, I'm going to play in the sandbox, interviewing people about social media. I am looking for interesting and useful stories. I am happy to hear any that you think are useful and interesting.  am particularly interested in hearing those that are unique; that stretch the boundaries of social media. I am more interested in the human element, but I remain primarily a business writer. Please email me or leave a comment hear if you know someone or something you think I should cover.

I'm a sucker for a good story, so please tell me one.

At some point, a subject will come along that may lead to my next book. I certainly hope so and I am always searching for my next book. I will pursue a subject for a while and see if it fits for that topic, then either leap into it or move away.

For the past several months I have been talking to my friend Tom Stitt about a subject that has his passion and which invokes great interest on my part–the role of social media in healthcare. It's a great subject, and there are more than enough stories about cool people in healthcare who are changing the medical practice, respecting patient choices. There are also people like ePatientDave and Drew Olanoff who are using social media to share ideas and information and support.

But ultimately, I realized that a book we were going to call Conversational Healthcare, was not one I should help write. This subject greatly interests me, and I will write about healthcare and social media many times in the coming months. But it does not grab my passion as does another subject. Tom is continuing with the project and I have agreed to write the forward to his book which nw has a new working title.

What did grab my attention and my passion over the past few weeks is the role that Twitter has played in shedding light on the dark awfulness that has followed the Iran Election and I have little doubt that the hours I have spent following that story will be part of  my next book.

If it had not been for Twitter, Flickr and YouTube the world would not know and probably not care about what as happened there. Social media let people everywhere hear and see what has been happening to a people who were fooled into thinking they were part of a democracy when they were not. People bypassed governments and traditional media to inform each other. Truth in Iran keeps bypassing those who would suppress it via handheld devices and it is a fundamental change in how people connect.

This story has my passion. Iran itself may not be my next book, but it is likely to be a component. It seems a direct descendant of stories I covered in Twitterville including Mumbai, Israeli-Gaza, Janis Krums and US Air 1549 on the Hudson.

At this point, the likely focus of my new book will be an extension of what I call "Braided Journalism," the title of my favorite Twitterville Chapter. It is the idea that news requires both the efforts of traditional news-gathering organizations as well as the feet on the streets of the world being covered by people with connected devices in their hands.

I am in no great hurry to start the next book. There is still a great deal of time and effort needed in support of Twitterville. But for a while, much of my focus will be directed at the points where traditional and citizen journalism converge and intertwine to make something entirely new and perhaps, better.

It's nice to be playing in the sandbox again.

I had a really good time at TWTRCON yesterday. While some were critical that it was the Twitterville community's testimonial to itself, I found it inspiring to see the rapid emergence of a business community that shares a passion for Twitter. The conference was sold out and the room was about as filled as it could be–unless the round top tables had been removed.

My old friend Gina Smith, for ABC tech correspondent and iWoz co-author, did a good job of co-hosting, but she seemed to inject a common theme regarding Twitter and the alleged lack of business model. I found myself disagreeing with her observations and the fact that every time she took a mild snipe at Twitter's alleged lack of model many heads in the room would nod in agreement.

I was not among them. First, I believe the company has been pretty clear that it will charge businesses for services. The founders have stated this and expanded upon it many times. Second, Twitter should do so well as other Silicon Valley start ups that were knocked for not having a business model such as Google and Facebook.

But more than that, the room was filled with companies that show the viability of Twitter's approach. All day we heard from people like Frank Eliason who heads the Comcast Twitter support team, Beth Mansfield the voice behind the curtain of the Carl's Jr, Twitter account, Dell Computer who sold over $1 million in refurbished computers via Twitter in its first year and so on. Each of thee company representatives made clear that their companies are making money because of their Twitter involvement. They were feeding ideas and encouragement to an audience of people who want to use Twitter to profit while getting closer to their customers. Here were these successful companies telling a business audience how Twitter was making them money, positioning them closer with customers efficiently and giving multiple examples of how other companies could do the same.

Then there was the observation by Comcast's Eliason: His company had come to Twitterville because that's where they could find their customers. So what company would not come to Twitter to get closer to customers and make money?

Now, here's the obvious leap that Gina and others, in my opinion are missing. Twitter will eventually charge for such services and as long as charges are reasonable, companies like Comcast, Dell and Carl's Jr will be happy to pay for these services. And the longer Twitter can wait before they charge, the bigger Twitter gets during that period, the more companies will see the value and be willing to pay.

Gina asked the question whether Twitter made a mistake by turning down a $500 million stock offer to be acquired by Facebook. Some thought they had. I do not. I think the amount is chicken feed.

My editor came up with a great idea for Twitterville. he wants to sprinkle a few chapters with a few sample tweets.  The idea is to give readers a sense of the diversity, depth, humor, passion and surprise you find there every day.

I'd like you to send me your favorite tweets. The catch is that it should be someone else's–not your own. If we use it, I'll add you to the Acknowledgments. If there is space please use the tag #TVL. I know some entries won't have space, so I'll be pretty vigilant looking.

