Tips/Tools

17
Dec

TwitterI was reading TwiTip and realized there was a comment field, to link your twitter address, linking to your Twitter home page.  That is a great idea. I searched for a Wordpress Plugin, none was found on Wordpress.org. This worked great until I upgraded to 2.7 and am hoping this plugin will soon be upgraded as well.

To my delight, a few days later ProBlogger, wrote a post on his process.  He provided a link to Ideashower, a plugin developer with a method of adding fields into the comment section. Between ProBlogger ’s post and the overview of the developers site I was able to code my comments, fairly simple. If you use Thesis template, ProBloggers post would benefit you.

Here is the process I used.  Let me remind you, each Theme is different, so your code may look slightly different. It is also a great idea to make a backup before changing any code, here is a plugin referred by @panah, WP-DB-Backup. I used Dreamweaver to modify my php files and used my “undo” a few times testing this method.

Download Plugin Files

Download the plugin files from the developers site.

Install the Plugin

Unzip the “Extra-comment-fields” zip file.  Upload the file PHP file “extra-comment-fields“ to the /wp-content/plugins/ directory, under your themes directory. This file does not have a folder as do many Plugins available.

continue

Popularity: 62% [?]

Category : Blogging | Tips/Tools | Twitter | Blog
6
Nov

You have selected a Social Networking service, created your profile, selected a photo of yourself and invited your contacts to join your network. Now you have built a network! Congratulations!

The network you have created is an important one. You have invited people to become part of your network community, so what is your plan? How are you going engage with your community?

Being active and engaging in your community is vitally important. The same time you invest in your personal face to face relationships, you will need to invest in growing and enhancing your online relationship.

Twitter is an exceptional tool to engage community. Why Twitter? It allows you to communicate in real-time, share information, get help to questions and build relationships. People share many aspects of themselves on Twitter, much more than the carefully planned bio on their profiles. Twitter allows you to gain unique insight and open the doors to many new relationships quickly.

Overview of Twitter Basics

  1. Account – Setup a free Twitter account.
  2. NamePick a meaningful user name that you can use in all of your networks. Be consistent.
  3. Avatar/PhotoBe easily recognizable. Select a photo and use it consistently over all other social applications.
  4. BioComplete your one line bio, telling visitors a little about yourself.
  5. LocationPut your location in your profile. This will help local Twitter users locate you.
  6. About You Page/URLAdd a URL to allow people to learn more about YOU.
  7. Customize TwitterCreate a custom background and promote your brand.
  8. Invite Your Connections – Locate your connections on Twitter and invite non Twitter users to join in the conversation.
  9. Set NoticesSet your notice preferences for followers.
  10. Promote Your Twitter AccountPromote the fact you are on Twitter on your networks, in groups and in the Twitter Yellow Pages.
  11. Managing TweetsSimple tools to help you engage with the community.

Let’s Get Started

1. Account

Set up a free Twitter account or consider getting several accounts and avoid others from obtaining your brand, domain, product names, etc.
Twitter names/ID’s are getting as popular as Domain names. The best way to protect your brand is to reserve your name now. Twitter allows you to register one user name per email. Have other email addresses available to this purpose.

2. Name

Keep User Names Consistent. Use your real name, company name, blog title or a brand name. Be consistent between networks. It is much easier to develop relationships with your network, when they immediately recognize you across applications.
Seriously, using your real name on Linkedin, nickname on Flickr, and yet another on Twitter gets confusing for the best of us. Same goes true to avatar photos, be consistent.

3. Avatar/Photo

Select a photo and use it consistently over all other social applications. Be easily recognizable. In most cases an avatar in a 100 x 100 pixel size, in a JPG, GIF or PNG format, works across most applications, but there are exceptions.

Example: A 100 x 100 pixel size photo appears pixilated in TweetDeck’s larger profile window. Using a larger size of 1000 x 1000 file size, not exceeding 700 k, works best overall.

Special thanks to my friend Simon Salt, for allowing me to feature him as my example.

4. Bio

Complete your one line bio in fewer than 160 characters. People will look at your bio and by this brief description decide whether or not to follow you or engage in conversation. Make your bio interesting, by being “REAL”. Not everyone works 24 x 7, so put a mix of interests in your bio. Even business people have interests in sports, arts, family fun, pets, video games, gardening, etc.

