As I read through my RSS feeds each day, I always find a number of interesting items. Google Reader allows me to easily “share” these items, both within Google Reader itself and at this web page and RSS feed.
To the right you will find a widget containing my latest “Noted” items and a link to see even more. I found them interesting and I bet you will, too! Subscribe to the RSS feed to track what I find interesting every day. |
Elsewhere Online: Twitter Landing Page
I came across this interesting article today on why you should have a custom “landing page” for people who discover you via Twitter.
Develop a Twitter Landing Page
Over the weekend I created a landing page for my Twitter account.
I got the idea off Laura Fitton (@pistachio) when a guest post on TwiTip highlighted what she’d done with her own Who is @pistachio landing page.
What is a Twitter Landing Page?
In short – a twitter landing page is a page on your blog or website that is specifically written for those arriving at your blog having clicked on the link in your twitter profile.
New Media Prescription 004 – Interview others
For other entries in this series, See New Media Prescription
If you want to enhance the impact of your new media efforts, and expose yourself to an entirely new set of listeners and viewers, you can’t do better than recording a series of interviews.
Why are interviews so powerful? It is a simple fact of ego. When you interview someone for your show what is the first thing they do? That’s right, they tell all their friends, family and business contacts to listen.
“Hey, you’ve got to listen to this interview I did for the XYZ show!”
This is exactly what you want them to do and you want to facilitate it as much as possible. In this relatively simple way you gain exposure to each person’s network of contacts so provide them with audio or video from the interview, send them links they can share and embed in thier own blogs and web sites and post the interview to public audio and video sharing sites.
While you might hesitate to ask someone for their entire mailing list so you could send out a press release, interviewing someone, and asking that they share it with their friends and contacts is very natural. An interview provides valuable content and yet still achieves the goal of raising your profile and that of your interview subject.
Who do you interview? Start with the people you would most like to speak with. Who are your influences? Who are your heroes? Whose opinions do you respect most? There is no need to shoot low, either. My fellow Friends in Tech members, Chuck Tomasi and Kreg Steppe of Technorama always make a point of reaching out to bigger names for their interviews. Their guests have included Mythbusters Adam Savage and Grant Imahara, author Stephen Covey, explorer and discoverer of the Titanic, Dr. Robert Ballard and many others.
You should also seek to be interviewed by others. You gain content that can be shared on our own blog or podcast and your ideas get exposed to a new group of people. It also allows you to get your ideas out if you are having difficulty writing them down. This was the genesis of my New Media Answers series for New Media Interchange. Members would often be peppering me with questions during our meetings and I quickly realized that my answers would be beneficial to many more people if I captured them for the web site and podcast.
So I asked NMI member, Tracy Pattin, who does her own show, Sizzle in the Middle, to act as the interviewer and duplicate in the studio what happened so frequently at our meetings. She comes in with questions on a particular topic and I answer them to the best of my ability. This results in an engaging discussion and allows me to talk about new media issues and work through ideas that I can later present as more fully-formed articles here and on the New Media Interchange blog. This allows me to answer questions that a large majority of the members might have even when I am unable to talk with each of them individually.
Start interviewing today to spread your name and your message to an entirely new group of people.
Get your message to your audience…cheaply…give away MP3 Players
It has been said by many New Media folks that if you want to get your message into your audience’s ears, buy a cheap MP3 player, load it with your content and give it away. This used to be an expensive proposition, but today’s Sunday ad flyers show this isn’t true any longer. These 1 GB MP3 players could easily hold hours of content and at less than $20 each retail it might actually make sense. You could probably find similar MP3 players even cheaper at retail.
If you have a message to get out to your employees, your charity donors or your any other audience, there is little excuse in not giving away both the “blades” and the “razor”.

Target
Toy R Us
Douglas Welch and the JoshMeister at PodCamp AZ 2008
Another photo from PodCampAZ I just discovered while searching through Flickr.