Of course it will score points–but is not mandatory if you send a tweet if it touches on the subjects and companies I cover in the book. So below is my final Table of Contents, with a brief summary of the content.

Table of Contents
Forward
Introduction
Talks about James Buck being arrested in Egypt and it discusses why the incident inspired me to write Twitterville

PART 1.         How It Started

Chapter 1      A Pinot Kills Odeo
The story of how Twitter got started and looks at @Ev @Biz & @Jack'a backgrounds before joining.

Chapter 2      Showtime
Talks about SXSW 07 and how Twitter stole the show with an investment in nothing more than two flat panel screens.

Chapter 3      Dell’s Parallel Avenues
Traces how Lionel Menchaca and l and Richard Binhammer developed down one Twitterville avenue to engage customers while Riccardo Guerrero explored down another avenue and figured out how to sell computers via Twitterville.

Chapter 4      Why Comcast Cares

Profiles Frank Eliason  and how it has turned around an historically negative customer service image. looks also at how airlines have used Twitter and how U-Haul hurt itself by ignoring David Alston's conversation. Explains why Twitter is so superior and efficient as a support tool

Chapter 5      Customers Take Control

Looks at the Motrin and Pepsi Suicide ads and explains why companies  need to be vigilant. Profiles Scott Monty at Ford Motors. Looks at big  picture implications of Twitter's customer-generated conversations, particularly when customers are angry.

PART 2          What They’re Doing.
   

Chapter 6     The Twitterville Marketplace
Brief Chapter explains why Twitterville is a marketplace and how markets have become what they used to be before the 60-year intrusion of the Broadcast Era.  

Chapter 7      Global Companies. Local Touch
Looks at how big companies like Zappos, Molson, Rubbermaid, Henry Ford Medical Center and Sutter Health give a close human touch to customers via Twitter.

            

Chapter 8        Seeing the Wizard
Looks at logo tweet accounts such as Starbucks, Whole Foods, and CarlsJr. Interviews the real people behind the corporate logo and other proponents of branded tweeting. Tells why I disagree.

Chapter 9       B2Bs Are People Too
 Looks at several business-to-business Twitter strategies including IBM, United Linen, Pitny Bowes and little CrowdSPRING.

Chapter 10     Small Business.  Big Footprint
Looks at startups and small companies who are using Twitter to their advantage. Includes Seesmic, Stocktwits and CoffeeGroundz and others.

Chapter 11     Personal Branding

 Looks at how Twitter has favorably impacted personal brand. Intervews with Chris Brogan, Veronica Belmont, New Media Jim, Jeremiah Owyang and Cheeky_Geeky

Chapter 12    Braided Journalism

 Examines the convergence of citizen and traditional journalism in Twitterville. Looks at Szechwan Earthquake, USAir on Hudson, Mumbai and Gaza.

Chapter 13    Conversations with Constituents

 Looks at how politicians and government employees are turning to Twitter to get closer with Constituents. looks at Obama, UK prime minister, local transit services and snow school warning in Newcastle England.

Chapter 14    Goodwill Funding

 Looks at grassroots fundraising including charity:water, Tweetsgiving, The Frozen Pea Fund and more. Talks with Connie Reece, Stacey Monk and Beth Kanter.

Chapter 15    Dark Streets
 Reports on the spammers, phishers, stalkers trolls and other assorted slimewear. Gives tips on dealing with it.

PART 3        How & Why to Do It

Chapter 16    Tips, Metrics & Finer Points
Provides advice on getting started as well as dealing with complexities of                       measurement, following/followers and retweets. Interview with KD Paine.

PART 4        The Big Picture

Chapter 17    Global Neighborhoods
A personal note on why I believe the ability to form a geographically agnostic community of people who share interests can lead to World Peace.  Seriously.

Please forgive the poor formatting and lack of links. I am am really stretched. I look forward to your comments. I also look forward to completing the details of this project and seeing it come to life on Sept. 3.

I am absolutely blown away by the number of people who have contributed story leads to me while I was writing Twitterville. The following people will be acknowledged for their contributions in the book when it is published on Sep. 3.

I know I missed a lot of people and I apologize. If you feel you are one of them please contact me on twitter, in a comment or by email. If you could refresh my memory by telling me the lead you sent, I would appreciate it. If I write about you in the book itself, I have not included you in the acknowledgements.

Also, these are a lot of links. If you find one that is broken or a Twitter handle that is mispelled, please let me know.

