Archive for August 1st, 2012

01 August
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1000 True Fans

Chris Guillebeau and 1000 People

This past weekend, I had the privilege to attend and keynote the World Domination Summit in Portland, Oregon. I spoke to a crowd of 1000 people that Chris Guillebeau and J.D. Roth had assembled for their event. Both gentlemen have a much larger overall following, but what I was witnessing, it felt, was Kevin Kelly’s famous 1000 true fans in living color.

1000 True Fans

This event is a must-attend event, if you are someone seeking to build a business of your own, especially if you’re seeking an uncompromising solopreneur lifestyle. Guillebeau and Roth attract all kinds of people who seek to live life on their terms and build business that meets their needs, interests, and criteria. And the attendees were every bit as powerful as the folks on stage. Take, for instance, the fact that this is the first conference that C.C. Chapman has paid to attend in years. I feel the same way. Jacq and I will go next year, no matter what.

The speakers reflected this, too. Jacqueline and I had a chance to talk with one of Jacq’s favorites, Danielle LaPorte, who certainly fits right into this tribe’s mindset.

It was just a very well curated, well-produced, well-attended, and passion-filled event. I’m writing this post solely to encourage you to get on the mailing list at the event’s website, so you might have a chance to get a ticket for next year. They sold out in minutes for the 2012 show.

Watching Magic

Oh, and one more thing. Some anonymous contributor (an attendee from the previous year) helped add to the profits that the event made. But Chris and J.D. didn’t bank these profits (I would have!). They put $100,000 into 1000 envelopes and handed everyone in the crowd who paid to attend $100 as an investment in them. Why? Because Chris is the author of the freakishly bestselling The $100 Startup (affiliate link), and of course, this is the perfect way to symbolize his (and J.D.’s) commitment to this tribe.

Watching 1000 people get an envelope with $100 with which to start a new dream was a touching and powerful gesture. I was truly blown away. Sure, $100 isn’t much, but have you ever attended a conference where that’s happened? Not me. And it won’t ever happen at mine, so to me, it was totally beautiful.

Hats off to Chris and JD and the over 80 volunteers and others who helped put together an amazing event. Put this on your calendar. It’s an experience you won’t soon forget.

Chris Brogan is an eleven year veteran of social media using both web and mobile technologies to build digital relationships for businesses, organizations, and individuals.

01 August
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All-You-Can-Read Magazine Subscription App Launches on iPad

Next Issue Media, a joint venture backed by five major U.S. publishers — Conde Nast, Hearst, Meredith, News Corp. and Time Inc. — is launching an all-you-can-read magazine subscription app for the iPad Tuesday.

For a flat monthly fee of $10 or $15, users can get access to the digital versions of 39 magazines from those publishers, including back issues. The lower-priced plan nets you access to monthlies and bi-weeklies, including Esquire, InStyle, Vanity Fair, Vogue and Wired. The $15 plan includes those magazines plus a small roster of weeklies, including People, Sports Illustrated, The New Yorker and Time. Users can also purchase individual subscriptions as well as single copies.

Next Issue first launched on Android — specifically, on Android tablets running version 3.0 (Honeycomb) — in early April. Next Issue CEO Morgan Guenther refused to share sales figures, but did say that 15,000 people are actively using the app. He added that more than half of those active users are not new subscribers, but rather getting access to individual titles by authenticating their existing print subscription credentials.

Though an intriguing concept, Next Issue is a tough sell for the budget-conscious magazine consumer. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’s 2010 Consumer Expenditure Survey, the average American household spends $100 per year on reading materials, a category that includes books, newspapers and magazines. Beyond those who hold a subscription to The Economist — which is, notably, not included in Next Issue’s package — I know of no one who spends more than $120 per year on magazines. And Next Issue’s subscribers only get access to digital versions of titles, not print and digital.

Guenther, however, appears unfazed. He’s not after the budget-conscious — he’s after the readers who want more choice. “I think we can increase average spend three, four, five times,” he says. “I really think people will read more with our plans, too.”

Magazine readers: Does Next Issue’s model appeal to you? Would you mind giving up your print editions, or have you already gone all-digital?

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

01 August
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How Credit Card Companies Lure Customers on Social Media INFOGRAPHIC

Credit cards can be a wonderful convenience or an albatross around your neck. Now, in the face of a government edict to stop pressuring unqualified people into opening credit card accounts, those purveyors of plastic are trying to make the credit-card game easier and more cost-effective for social media users, offering specials, perks and rewards for those who use Facebook and Twitter.