5. Location

Put your location in your profile. Include the name of your city and state, or at minimum the county and state. This will help Twitter users locate you and your business on TwitterLocal.

6. About You Page/URL

Create URL to allow people to learn more about you. In Twitter you can add one link. Which link to choose? What is best, website, blog or one of the many other profiles you have created? Which one is best?


Connect to all of them. How? Create a custom landing page, just about you, and provide links to all of your social profiles. A little thought goes a long way. Make it easy for people to find, learn, engage and connect with you.

Please, avoid creating a link that appears like spam, which will turn people off immediately.

7. Customize Twitter

Let us not forget the “Visual” aspect of you or and your brand. Continue with the consistency with a custom background to match your website brand. It can be enhanced to be a , company logo or personality. Caution: Avoid creating a background that looks like a “sales” piece. The appearance of spam is a turn off to many.

  • Creating your background

In this example, we used Adobe Illustrator, but any graphic software will work if you can export into GIF, JPG or PNG format.

Format: GIF, JPG, PNG.” Images must be smaller than 800k.
Canvas Dimension: 795 px by 400 px (this was viewed on 15, 21 & 23” monitors)
Top Branding Dimensions: 39.428 px by 795-821 px

  • Change Design Colors

Select colors that enhance custom background graphic. You can change the RGB colors for the background behind your graphic, text, link colors, sidebar background fill and sidebar border.

To activate the color wheel, click on one of the fields; background, text, links, sidebar or sidebar border. Click on the color wheel to select the desired color. The color wheel will put the appropriate web or RGB colors in the appropriate field. You can also directly input your web hex color information if you have it available.

Important note: until you SAVE CHANGES, your preferences will not be changed. If you do not like your selections, CANCEL and begin again.

8. Invite Your Connections

Locate your connections on Twitter and invite non Twitter users to join in the conversation.
You can import your contacts from Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail, AOL and MSN. Note: if you use Outlook, you can export your CSV file and import into one of these free services.

9. Notices of Tweets in your timeline

These settings allow you to control the replies that appear in your timeline.

In the notices section of your settings page, you can choose how you will see the @replies of others. You have three options:

  • all @replies: see all of the @replies made by people you follow, whether or not you follow the person to whom the reply is directed.
  • @replies to the people I’m following: see @replies from people you follow directed toward other people that you also follow. This is the default setting.
  • no @replies: never see any @replies in your timeline, ever

10. Promote Your Twitter Account

  • Twellow

Twellow is like the Twitter Yellow Pages. You can search by name, Twitter user or by category. Members can set up a brief bio or an extended profile with links to a variety of their social networks. , as well as your web or blog URL’s.

  • Communication Materials

Email Signature – Include your twitter name in your email signature. A simple and professional signature can be created with WiseStamp a Firefox extension enables you to easily customize & add personalized email signatures on any webmail service (Gmail ,Yahoo ,Aol mail, Hotmail).

Business Cards – Include your twitter address near your blog and/or website information.  One Twitter user @adellecharles, suggested if your card has too much information and it begins to look busy, you could consider adding a Twit Bird as a symbol.  I love this idea!

As @Twalk said, “Many of us operate in multiple niches, so why not have mult. biz cards”. This is a great idea. Going to an event or conference, want more than your normal biz card has on it? Try Moo cards.

  • Join a Twitter User Group

Facebook has a group named “Twitter”, with over 8745 members.
LinkedIn has several pages of groups, one prominent group Tweeple, has over 1700 members.

11. Managing Tweets

There are a variety of desktop and mobile applications that will help you organize and manage your Twitter communications are available.

  • TweetDeck – My favorite and most valuable tool is TweekDeck. Why? I can create different columns and categorize my followers, topics of discussion, clients, etc. Plus the added benefit of having Twitscoop built directly in the application and the expanded profile viewing in the side panel.
  • Twirl – This application also runs on Adobe Air, but is a compact version, taking up much less room on your monitor.
  • Twitter RSS feed – Keep up with Twitter updates by subscribing to Twitter via RSS Feed. You can subscribe to any Twitter user or even track your own feed.

Just go to the users page and click on the RSS feed at the bottom left hand side of their page. Note: You do not have to follow them, to get their feed.