@KDPaine
@kevinokeefe
@kyeung808
@ledrewb
@lifeofjenn
@lovince
@Lparsons
@Marc_Meyer
@marilink
@martinxo
@mattblock
@MelWebster
@merubin
@mexiwi
@Michael_hoffman
@michaeljbarber
@Mikescott8
@netzoo
@Newcastlecc
@Nitchblog

@paulmorriss
@pambaggett
@Poneal
@rahafharfoush
@roblagatta
@ryankuder
@sconsult
@scottszur
@sdeclomesnil
@shonali
@Simon_Baptist
@SoloPcono
@SteveAmes

@SwaggerDesigns

@Tamera

@thornley

Can't find Twitter handles:
Phil Dane

Tomorrow morning, I'll be taking part in what I think is a very engaging experiment and perhaps breaking some new ground. At 8 am Pacific time I will live "tweach" a class led by Dr. Nora Barnes at UMass Dartmouth. There's a few special twists for me. The school is located less than 15 miles from where I was raised in New Bedford, Ma. The opening of the university was among my first bylined storis as a reporter in nearby Fall River, Ma. Dr. Barbes and I have come to kow each other through our mutual involvement with SNCR,

But all that is pretty much aside. What I love is this is that I get to talk with students. Through their questions I get to earn what is on their mind regarding Twitter and social media. Like many people, I would love to spend more time as a guest instructor, but school have little budget for people like me where travel costs are involved.

I'm sure what we do tomorrow will hav a few glitches and bumps, because as far as I know, no one has tried to guest instruct a class via Twitter before. My hope though is that others watch what we do then try smething like this themselves. Take what I do with 35 students at UMass Dartmouth and refine it. This may be a new way to remotely talk with people who want to learn.

The set up is pretty simple. Dr. Barnes will introduce me at approximately 8 am. Students will tweet questions to me and tag them with #UMD.  I will answer all that I can in the course of an hour. The students will watch primarily via search, at the #UMD hashtag site, so they can see wha their classmates have asked.

If I do not have time to answer all questions asked, as is likely, then I will answer them in small batches over the course of the next few days. Students will see them either by following me or by checking the #UMD hashtag page.

If this interests you, please observe it tomorrow. If I get stuck on a question I may ask observers if they can help, but for the most part, I want to give the hour to these students.

To make certain we get off to a good start, I asked the students to send me a few advance questions and I am impressed with the quality of the ones that have come in so far. Here are a few examples:

  • Stacey Boyd wants to know how Twitter can help students find a job after they graduate. That will take 3 tweets to dent the surface & then a follow up email.
  • Rachel Whaley-Grant would like to hear how Twitter is different from Facebook, a question that is not as easy to answer as it used to be.
  • Kerry Gallagher asked how to find stuff on Twitter that is relevent to her as an individual.
  • Sade Cabral went beyond Twitter to ask th differences between an online only company and one that is both online and real world.

If this is an example of the questions I hear tomorrow, then it is going to be a very valuable hour. I'll begin by answering these as best I can, then opening it up to the rest of the class. Think I'd better do some homework before school starts.

Yesterday, at 2:37 pm, I typed five asterisks across the page of Twitterville's Chapter 17: Global Neighbourhoods, indicating the conclusion of the book's final chapter. I called my wife and told her. I then posted it on Twitter, followed a few minutes later by the question: "What do I do now?"

Actually, there's a great deal to do now. In fact, following this post, I will proof, edit and revise the chapter, then send it over to Paula, for the crucial "wife test." Paula reads closely and tells me what makes sense. She also makes sure that people who are not social media obsessed will understand all my references. Then I revise again and send it to my agent Danielle Svetcov who reviews and comments, then sends to my editor at Portfolio, David Muldawer.

This is the process that has been repeated 19 times since early December, for each chapter, plus my introduction, plus Charlene Li's foreword. That is not the end of it. Muldawer will not edit the entire book, some 77,500 words and send back to me for yet another round. There will be countless proofing and editing changes plus questions for me to address. I also have two major inserts: an profile on Chris Brogan for the Personal Brands story, and a report on the first live-tweeted surgery at Henry Ford Medical Center in Detroit.

Plus, stories and anecdotes keep changing. For example Howard Rheingold tweeted that Biz Stone had told Rheingold's UC Berkeley class that the company we know as Twitter, was almost called "Jitter." Considering the shakiness of the technology in earlier phases, that's a sidebar I cannot leave out. There's probably 15-20 such inserts, and an equal number of factual updates.

When that's done I have to deal with the dreaded fact checker. Fact checkers are very often very smart people in their fist jobs. It is their job to challenge every fact, to ascertain that there is attribution, to what I say. For Naked Conversations, I tangled with a fact checker when he wanted to know my source for claiming Robert Scoble was Microsoft's most prominent blogger.

After that phase, there's a Galley Phase when I see the words as they will appear in the hard cover. Once again, you look for proofing and facts to change.

Along with all that, there are "blurb requests", when Portfolio and I request influential people take a look at Galley Copies, then say nice things in a paragraph that will be used in the front of the book or on the back cover.

The book is scheduled to be available in the US on Sept. 3. [Update] As I was posting this blog, Amazon.com  started taking pre-orders . Yes, it helps the author if you pre-order the book. It helps even more if you post  on Amazon, after you read the book, as well.

