‘Mr Tech Nashville’ Dave Delaney Gets Interviewed By RRW’s Jolie ODell

May 9, 2009

2009-0509-Dave-rrwIf you missed out on the Nashville RoadTwip stop because you didn’t know it was happening or what it was about, don’t feel bad, Dave Delaney spread word of Nashville’s digital community in an interview with  ReadWriteWeb’s Jolie ODell.

The Roadtwip consists of Jolie and two other tech geeks (Kurt Daradics and Jonathan Dingman) who decided to “take two weeks to travel around half the country, go to a conference in Omaha, & meet up with friends & thought leaders along the way.”

After explaining the nickname “Mr Tech Nashville” given to him by CC Chapman (although I doubt anyone is going to dispute that title), Dave does us proud yet again by talking up BarCamp Nashville and of course the Geek Breakfast. Jolie also interview’s Nashville native Katy Kirby of Remarkable Wit, who gives an excellent 2-minutes history of how Nashville got to where it is now AND gave a shout out to Nashville Geeks! [Hopefully ReadWriteWeb's Lidija Davis isn't too far down on the list of future visitors, pending she has a wacky cross-country voyage scheme in place of course.]

Head over to Dave Delaney’s Blog — DaveMadeThat — for both YouTube interviews and a video of the RoadTwip meetup that took place earlier in the week. [But honestly, go check out Dave's blog even if you are uninterested in the interviews because...well, Dave's got a pretty great blog.]


Q&A: The Future of Kl.am, A Short URL site for Social Media Stats

May 8, 2009
2009-0508-klam-logoKl.am is the short url site from Raven SEO that specializes in tracking individual links across the Web and even digests the information that is derived directly from Twitter itself (as shown in the screenshots below). Think of it as a more ambitious bit.ly-like site that aims to track stats from social media in addition to the web. Specialist/Social Princess Alison Groves answered some questions to help clarify the service and how it plans to grow in the future…
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Q: For the sake of ignorance, what specific pieces of information can kl.am capture without signing up for an account?

A: Although creating an account provides you with more options, you can still get a lot of features without it. For example, every kl.am link that’s made has a public stats page. That page displays how many people have clicked on the link, all of the websites that used the link, and how many people used the link in a Twitter post (or tweet!)

Q: What are they able to track if they sign up?

A: They can track the same information, but with an account, you can keep track of all the links you make. You can also edit existing links to add things like Campaign Variables for Google Analytic.

Q: How long will the link tracking campaigns be accessible to users?

A: As long as our servers don’t blow up. In all seriousness, they’ll be accessible forever.

Q: Why differentiate kl.am from the principle Raven tools?

A: Kl.am was just something we did for fun one day, mainly so we could control all of the aspects of a URL shortener that we’d want to. Kl.am is just a taste really of what Raven can do. If you enjoy digging into the information kl.am outputs, then you’ll love all of the bells and whistles built into Raven, especially the new Social Mention tool. And we don’t mean to brag, but it is one precious character shorter than bit.ly.

Q: Do the two sets of tools compliment each other?

A: Absolutely. The stats that you get in kl.am are just the tip of the iceberg as far as Raven is concerned. A successful internet marketing campaign doesn’t just stop with tracking your links across social media sites. While that is an awesome place to start, you need the whole package to really make the most out of your site or campaign.

Q: Kl.am scans twitter and spits out every tweet containing the short url that’s being tracked. Will kl.am offer relevant stats about other social media networks/services in the future?

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A: Why yes it will! We don’t want to spill the beans too much right now, but believe us when we say we’ve got ideas. We all know that everyone is looking to report ROI on social media and justify it in their business, and we realize how important that is. Kl.am is just under two months old, and we have so much more room to grow.

… And how might kl.am expand its reach of other social media sites to get relevant tracking info?

We’re not quite ready to share that yet, but when we do roll that out, we know everyone will be just as fired up about using it as we were with creating it.

Q: You mentioned that Sitening can build a short url tracking service for virtually anything… What kind of sites or businesses might benefit the most from using short url tracking?

A: Virtually any business can benefit from short url tracking. Newspapers, TV networks, record labels, content portals, and any other sort of brand can use it in a myriad of ways, whether that is just to make that link to ROI on social media, to generate ad revenue (you’re excited now aren’t you?!), or to just keep tabs on traffic and trends across their content. There are also additional value-added features that can be added to kl.am that can extend a website’s exposure and reach. We’ll be introducing those features, and the clients that are using them, very soon.