Slides: Douglas speaks on New Media at DevLearn 2008
I had a great time at DevLearn 2008 and the Adobe Learning Summit last week. Here is my New Media presentation from the conference. I also gave a all-day Podcasting Workshop the day before the conference.
Here are the slides from that presentation in PDF format.
Download: Many-to-Many Media from DevLearn 2008
Audio: Douglas speaks on New Media at DevLearn 2008
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I had a great time at DevLearn 2008 and the Adobe Learning Summit last week. Here is my New Media presentation from the conference. I also gave a all-day Podcasting Workshop the day before the conference.
Douglas speaks on New Media at DevLearn2008
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I had a great time at DevLearn 2008 and the Adobe Learning Summit last week. Here is my New Media presentation from the conference. I also gave a all-day Podcasting Workshop the day before the conference.
Adobe Learning Summit – San Jose
I am here in San Jose for the DevLearn conference and was able to check out today’s Adobe Learning Summit as well. Big crowd here to learn about all sorts of Adobe tools to assist them in their eLearning careers.
Douglas talks about “…more than podcasting!”
Sheila got this nice picture of me as I presented my session, “…more than podcasting” at PodCampAZ last weekend.
Audio and video of this session is coming soon. I have to get through my all-day podcasting workshop and a conference session at DevLearn2008 this week first.Thanks Sheila!
Douglas interviewed by Susan Heywood of Endless ROI
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Susan Heywood of Endless ROI – The Monetization Conversation grabbed a quick interview with me during PodCampAZ last weekend. You can listen to my section of the show using the following link:
Listen to Douglas interviewed by Susan Heywood of Endless ROI
[audio:http://welchwrite.com/cip/audio/2008/cinm-podcampaz-heywood.mp3]If you would like to listen to the entire Endless ROI episode, use the listen link below
In this session, which will be presented live at PodcampAZ, 2008 (www.PodcampAZ.org) you will learn how to set up, host and promote your own free Web radio show and podcast using BlogTalkRadio. Discover tips for planning and promoting your show, along with learning how to get started, scheduling and hosting your broadcasts. Each session will include a live broadcast as an example of how to take calls on the air and run the show using your PC and phone.
Listen to the entire show – My interview starts at 18:00
Get the most from Twitter through a balance of Systematic and Unsystematic uses
Whenever a bunch of tech folks get together, as we did this weekend at PodCampAZ, talk soon turns to Twitter and its uses. While the discussion is wide ranging it eventually turns to the use of Twitter as a branding, promotion and business tool. Everyone has their own idea about how Twitter should be used. Some want no business or promotional messages and others see it only as conduit to reach potential customers.
As with most things in life, the effective use of Twitter is dependent on balance. A balance between systematic and unsystematic uses. I think a combination of both yields the greatest ROI for you and your followers.
Systematic Uses
Systematic uses include the automatic tweeting of blog posts, new Flickr pictures, reminder and more. When I first started using Twitter I had to make a decision whether to use TwitterFeed.com to automatically post a tweet when I posted something new to my blogs. In thinking about this, I realized that it was ok for me, as it still directly answered Twitter’s main question, “What are you doing?” The fact is, the last thing I was doing was posting to my blog. The same went for photos and other content I may have posted elsewhere. What I am doing online is part of my life (a large part most of the time) and I want to share it with others.
Unsystematic Uses
Of course, I think my Twitter stream would be incomplete with unsystematic uses. Unsystematic use of Twitter includes the random thoughts that occur to me about where I am and what I am doing. I don’t typically tell folks what I eating or drinking, but a review of my Twitter stream turns up lots of posts about coffee. Most importantly, unsystematic use also includes engaging in the on-going Twitter conversation. @ replies to comments from the people I follow and others often bring out information about my thoughts and ideas that others might not know. They help to “fill out” my personality to my followers and give a more complete picture of who I am. One rule I use on Twitter is this…if I would lean over to a friend to say something, or if I find myself shouting something at the television screen, then it is probably worth a personal tweet. If I would comment back to someone in a face-to-face conversation, I would think this a great reason to @ reply on Twitter.