The credit card industry is slowly recovering from the big crash of 2008; delinquencies and charge-offs have significantly decreased. At the same time, the U.S. has smacked down the aggressive tactics used by credit card issuers, particularly when it comes to younger customers.

This infographic reveals the latest social media tactics of credit card companies — and what to look out for if you become one of their customers.

The news is not all good — such as the fact that interest rates for student credit have risen 3.1% just in the past three months. On the positive side, the infographic offers advice for improving your credit rating and getting better deals from the credit card companies.

Is this data reliable? The infographic was created by cardhub.com, a credit card-comparison site that’s independent of any of the major players (its CEO learned the tricks of the trade as a top executive at Capital One).

In addition to showing you where to get the best credit card deals, the site conducts studies about how credit cards are used.

The company has finished its second-quarter 2012 study. In this infographic, it’s concentrating on social media, as well as offering lots of hints we found quite useful.

Have you been targeted by credit card companies on social media? Share your experience in the comments.

Infographic courtesy cardhub.com

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

01 August
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Salt Dissolving Under A Microscope Looks Like The Grand Canyon

Signe Emma, a graphic designer, attempts to throw light on the copious amounts of salt in…airplane food?

Fun fact: Airplane food has 30% more salt than a typical meal. It is not because sadistic airlines are dead set on making you feel as disgusting as possible (good guess, though). It’s because the white noise and dryness of the cabin conspire against your sense of taste, stripping flavor from a perfectly seasoned dish. So airline chefs compensate by salting the hell out of everything.

That surfeit of salt is the subject of this oddly alluring photography series by Signe Emma. A graphic design graduate of Kingston University, Emma created scanning electron micrographs (a fancy term for images snapped under a microscope) of dissolved salt to represent the blood pressure-catapulting contents of airline meals. (When she presented it at an exhibit, she even made one of the prints 30% longer. I think you can guess why.) Here’s the neat thing: Under the microscope, the salt assumes the dramatic crags and canyons of an earthly landscape seen from an airplane window. Great to know that at 30,000 feet, the stuff giving us all hypertension manages to look like everything else at 30,000 feet: Beautiful.

Images courtesy of Signe Emma; h/t It’s Nice That

Via FastCoDesign: http://www.fastcodesign.com/

01 August
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Why Nashville Companies Are Targeting Tweens For High-Tech Jobs

Why Here

WHY YOU SHOULD START A COMPANY IN…

New Ideas, New Markets, New Insights

It used to be, if you were serious about starting a tech company, you went to Silicon Valley. But emerging entrepreneurial hubs around the country are giving startups new options. In this series, we talk to leading figures in those communities about what makes them tick.

CLICK HERE for hotbeds of innovation in other U.S. cities.

To most people, Nashville is a one-note town: Music City, home of the American country scene. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, says Liza Massey, president and CEO of the Nashville Technology Council. “It’s great because it shows we have a creative, vibrant community.” But now another type of creative professional is stepping into the spotlight: the tech entrepreneur. Not only have the big technology leaders like Microsoft, Dell, and HP come to town, but frisky social media startups such as Emma, Moontoast, and Populr, are sprouting up here, too. Plus, there’s a burgeoning healthcare industry with high-tech needs. Which poses one of the best problems a city can have: Nashville now has 1,200 vacant tech jobs and not enough qualified workers to fill them.

So the city’s Technology Council has launched Nashville Is Hiring, a massive recruiting campaign that uses strategies both conventional (partnering with community colleges) and decidedly unconventional (going after middle school kids) in hopes of filling those jobs and starting a larger conversation around how to make Nashville a great place for tech workers. It is one of the Council’s several initiatives, which move beyond the “great quality of life” pitch and work toward making real grass-roots change with job candidates, educational institutions, and employers.

You might be wondering: Why so many jobs to fill? Well, for one, business is good. “The city has become so good at attracting and starting businesses that we’ve actually weathered the recession quite well,” Massey says. “I get pulled into meetings all the time with companies who are looking to expand and all they want to work on is tech workforce.”