Q: How different would the information tracking be for each individual site you worked with?

A: First off we could white label any shortened URL for any client, so it could be branded for their own specific needs, which already opens up a world of opportunity. From there, we would just assess the needs of the individual client and build the entire service specifically for their needs.

Q: Both the NY Times and TechCrunch are now either using or testing their own short url service… What additional degree of control does a site have over tracking (statistics and usage) if it uses it’s own specific short url domain?

A: Like I said above, we can customize whatever the needs of the client are for the specific project, so not only can we give you the amount and kind of tracking that is a perfect fit for you, it can also be branded. Win win!


Digital Nashville Education Organizer Responds

May 8, 2009

carrot_and_the_stickThe organizer of Digital Nashville’s “Education Sessions responded to my last entry that basically pointed out they had scheduled their event the same day as the centre{source} Mixer.  I felt like it was only fair that I repost that response in the main feed.

There are a number of issues I have with Digital Nashville and I only really discussed their disregard for scheduling (and/or rescheduling). Jacques (the organizer) said they planned their meetings out in late 2008 and that may very well be the case, but if the “Digital Nashville” community was intertwined with the actual digitally-minded Nashville community, I feel like they would have had no problem rescheduling. But that doesn’t mean they should have, only that it was a possibility.

The core reason why I am not a big fan of “Digital Nashville” mainly has to do with motivation. When I go to the Mixer or the Geek Social, I do so to meet others who could carry on a decent conversation about why (or why not) Google’s Chrome browser will (or will not) eventually become the most used based on android growth. If that sentence makes no sense at all, then not to worry, I’m sure someone would gladly bring you up to speed over a beer and slice of pizza. And you know what? You’ve  just been educated. Take that line of logic and apply it to several other conversations and subjects and you’ve really started to understand bits and pieces about technology. Combine it with self motivation to teach yourself how to do something (like, writing php or understanding how to alter Cascading Style Sheets) and you’ve really got a decent education.

Digital Nashville’s motivation is inherently different because they want to bring people together to make them more marketable by educating them about subjects that employers need and/or small business owners need to know. At the core, this motivation is about money, and not too far down the road from that, survival. There is nothing wrong with wanting to learn new skills to make more money. But what I’ve tended to see with this group is that it gets billed as the community. It is not the community, its a club or organization.

Organizations can dictate commentary, delete comments on their message boards and justify how they would like others to perceive them. They seek out other members and offer tangible, exclusive advantages. So I don’t doubt that there is real value in the educational series provided by Digital Nashville. At the same time, I think there’s far more value in getting to know the community of digitally minded individuals in Nashville.

If the distinction that Digital Nashville is more of a organization than a community were more apparent, then I’d probably not be writing this response. (That and seriously, your Facebook should be a group, not a personal account.)

Digital Nashville Organizer’s response:

Tom,
Very insightful piece here and as being the organizer of the Digital Nashville’s education series I really appreciate all feedback, especially given that we are such a new organization and even more new to providing, what we feel, are quality education sessions. I say that last part with confidence as the majority of attendees have said so.

Once more, we really appreciate your, the community’s, feedback on all we do. In fact, so much so that we are soon to announce a town hall style meeting in June for gathering and opening a more proactive dialog between the leadership team, all being volunteers from the community, and the community itself.

Yes, we are aiming to not have an overlap of events for this session, as we do all our session, and hope you come and bring all your great feedback with you.

Lastly, let me address your claim that the scheduling conflict was intentional on our part. As being the organizer of these events I can insure you that this is not true. We started planning these events in November and chose the last two Thursdays in the month as the target dates for our events. In fact, our next event will be presented by Nick Holland from CentreSource as our relationship is very strong.

I hope I have helped clear up the two concerns in your posting and you are able to make it out to our town hall meeting in June. Any other feedback, feel free to provide to me directly at education-at-digitalnashville.net.

- Jacques


Overlapping Digital Events

April 30, 2009

photoOverlapping social events in the tech scene is beginning to become an issue for Nashville’s geek community and I suppose I should be glad that there are an over abundance of things to do rather than complain that I now have choices.

But when one of those meetups remains ignorant enough to overlap events on purpose, well, I guess that speaks to the heart of what kind of meetup group it actually is. I’m talking about the faux community “Digital Nashville” (Here start-eth the Flame War).