I believe that in order to enjoy the most benefits from using Twitter you have to have a balance between these 2 uses. Constantly twittering offers from your business, links to your business or links to other sites misses the conversational side of Twitter and can leave followers with a limited view of who you are, what you do and what you are trying to accomplish. Look at your Twitter stream and try to get a feeling what others might feel when they see your stream for the first time. Would you follow yourself if you stumbled across your stream?
Of course, you can engage only in unsystematic uses of Twitter and still have a great time and build some great relationships. It is just a more social use of Twitter and that is perfectly fine. That said. if you are not using systematic tools to include some of your other content in your Twitter stream, you are missing out on some great opportunities to tell folks more about yourself. Whether these systematic uses includes business pitches or not, followers will be accepting of them if they somehow give them a better picture of you.
Balance in all things is difficult to accomplish, but seeking that goal in life and on Twitter is a great way to share your life with others. I think that mixing business and pleasure is one way to make Twitter the most useful to you and your followers. Give it a try.
Video: New Media Interchange at BarCampLA-6
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Douglas E. Welch, Founder of New Media Interchange talks about the group’s goals and hosts an open question and answer session.
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PodCamp AZ 2008 Promo Video
Courtesy of: Izzy Video
Have You Registered?
Get on over to the registration page so we know you’re coming.
New Media Prescription 003 – Capture your content
So, if you have read the previous 2 installments of this series — Get a Blog and Start/Build Your Email List — then you are ready for the next step. Now that you have a place to release your new media and have started a mailing list to promote your new media, it is time to create some new media!
Too many people I talk to look upon this as a challenging task. “Where am I going to find the time to create all this content?” The truth is, you don’t have to make more time to create your content. In most cases, you are already creating content every day. The sad part is, you are probably throwing away this content because you don’t recognize it when you see it.
Every person, every store, every charity, every restaurant, every business creates content every day…or should be. You have a unique message you want and need to communicate to your customers. You goal is to integrate new media into your work and business so that you take advantage of every opportunity to create new content.
Here are some examples from a variety of businesses:
Retail Store
Did you just receive a new product, new product line, an enhancement to an existing product or a promotional video from a vendor? Look for a way to make a short video, a piece of audio or a blog post about this product. Look for opportunities to interview manufacturers about their products. Have your staff create videos about products they really like. Your customers are there to buy your products. Give them as much information as you can to make their purchasing decisions easier. Even more, using your existing staff in your new media productions brings a personal feeling to them. Your customers will see the same people online and in the store and feel a closer relationship with your business.
Restaurant
Many restaurants work on a very seasonal menu. Peaches are in season one week, raspberries the next, strawberries another. Fall calls for comfort food and summer for lighter fare. This gives you a ready-made schedule and reason for new media. Show your customers how you are developing a new seasonal menu. Show them the special ways you are using the seasonal product. Celebrate the change of seasons with menu items, entertainment ideas, party information and more. You can also produce mini-series of cooking classes and recipes, showing some “behind-the-scenes” action that everyone loves.
Charities
One of the biggest goals of any charity is out-reach — telling potential donors what you do and why it needs to be done. If you are a medical charity, I would guess you have regular panel discussions and speakers that come to present to your staff and donors. Make a point of recording these events. While you may have 10-20 people at the in-house discussion, you have a potential audience of thousands on the Internet. If you have influential visitors to your offices, record an interview with them that can be used on your web site or sent out as a podcast.