Along with that, is my own promotional effort. I have been pretty much sequestered for the past several months. I'll now start speaking in public more often, talking with traditional and social media more frequently as well. I am also talking with the Social Media Club where I serve as an advisor. The thought is that they will host sponsored book-signing events in several US Cities between Labor Day and Thanksgiving to help get book sales going. I have talks with a couple of other associates in that direction as well. If you have some ideas that will help promotion, I am now focusing heavily on the Twitterville launch.

I've also been asked a couple of times recently what I plan to do next. The answer is quite simple. I plan to keep writing books and speaking at events for a living. I am already in serious talks with a friend on writing a book called Conversational Healthcare and as I start wrapping up Twitterville's creation phase, my attention will be turning in that direction.

Twitterville 150dpi

This will be the book cover to Twitterville. What do you think?

My friend Brian Solis is one Hell of a photographer. He came over to my house a few days ago and shot over 100 photos of me. This one will be used as my photo on the Twitterville book jacket. If you ever need to make an iffy subject look good, you should consider using Brian. Look what he did for me. The other guy in the photo’s name is Brewster. Brian gets no credit there. Brewster always looks good.

If you want to see a few more samples of Brian’s shots of me, just click here.

[Mama Lucy Kampton. Photo by Tim Llewellyn]

In several Twitterville chapters, I discuss that much of twitter is built on a culture of generosity. For Chapter 13, Goodwill Fundraising, my cup overfloweth with good and remarkable stories. Stacey Monk,

who you may have heard about when she launched TweetsGiving is one of those people who make Twitterville fundraising stories so incredible. She tells he story quite well in this Q&A I conducted with her.

1.  What did you do prior to starting Epic Change?
Immediately before founding Epic Change,
I ran my own small consulting firm that focused on leading
organizational change.  Prior to that, I worked in management
consulting and project management for Deloitte, Genentech and a social
services agency in the Silicon Valley.  My graduate degree is in
performing arts management from the Heinz School of Public Policy at
Carnegie Mellon, and prior to that I worked in arts administration at a
theater in Texas.

2.  I understand you were in Africa when you decided to start Epic Change. What happened to inspire starting
a nonprofit organization?
Why a school in Tanazania?

During
a 2007 trip from Cape Town to Cairo, I volunteered at a school run by
Mama Lucy Kampton, a local woman who used to sell chickens and used her
income to build a school on land she rented next door to her home.  To
say I was impressed with what she’d created would be a vast
understatement.  At the time, there were over 100 children at the
school, and most paid tuition; the income covered the costs of other
children who could not afford to pay.  Teachers were paid, meals were
served daily and, most importantly, the children were getting a much
better education than other local alternatives offered.  Lucy & I
kept in touch after I returned home and a few months after my initial
visit, she informed me that a developer had purchased the land she was
renting.  At that point, Epic Change and our unique approach to
creating social change was born.

Epic Change was born as a way to ensure
that effective changemakers like Mama Lucy could get access to the
capital they needed to expand their successful community improvement
programs.

3. How did Twitter get baked into your strategy? How important is Twitter to Epic Change?

Twitter
was originally suggested to me by a former IT colleague as a way to
cultivate a community of support for Epic Change.  At first, though, I
must admit I had no idea how to use it effectively. Then, in May of
last year, I saw Sam Lawrence, outgoing CMO at Jive Software, tweet that he didn’t feel like writing his blog post for
the following day. Because his blog Go Big Always,
aligned with my personal philosophy and had a few thousand viewers, I
thought it might be an opportunity to expose Epic Change to a wider
audience. When I tweeted that I’d write it for him, he playfully
responded “go for it!” I stayed up all night writing a guest post and,
after polling twitter, he posted it to his blog,
resulting in many new followers for me, some new donors, a few YouTube
video submissions, new blog subscribers, and blog coverage in places
like ZDNet, TriplePundit and What Gives.
At that point, I realized that Twitter offered countless opportunities
for the creation of serendipity and mutual benefit.  It’s been part of
our strategy since then.

4. Tell me
about Tweetsgiving. How did it get started?  Why did you cut
the start so close to the American Thanksgiving?  How much did you
raise? What role did Twitter play in the effort? Could you have done
Tweetsgiving without Twitter?

TweetsGiving was imagined 6 days before it was launched in response to a very kind thank you post by Avi Kaplan, a volunteer I’d met on Twitter as a result of my post on Go Big Always. When
I read his blog post, I was moved by his kindness, and wondered what it
might be like if, for 2 days, the entire Twitterverse unanimously
celebrated gratitude.  We started so close to Thanksgiving because of
its timeliness during the holiday, because we thought we could sustain
momentum for 48 hours, and because we needed the full 6 days from idea
to launch to prepare the site and strategy.