The real problem is that while it’s easy to sell families on Nashville–the city has great schools, affordable housing, and no state income tax–it’s a lot harder to lure recent graduates. Employers aren’t always offering the hip, culture-driven workplace that young creatives seek.

The Technology Council wants to help employers understand that the young, recently graduated tech workforce is looking for a very different kind of work environment. “We have to tell students that you’re not going to be Dilbert in a cubicle, you’ll have flexible hours, and you’ll be able to work from home,” Massey says. Massey and her team encourage that structure by pointing companies to the postive aspects of ROWE, or results-only working environment, the kind of ethos pioneered by companies like Best Buy and Zappos, where employers focus less on face time, and more on work achieved.

Nicholas Holland, an entrepreneur and founder of Populr, a publishing platform that allows users to make good-looking single-page websites, and the digital agency Centresource, serves as a local expert on ROWE, advising companies large and small on its benefits. Holland challenges Nashville executives to think differently when it comes to structuring their office life, from initiating flexible hours to placing a focus on corporate culture. His argument is that companies can use ROWE to add a lot of value for potential employees without spending more on recruiting or facilities. “Right now, there’s a lack of resources so everyone is trying to entice and incentivize the same tech pool,” he says. “Larger firms, especially in Nashville, like healthcare firms have the ability to throw a lot of money at the problem, but many workers are looking for other things like a fuller career path, or an ecosystem that supports their personal lives.” (Holland sent me his answers using his company’s product, which includes many more ROWE resources.)

The Nashville Technology Council also works closely with local government leaders, many of whom are on a coordinating committee that meets once a month. One of those members is Matt Largen, director of the office of economic development in Williamson County, south of Nashville. He’s partnering with local community colleges to find funding sources for specific IT certification programs that meet the immediate needs of companies in the area. Across the region, says Massey, the Council works with the 14 universities, as well as community colleges, to tailor programs to employers’ needs, namely in healthcare, where technology changes rapidly.

But Nashville isn’t just focused on college outreach, they’re also targeting junior high school students. Largen says his team is laser-focused on increasing the number of eighth graders who enroll in a track they call Foundations of Information Technology. “We know there is a high retention rate of students who start in the foundation class and continue throughout the IT track so we decided to focus our energy and resources there,” he says. This includes sending a letter from the Nashville Technology Council to every eighth-grade parent and bringing in volunteers to answer questions about IT careers. “The bottom line is that we have to reach out to kids who show an interest and aptitude in technology and make them aware of the wide variety of career options.”

It seems like it might not be the best investment of energy–there’s no guarantee that those students will stay in Nashville when they enter the workforce–plus, could so much emphasis on tech that early be pushing kids away from other potential careers? Largen says that since technology is so pervasive in all jobs, a focus on IT in schools means building a stronger regional economy, period. “In today’s economy, talent drives economic development,” he says. “Plus, growing our own sector is going to be the direct result of efforts to push IT into early grades.”

Katherine McElroy, a partner at C3 Consulting, also works closely with Nashville’s public schools, where she says teachers, too, need to be aware of the widening tech field. She encourages local tech companies to host three-day “externships” during the summer for teachers. “It really helps for teachers to see how technology is used throughout companies in all types of industries,” she says. She also points to local efforts to engage young women, like an Art2Stem camp for girls in the summer, and the local Women in Technology-Tennessee chapter, that sponsors mentorships and scholarships for girls.

Although the Nashville Is Hiring campaign has only been recently announced, Massey says the effort will include an ad campaign as well as visits to tech conferences like SXSW. Earlier this year, the Technology Council sent a street team of young Nashville residents to the Tennessee music festivals CMA MusicFest and Bonaroo wearing bright yellow shirts that exclaimed “I’m a hotspot!” with QR codes that could be scanned for more information about the tech jobs available.

Massey hopes that the campaign will allow them to entice workers from nearby Atlanta, Indianapolis, and Raleigh, but their bigger range of initiatives will also allow them to lure tech workers away from larger cities like L.A., New York, and Chicago. She thinks their efforts show candidates that Nashville is dedicated to creating the best tech working environment in the country. “I challenge them to find another city on their short list that has such a coordinated effort and is taking such a holistic approach.”

Follow the conversation on Twitter using the tag #WhyHere.

Image: Cheryl Casey via Shutterstock

Via Fast Company: http://www.fastcompany.com

Valve Interactive
An online marketing and design agency in Portland Oregon