If you have a yearly event, capture as much media as possible during your next event. Done right, you will have enough content to power a weekly or monthly podcast. This show then becomes a regular promotion for the next yearly event. Instead of making your PR push a few months before your regular event, you now have a series of regular promotions throughout the year leading up to the event. Your goal here is to be make the yearly event a culmination of a year-long event that you have been fueling using your new media productions. Ideally, by the time you open up ticket sales for your event, the demand will be so high that you will sell out almost immediately. Then you repeat the process, gathering more media at this event to fuel your show for another year.
Build your personal brand
Many of us are in the business of providing information and advice. Too often, we wait until customers come to us for information instead of proactively reaching out to them. In the case of one financial planner, the current mortgage and stock market crises has led to frightened customers rushing to their office to inquire about their portfolios. Imagine how you might allay fears by providing a regular informational update to your clients. When customers are clamoring for information, new media is a great way to provide it.
Providing this information also goes a long way towards building your own brand as an expert in your field. Your audience might begin with your clients, but it can quickly grow to include others who might eventually become your clients. It could even raise your profile enough to bring traditional media outlets like newspapers and television to come seeking your insight.
Content surrounds you and your business. You only need to reach out and capture it when it occurs. Starting a new media program isn’t about creating information out of whole cloth. It is about sharing what you already have and know. Start capturing your content and building your New Media future today.
Link: Prescription 001 – Get A Blog
Link: Prescription 002 – Start/Build Your Email List
Douglas on E-Learning Guild Podcast
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In preparation for my day-long podcasting workshop at DevLearn 2008, Brent Schelenker had me on his show to talk about myself, podcasting and New Media on his GuildCast for the ELearning Guide podcast.
Here is the info on my workshop:
Audio and e-Learning: How to Turn Sound Files into Training Podcasts
Tuesday November 11, 2008 08:30 AM
Doug Welch, The WelchWrite Company, Inc.
As e-Learning professionals, you create content everyday. Much of that content is lost when you fail to capture it, or when you fail to edit and distribute it to your audience. Audio is already a big part of your e-Learning, but you could be using it for so much more. Learn new ways to capture audio content, and how to distribute it via internal and external systems and services like blogs, RSS (Real Simple Syndication), and Podcasting.
In this workshop you will be immersed in sound, and learn how new audio technologies can be used to enhance your learning solutions. You will learn how to capture, edit, and distribute sound files, as well as learn which tools are best for you. You will be learning about Podcasting from an industry veteran who specializes in new media production. If you already know the learning theories related to audio in your e-Learning courses, then this workshop will get you to the next level, and help make your corporate learning Podcast dreams a reality.
In this session, you will learn:
* How to capture good audio, and what tools you can use
* How to edit audio to produce a complete, professional sounding, show
* How to use a blog and RSS to distribute your work
* How to share your work with the world using the iTunes Podcast directory (and other products) can share your work with the worldAudience:
Intermediate Designers, Developers, Project managers, and Managers who have Only basic computer knowledge is required. Additional experience with audio production is helpful, but not required.
Career Opportunities starts its 5th year of podcasting
I guess I have been podcasting so long that anniversaries no longer make an impact on me. Last Wednesday, September 24, 2008, I started my 5th year of Career Opportunities and my fifth year of podcasting in general.
It is hard to believe it has been that long and yet the podcasting and new media environment has changed dramatically from when I first began.
Thanks to all the readers, listeners and viewers who have part of Career Opportunities! I look forward to many years in the future.
PodCampAZ is coming! – Nov 1 & 2 – Phoenix, AZ

As you may have noticed in the right-hand sidebar, I am going to be speaking at PodCampAZ, this November 1&2. You can find information on my sessions in the program guide.
Evo Terra and I will also be hosting the first meeting of New Media Interchange Phoenix.
What is PodCampAZ? Funny your should ask! The PodCampAZ site has this to say:
“PodCamp is a FREE BarCamp-style community UnConference for podcasters and listeners, bloggers and readers, and anyone interested in New Media. It was held for the first time from September 8-10 in Boston, Massachusetts and is now spreading across the world.