TweetsGiving
raised over $11,000 in 48 hours, almost entirely from the Twitterverse;
I did not publicize the effort to previous donors, and only 6 out of
372 contributors had previously donated to Epic Change. TweetsGiving
simply wouldn’t have been possible without Twitter.

5. What other fundraising
projects are you involved in?  What role does Twitter have in them?

To
minimize overhead expenses often associated with event-based
fundraising, Epic Change has been built primarily through online peer-to-peer
fundraising campaigns. To date, we have raised over $70K using email,
my blog, Facebook, Twitter, etc.  Since I started using Twitter, it’s
been some part of all of our campaigns, whether using it to reach out
for volunteers, advice or donors.  That said, most of our
donors/supporters do not use Twitter at all, so it’s only one aspect of
our overall approach.

As a member of the Twitter community, I
also support other people’s fundraising efforts when I have the
opportunity, especially those by my peer social innovators like Lend4Health and Social Actions.

6. How does Twitter change the business of fundraising for causes?

Twitter
gives us a new tool for cultivating and sustaining support for social
causes.  Especially for social innovators, for whom early-stage and
seed funding and support is limited, the Twitter community can be an
invaluable source of funds, ideas, advice and volunteers. In addition,
Twitter lowers the cost of fundraising; the TweetsGiving campaign was
entirely volunteer-supported and cost zero.  Finally, as we saw with
Twestival, Twitter can put fundraising in the hands of supporters,
without causes even getting involved. While this involves some loss of
control for nonprofit brands, the end result is that a great many more
people can organize to invest themselves in causes they support.

7. What advice do you have for others who want to use Twitter for cause fundraising/awareness-building?

Cultivate
a community before starting to raise funds. Create a community of support for an idea or cause.  Actually, even
before that, the first step is simply connecting as an individual,
with other like-minded people. After that, you can attempt to build a brand
presence or cultivate support for a cause. For additional insights into
what made TweetsGiving successful, check out my summary of critical success factors.


8. What percentage of the money you raise actually goes to the people and the causes?

About 95%
of the funds we’ve raised to date have gone directly to programs, as
Epic Change currently has no salaried employees. The vast majority of
overhead is spent on PayPal transaction fees and other technology tools
that improve our ability to fundraise online.

9.  How can people on Twitter be sure they are being approached by an authentic cause?

Twitter is a community in which trust is earned through
reputation, so the first thing to do may be to check with followers of
a cause to learn more about it. Tools like Guidestar make it possible to find background information on any nonprofit too.

10.  Additional comments?

The TweetsGiving classroom, built from sheer gratitude, is now complete and pictures
are
available
of donors’ Twitter handles painted on the walls.


James.buck

On April 10, 2008, James Buck was being wheeled off to jail by Egyptian authorities in the Nile region. He pulled out his Blackberry and tweeted a single word: "Arrested. That was at about 9:30 am my time. Within the next hour the same message was retweeted by people I followed six times, even though I had never heard of the UC Berkeley student photo-journalist.Within 24 hours, people he connected to on Twitter had contacted th US State Department, who in turn got James freed. As he was being driven off to the airport and a free ride home, he tweeted: "Freed."

This incident was a light-bulb-over-the-head incident for me. It was the moment when Twitter transcended from a neat social media tool to something that would eventually be as transformative to the world as had been email or the telephone.

It was also the moment when I decided what I would write about in my next book. I had been an author in search of a topic, and knowing me, it would have to be a topic that covered social media and stirred my passion. I am a story teller and a business writer. I talk to people and try to convey to you how a piece of technology changes their lives, and their businesses.

Twitter was perfect for me. But the times were not. I was busy with other projects. Like most other industries, publishers were becoming gun shy. So it wasn't until the day after Thanksgiving 2008 that I started to write Twitterville.

Like Naked Conversations before it, I started slowly. For me it is a daunting place to stand with your toes to a mountain, realizing that you have a limited amount of time to get to the top. On the day after Thanksgiving, my mountain consisted of 80,000 words and what will probably be 17 chapters, each reporting  a different aspect of Twitter.

Four months later I find myself at Base Camp. I have 62,000 words behind me and about 15,000 more to go. Then there are revisions and revisions, details, rechecking facts. Posing for pictures, figuring out what to do at launch–beside tweet about it.

But the heavy lifting is now behind me. Most of the interviews are over. I have two more chapters left to Twitterville Part One: What's happening. Chapter 13, Goodwill Funding covers humanity and generosity and Chapter 14 covers the Dark Streets of Twitterville, the spammers, stalkers and Phishermen.

By the end of Ch. 14, I will have talked with more than 200 people. I will have written about more than 50 people and businesses that I learned about directly on Twitter over these past four months. I believe Twitterville will be the most crowd-sourced book ever written. I do not think the book could ever have been written without the help I received from more the hundreds of people who tweeted suggestions to me. Without Twitter, it would have taken at east two years to get this far, rather than four months.