Closing

Now that you are easily recognizable, linked to your network connections, promoted your account so others can locate you easily, you are ready to begin engaging with your community.

You can communicate in real-time, share information, get help to questions and build stronger relationships.

Writing this post was a great re-check of myself, soon realizing I had been a bit lax in following my own advice. I found a few of my avatar photos were not consistent, my landing page needs work and I will consider a new style of business cards with room for my Twitter address, or at minimum a Twitter Symbol.

People are creative, with creative ideas, what are yours? How do you promote yourself on Twitter? How do you manage your Twitter steam? What tools and tricks work best for you?

Does anyone have the perfect background size for all monitors? I tested 15” to 23”, but there must be an overall method that fits all? No?

Look forward to hearing your tips and tricks!

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Popularity: 100% [?]

Category : Branding | Featured | Social Media & Networking | Tips/Tools | Twitter | Blog
20
Aug

What is LinkedIn’s real purpose?  It is a social networking platform for making connections, right? Wrong.

Wrong? I was sure surprised to learn I had been using LinkedIn improperly.

Hmmm, that must be the reason they “blocked” me from contacting people in my groups, without their email address.  LinkedIn was nice about it, stating they would remove it, if I basically acknowledged I now understood the concept.

Interesting enough, even if I had watched this video, and completely understood the concept of LinkedIn, I probably would have contacted “group” members.  I consider a “group” as a collection of people sharing common interests and goals. Several of those said “groups”; I currently hold active paying membership status, leading me to further questions the LinkedIn “group” function.

Needless to say, I remain blocked, if for no other reason than I continue to debate why contacting members, should lead me into “blocking” status.  At some point, I would like to understand the “group” process and why contacting members is such a sacred taboo.

I may have started this LinkedIn journey, going down the wrong path, but I made some great connections and friends, with those willing to share within the groups I subscribed.

Going forward, I will embrace the LinkedIn concept in part, although I will continue to be an open networker, in all of my networks.  My interests are in meeting new people and developing relationships.

How is the “group” process supposed to work?  Shouldn’t group members, be able to contact other group members, for a connection?  If not, what is the real purpose of joining a “group”?

We encourage you to share, any of our posts that you find interesting and useful. Please feel free to repost portions or the entire post, but please link back to blog.einnoventions.com‘s article, and give our team credit. Thank you! This notice excludes use for profit.

Popularity: 8% [?]

Category : LinkedIn | Social Media & Networking | Tips/Tools | Blog
16
Jul

In my post, Beginning Your Online Social Network, I provided some very basics to get started.

New concepts are sometimes difficult to grasp, especially when faced with so much new information at the same time.

I am a fan of Commoncraft series “in plain English”. They use short, unique and understandable videos in a format they call Paperworks.

You can enjoy more from Commoncraft at their website or in the saved files on Innoventions YouTube account.

Hope you enjoy the video!!  Let me know what you think of this Commoncraft video.  Do you have other videos that you enjoy about Social Networking?  Yes, please comment and post a link to share.

We encourage you to share, any of our posts that you find interesting or useful. Please feel free to repost portions or the entire post, but please link back to blog.einnoventions.com‘s article, and give our team credit. Thank you! (This notice excludes use for profit)

Popularity: 6% [?]

Category : Social Media & Networking | Tips/Tools | Blog
8
Jul

Common Craft has created a reputation, for taking complex ideas, and turning them into short, unique and understandable videos.

I thought this would be a nice compliment to the posting “Twitter, What is a Twitter” and “Twitter Two Months & Counting”.

Common Craft has many more enjoyable videos, on their website as well as on YouTube, teaching Social Media services and applications in a easy to understand format.

I hope you enjoy and if you know of any other useful videos of Twitter, please let me know.

Related articles:

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Category : Social Media & Networking | Tips/Tools | Twitter | Blog
Karl Newman
karl newman

“Reinventing Innovation Through Education: • Corporate Universities • eLearning Training • Curriculum Development • Interactive Simulations. ”

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Tawny Press
tawny press

“ Bio Corporate Education w/focus on eLearning & Custom Universities, Social Media Evangelist, Wife, Doggie Mommy & Macaw tamer. Orange County TweetUp member. ”

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