These 7 rules define what events can be called a PodCamp:
- All content created must be released under a Creative Commons license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
- All attendees must be treated equally. Everyone is a rockstar.
- All attendees must be allowed to participate. (subject to limitations of physical space, of course)
- All sessions and events must be free of charge to attend.
- All sessions must obey the Law of 2 Feet – if you’re not getting what you want out of the session, you can and should walk out and do something else. It’s not like you have to get your money’s worth!
- The event must be new-media focused – blogging, podcasting, video on the net.
- The financials of a PodCamp must be fully disclosed in an open ledger, except for any donor/sponsor who wishes to remain anonymous.”
So, if you are in the area, join me (and a bunch of other folks) for PodCampAZ 2008. I look forward to seeing you there!
News: New “season” of web series is most mature yet
I look forward to the day when reviewers stop using subtly (and not so subtle) dismissive comments when talking about Internet-distributed shows. (The descriptive term I am coming to prefer.) Still, it is heartening to see some coverage of these shows in the mainstream press.
I often wonder, though, if making shows designed to look more and more like traditional television is really an appropriate goal. Given the new tools and the new freedom of Internet Distribution, shouldn’t we seek to make some new, instead of relying entirely on the old models?
New “season” of web series is most mature yet
For the last year or so, amid the angsty teenagers talking into their webcams and the skateboarding dogs, you could find professionally made Web series scattered around if you knew where to look, and when. But this month and next, there’s a critical mass approaching: Hollywood is bringing out what you might call the first “new season” of spiffy, corporate-backed Web series designed to be watched on your computer.
There’s now a clear line between amateur “user-generated content” and the new wave. On one side, you have the YouTube revolution in all its rough-edged glory. On the other are slick, premium productions coming from Web teams at Warner Bros., Sony and HBO, and from hopped-up bands of writers and directors who were motivated by the writers’ strike to land corporate sponsorship and create their own shows. Many can boast celebrity names on camera, behind the scenes or both.
What is this New Media Thing Anyway? – September 25, 2008
Join us for New Media Interchange and find out!
FREE ADMISSION
Maybe you’ve heard of YouTube, watched a few videos, made some “friends” on Facebook, maybe even listened to a few podcasts, but you’re wondering what New Media can do for you, your organization or your business.
New Media Interchange can open the door to New Media and a new world where you can get your message, your writing, your videos, your music out to a global audience. Visibility is the most important goal in today’s world. You can be the best chef, the best writer, the best Realtor, but if no one knows what you do, does it really matter? New Media can introduce you to a world full of new contacts, viewers, listeners and readers.
Our next meeting of New Media Interchange:
Sherman Oaks Branch of the Los Angeles Public Library
(In coordination with their twice-monthly Internet Seminars)
14245 Moorpark Street, Sherman Oaks, CA 91423
(818) 205-9716
Free Parking
RSVP Online at Upcoming.org – http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/989139
For more information on New Media Interchange, visit http://newmediainterchange.com
How can you use New Media? The options are almost endless. It all depends on what you want to accomplish.
- Start a blog to share your writing, your restaurant’s menu, your philosophy, your charity’s message or communicate with your businesses’ customers.
- Create videos to highlight your band’s performance, your favorite hikes, your unique knowledge of a topic, sell real estate or your products, hold lectures and classes online.
- Create audio and video shows. Deliver them right to your audience’s computers and media players (iPods and others) automatically.
- Broadcast your band’s performance, lectures, speeches, panel discussions, interviews and more LIVE using only your computer, a web cam and an Internet connection.
- …and much, much more!
Join us for New Media Interchange, a FREE group dedicated to bringing the power of new media to everyone, and learn what New Media can do for you.
New Media Interchange was founded by Douglas E. Welch, pioneer podcaster and computer consultant of 20+ years. Douglas also teaches Podcasting and New Media for Writers for UCLA Extension.
Visit http://newmediainterchange.com for more information.