I cannot say thank you to the tweeters who have helped me enough times or in enough ways. I am pretty happy with the way the book is coming out and I just hope it does the generous and diverse community it's about the justice and honor I hope to contribute.

Oh yeah. I almost forgot. Special thanks to James Buck for tweeting his way out of jail.

If you’re new to this project, Twitterville Notebook contains my selected notes for a book I’m writing called Twitterville, scheduled for September by Portfolio.I have just started writing Chapter 13: “Goodwill Funding,” about cause fund raising on Twitter. It’s organized into three bucket: (1) Random acts of generosity, (2) Grassroots generosity, and (3) Corporate cause marketing.

In the first category, there are few better-known or more-moving stories that of David Armano, VP of Experience Design for Chicago-based Critical Mass. Armano had been blogging and tweeting for some time when he introduced his followers to Daniela and her three children shortly after New Year’ Day 2009. It’s worth noting, that he was a known entity who had established credibility over years.

He wasn’t sure at first, what he should do when his wife Belinda, came home with Daniela, a house cleaner who was
divorcing a consistently abusive husband. She had no money, no home and
three children, the youngest of whom had Down Syndrome.
The Armano’s had two kids of their own and a relatively small home. So he turned for help to a community he knew and where he was known.

He wrote a moving post, asking people to help him raise $5,000 so Daniela could get an apartment, furniture Armano
and cover deposits. He also asked his Twitter followers to spread the word.

In the next 24 hours Armano’s effort raised more than $12,000. In all, 545 people would donate $16,880.

With David serving as the fund’s steward, Daniela found a clean two-bedroom apartment in a north Chicago suburb. Through the awareness David raised some furniture was also donated. “They now have a huge advantage
as we’re taking care of the rent with the funds you donated,” David wrote in one of several posts that kept contributors and followers posted.

David doesn’t think this story of helping a family in transition would have happened without Twitter. Like so many stories in my book, this involved using blogs to go long and deep, and using Twitter to amplify a blogger’s voice and spread word rapidly.

“Twitter was perfect for raising awareness and generating a viral
effect which spilled outside of my network into others. I primed my
followers and they started paying attention quickly. When the word got
out, it was retweeted hundreds of times pushing #daniela into the
number one trending topic,” he told me. Blog traffic ran about 30 times his usual rate. “The immediacy of the donations would not have been possible had it not been for
Twitter.

He used TwitPic to add to his personal credibility in telling the story, showing photos of Daniela’s family property stored in his garage. Twitter also pointed people to an emotional video he produced a few hours after the original post and when contributions blew right past his stated goal.

David warns that Twitter itself is not sufficient for raising funds for causes. In my interchange with him, he kept going back to credibility-related issues.

“Having large networks doesn’t give us the right to ask for
anything. We found ourselves in a
crisis situation and didn’t know how else to get help and I have been
fortunate to have enough people who realized this and alerted others on
behalf. Like any other network, Twitter requires us to be transparent
and authentic in order to leverage the people who power the network to
get them to act.”

It also required follow-through. He regularly posted updates on how the family was doing. He used the #daniella Hashtag  so that interested parties could track the entire Twitterville conversation regarding Daniela.

He also shared that with the overwhelmingly positive experience, there was a downside, one that I will mention in my next charter called “Twitterville’s Dark Streets.” One tweeter became obsessed either with Daniela or her story. He started barraging the conversation with
unsubstantiated claims, sort of like throwing rocks in a tweetstream. David feared that the person might pose a real danger, and used Twitter’s “block” feature to delete the intruder from the conversation.

“If you are going to ask
for help, be prepared to help yourself because raising a significant
amount of money through a network will attract all kinds of attention.
Be ready for anything, especially the responsibility that comes with
it,” he warned.

http://darmano.typepad.com/daniela/

[NOTE: Twitterville Notebook are selected notes from interviews I've conducted with over 150 people for my new book, Twitterville, which will be published in September by Portfolio. Twitterville tells the stories of people in enterprises, media and small businesses; consultants, media, government and non profit organizations have done so far on Twitter in the hope it will inform others of the enormous potential to thrive on Twitter even during tough times like these.

I am crowd sourcing the book. Over three-fourths of the stories I discuss in Twitterville came to me on Twitter. The book should take me about five months to complete. Had I not used Twitter and this blog, it would have taken more than two years to gather the research. Also comments I receive ere and on Twitter, greatly infuence which interviews get major--or minor--play.]

This post, which completes my research on my Twitter in Government & Politics chapter, results from my interview with Brian Humphrey, a 26-year veteran of the Los Angeles Fire Department [LAFD]. He is now a Public Information Officer. Humphrey has been awarded honors on the battle lines of countless
storms, conflagrations and disasters -

In the previous chapter, I discussed the citizen journalism that started with the video recording of the 1992 police beating of Rodney King. Humphrey’s story really begins in the aftermath, when riots broke out causing more than $1 billion in property damage and about 70 people dead. Humphrey was a rookie then and he was active on the front line when firefighter worked exhaustively to quell arsonist action plus provide First Aid to injured people in what can best be described as a war-torn zone.

