Encouraging Academic Faculty to Start Using Social Media
Tracy Playle of Pickle Jar Communications offers advice on how to convince academic faculty to add social media to their mix of tools.
Tracy Playle of Pickle Jar Communications offers advice on how to convince academic faculty to add social media to their mix of tools.
The Social Media and Community Conference, held April 12-15 in San Francisco, generated a flurry of Twitter activity through its hashtag #casesmc11. Jen Doak lists her 10 favorite tweets from the conference.
If you can’t write well for the Web today, you won’t probably be read. Your title might get a look from friends of friends and your introductory paragraph a quick scan from your biggest fans, but the remaining 100, 500 or 1,000 words you lovingly typed on your keyboard will be ignored for a more promising link.
Michael Stoner discusses the results of the 2010 social media survey (conducted by mStoner, Slover-Linett Strategies and CASE) and offers a preview of 2011 survey results, to be released April 13 at the CASE Social Media & Community conference.
In an interview with CURRENTS magazine, Beth Kanter provides concrete examples of social media rights and wrongs.
Karine Joly is the editor of the blog www.collegewebeditor.com. Have you ever read Facebook Terms of Services or promotion guidelines, Twitter Rules or LinkedIn User Do’s and Don’ts? If you have, […]