Since 1993, he’s managed external relations, dealing firsthand with all aspects of print,
radio, television and internet journalism. From both a traditional and social media perspective, Humphrey very often is the face and voice of LAFD.

LAFD is generally considered the pioneer for both government and disaster activity in social media. The following is extracted from my email conversation wth him:

Q 1.How much of your work is related to social media?

I was an early proponent of Google’s ’70% Solution’: http://snipurl.com/e3f8d
… in my case: 70% for the ever-blurring line between traditional and
new media, 20% for personal interaction with those in the new media
sphere and 10% to development and better understanding of new media
tools and trends.

Q2. Can you tell me when and why the LAFD started using Twitter?

It was March 2007, admittedly as a ‘new shiny
thing.’ Within weeks – May 8, 2007 to be exact, we discovered the
potential of the now ubiquitous SMS tool during a wind-driven wildfire
in LA’s Griffith Park
.

Q3. Was LAFD the first crisis-repsonse organization to use it?

While we’ve never touted ourselves as the first, LAFD’s use of Twitter
does pre-date its oft-cited use during Southern California wildfires in
the fall of 2007.  In the years since our first use of Twitter, we’re
pleased not only to have been a springboard and proof of concept, but
also remain humbled by the mention of @LAFD by Twitter’s principals,
including this video keynote address by founder Jack Dorsey making
direct reference that LAFD and Twitter fit like hand in glove:

Q4. What was the original thinking?

We were notably different than most Twitter users’ in the early days. There were no corporate or other government participants to speak of, and
we shared a blissful and mistaken notion with many early adopters that
Twitter was a dissemination tool. Like the proverbial kitchen gadget at
the County Fair, we soon learned it was far more.

It wasn’t long, especially with the growth of API’s that we saw Twitter
as a multi-dimensional tool, specifically one that allowed us to have
situational awareness in times of duress with simultaneous immersion
into the lives and concerns of our many stakeholders.

Q5. Are you the sole author of @LAFD? Is it just used for alerts?

I am
but one of three persons that staff our LAFD Public and Media Relations
office around-the-clock every day of the year.  At this time, @LAFD is mostly an automated simulcast of our popular real-time LAFD_ALERT e-mail list ,which focuses on Breaking News. While we offer safety or public service messages every now and then. We are deeply sensitive to “signal to noise ratio” and the fact
that many of our wireless recipients are paying my the message.
Therefore, the outgoing messages via @LAFD seek to address the key
elements of the crisis messaging triangle: “What’s Happening?” “What Are You Doing About It?” “What Does It Mean To Me?”

We don’t get more conversational because our @LAFD format was driven by the legacy LAFD_ALERT e-mail system on Googlegroups which automatically sends to @LAFD via Twittermail . It simultaneously produces RSS Feeds and Widgets from which we encourage syndication.

But I do actively engage users of
Twitter and other social media by automated keyword searches. I read
and reply to every direct tweet and @ reply whenever possible.

The issue for us is engagement, and our approach is flexible.

Q6. When do you used @LAFD and when do you use your personal @BrianHumphrey?

As a public safety agency information officer, I’m often saddled
by the inability to share my opinion (as if anybody cares) on or
off-duty about anything more serious than the weather – which isn’t
really saying much in Southern California.

I know that many of the Twitterati used an on-line forum and wanted to know more about what I was doing, hence, I started @BrianHumphrey. I’ve also recently opened a side channel @LAFDtalk to discuss non-emergency issues.

Q7. Have you considered following more people or do you feel that sidesteps your primary mission?

I think @LAFDtalk account will follow more people,
and serve as an informal gathering place for Twitter conversation about
LAFD without polluting the potentially
lifesaving stream of incident and alert information sent via @LAFD.

Q8. What other social media tools does LAFD use?

For the most part, you name a
popular tool and we are using it or at least experimenting with it. I have a self-imposed limit
of 100 in the “LAFD Lab,” which exists wholly in my laptop computer. I hover around that
number, and sometimes have to scratch a marginally applicable tool for
one that is showing greater promise.

Q9. Do you think that Twitter has ever helped save lives? ‘

Yes.  A recent situation with an overcrowded nightclub in Los Angeles was recently brought to my attention . It was a matter of moments later that we dispatched
inspectors to close down a venue that could have resulted in a tragedy.

It is only matter of time before Twitter plays a life-saving role during
wildfires or floods.

Q10. Do you have a great story for me regarding LAFD and Twitter?

I have many. One of my favorites is the mention of the Starbuck’s
Barista contained in the post below, when my colleague Ron Myers and I
were off-duty, out of uniform – and nearly sprayed our coffee across
a local Starbuck’s.

[US Airways Flight 1549. Emergency Landing on the Hudson. TwitPic by Janis Krums]

Recognize this photo? Chances are you have already seen this amazing shot of a US Airway commercial flight that was supposed to deliver 150 passengers and crew members to Charlotte, NC from La Guardia Airport, near New York City. Instead, it collided with a flock of Canadian Geese somewhere above Battery Park. Six minutes into the flight and eight miles after taking off it skidded to a landing on the Hudson River. While there were some injuries, it was the first time a commercial flight ever made a water landing without the loss of human life.

Janis Krums, a Latvian-born entrepreneur, living in Sarasota, Fla. was on a ferry, about two football fields away from where Flight 1549 skidded to a halt. He whipped out his iPhone and took the above photo. His story is, I think, the strongest in my chapter on Braided Journalism. It was the point when traditional media understood that there was greater value in using Twitter as a news source, rather than a distribution channel or a place to divert eyeballs to their own websites.

A major point of the chapter is that the best citizen journalism is accidental. Twitterville people are all over the world when news breaks. We have the tools in our pockets and backpacks to record and report what we see. Traditional media’s financial problems have reduced their ability to have feet on the street when news breaks. In Twitter there is a convergence between citizen and traditional journalism.

Janis Krums did not intend to become a citizen journalist. He only intended to get to New Jersey. HereJanis Krums
is the Q&A from my talk with him.

1. Why were you in Manhattan? How did you end up on the Hudson River Ferry at that particular moment?

I was in Manhattan on business concerning my new start-up company Elementz Nutrition [site under construction]. We are developing all natural performance based supplements for elite athletes. I ended up on the ferry because my car was parked on the NJ side and was crossing the Hudson to go get it.

2. How, when and why did you start using Twitter. What was the most interesting thing that had happened to you there before the US Airway incident?

I signed up about nine months ago, but started to really use it about four months ago. This was because I was exploring what social media sites I could use for business reasons. Twitter was something that seamed to have a lot of potential and I started to post links, mainly entrepreneurial, technology, health, and personal interest based links.

Prior to US Air incident, the most interesting thing was actually interacting with users around the world. My network was slowly growing and I was trying to find users with similar interests. As I was getting more involved, I saw more value in twitter. Because of the incident, twitter has become indispensable to me and how I use social media.

3.  When and why did you start using TwitPic? What had you used it for prior to the US Airway 1549 incident?

I used TwitPic because it was associated in the applications that I used on my phone, Tweetie and Twittelator. The posts before and after the US Air photo were mainly random things that I think are interesting.

4. Where was the ferry headed? How soon did it arrive at the scene after the plane’s water landing?

The route was Midtown (NYC) to Port Imperial (NJ). We were there within minutes, the passengers said that once they got out of the plane they saw the ferry approaching. It all happened very quickly and within ten minutes various rescue vessels surrounded the plane.

5. What role–if any–did you play in the rescue operation?

I was behind the ferry crew and helped orient the survivors of the crash. Another person and I carried the stewardess who broke her legs to one of the benches. Mainly we tried to get everyone warm and give our jackets and whatever we had that was warm to the survivors.

6. You were talking on the phone talking on MSNBC about 20 minutes after the plane skidded onto the river. How was that contact made?

They called me once I got my phone back from the passenger who had borrowed it. I don’t really know how they got my number, but once they had it, my phone kept ringing until late that night and started again next morning.

7. How many traditional media folk have contacted you roughly? Can you name some of them?

I’ve had contact with most of the traditional media, from all the major television networks, many newspapers both in the USA and internationally, especially Germany and England. I was on Good Morning American, Rachel Maddow, Rick Sanchez, 20/20 and two segments on BBC. All in all, the experience lasted about 48 hours. Since then, I’ve had couple of requests or so each week.

8. Your photo appeared in a great number of places, sometimes with no credit, sometimes with your credit and at least once with attribution to Associated Press. Did many traditional media organizations ask your permission? Did AP?  Did anyone offer you compensation?

Initially I spoke with AP but I did not like the terms that they tried to get me to sign and I decided to retain the rights to the photo. I’ve received compensation from some newspapers and television productions that have used the photo post the event. Most newspapers did not ask my permission; I’m sorting that issue out and we’ll see what happens.

9. How has this incident changed your life?

Well, I’ve become the Twitter guy or the TwitPic guy… .

Besides those distinguished titles, this incident has opened my eyes on the power of social media and especially Twitter. It is incredible that someone in my position is able to inform the world in real time and beat traditional media to an incident.

Also, I’ve started to evangelize the power of social media for various people who might have ignored it before. There is real interest in the potential and people are intrigued by it.

10. What thoughts do you have related to citizen journalism intersecting with traditional journalism?

Citizen journalism has the potential to be a great supplement to traditional journalism. Citizen journalists report an incident and they might be the first on the scene, but they are not investigating tips and doing background research. There will need to be a mix of both, and I think traditional journalists are seeing this shift. It will be some time until both are used to its potential, but I think we are going in the right direction.