Digital Nashville has taken it upon themselves to schedule their event at the exact same time as the Centre{source} Mixer, which has always been well communicated and began their regular monthly meetups in January. Therefore I can say with a bit of authority that the information about the c{s} Mixer gathering, which typically has a pretty good turn out, is not hard to find. I can also say that there is some spill over so that the same people attending the Mixer are also involved in the Digital Nashville meetup.

But they chose to remain ignorant and schedule their event on the same day despite having at least a month to preplan. I know this because I got a message from the “Digital-Nash Ville” Facebook account. Apparently they are also ignorant of starting a Facebook group managed by real people (that is, actual people without hyphens in their names). Do you really want to attend a DIGITAL event that’s been organized by folks who don’t know how to use Facebook properly?

I’m just saying, If I were to recommend a choice between the two, I’d go with the Mixer.

[/END_Flame War]


Geek Social Moves To The Flying Saucer

April 22, 2009

no-cylonThe Geek Social, the monthly meetup of tech/science/media minded folks in Nashville, has outgrown the super secret room in the upper portion of Sam’s and as of May 7 will be switching locations to the pool room at the Flying Saucer.

After more than two years in existence, the meetup has proven that there are geeks aplenty in this southern city we call Nashville. And in case you’re wondering what a “Geek Social” is, its pretty much self explanatory. The guys at Firefly Logic started it with no purpose or agenda. They just really wanted to meet others in the community who enjoyed technology and all the wonderful culture it brings. But since the group is so large now, they decided to bring in a job board to help friends find work, and other friends find people to work for them.

And if you’re looking to lay the ground work for a new startup company, keep in mind that Firefly Logic is an official network partner of Microsoft BizSpark , which is a program designed to help accelerate the success of startups by linking them with established companies. So basically Firefly Logic can help up-and-coming companies with services, software, visibility and even offer mentoring in other aspects of running a tech company.

I should also mention that promoters, recruiters and any other unsavory individual who attends will be treated like Cylons and asked to leave the universe.

Official Geek Social site


Interviewed On The New Mediology Podcast

April 6, 2009

tnmlogoHosts of The New Mediology podcast, Bill Seaver and Nathan Moore, interviewed me about the impact of social news sharing sites in a public relations / marketing world. Episode 22 is posted on their site now and (of course I shamelessly) encourage everyone to check it out.

Without robbing the answers I gave to Bill and Nathan, I will say that social news sharing sites like digg, reddit, mixx and Stumble Upon are all very crucial to the media ecosystem that includes hard hitting journalism, marketing, advertising, public relations and everything else in between. What’s more important is newer news sharing communities are hungry for their own active users, and often welcome them with open arms, (Tipd is a great example).  If you aren’t seeing a benefit from being a part of these news sharing communities, then you haven’t spent enough time with them.

I’m curious as to what others think of my opinion, so if you have some time venture over to The New Mediology site to listen.


Geek Social: A Board For Jobs

March 7, 2009

erectorCertain words, when mass communicated, evoke very distinct reactions. Such is the case with saying “Geek” in Nashville. I’m not sure when this occurred, but very recently I realized it while having an in depth conversation about growing  genetically engineered meat in a lab that may or may not take the shape of a sphere. In the middle of this conversation, the topic was briefly changed to Erector Sets (the metal kind, not the dumb plastic ones) and robot gorillas before going back to Lab-grown meat again.

It happened at the Geek Social, a monthly gathering of folks in Nashville who happen to enjoy the same areas of interest. The dialog is a lot like what was described in the paragraph above, but of course also floats into more serious topics of discussion like employment.

“Usually I don’t stop like this to say something — we just let it flow naturally,” said Firefly Logic founding partner Chris McPherson at this month’s meetup. He’s routinely one of the first people to show up at the increasingly packed Sam’s Bar in Hillsboro Village where the Geek Social is held. “We’ve got a lot of friends who are out of work and also lots of friends who need work done so we’re trying something new.”

Chris points to the back of the Mafia-esque “secret room” where a plain, mid-sized cork board leans against the wall. He and all the folks at Firefly Logic had a pretty simple rationale for setting it up: Help people who are friends and who are not yet friends.

Obviously it’s also about helping people get a job if they need one, but if that’s all it was, I wouldn’t be writing about it. I’d hesitate to call it a job board and it seemed like they were on the same page as I was. “Job Board” implies hollow opportunities, empty handshakes, contact information for strangers and even headhunters. If you were there for any other reason than to meet like-minded geeks, then you were out of place. This was just a cork board to help people.

Why?

The most likely explanation is because they were in a position to do so. The Geek Social has grown such a large turnout from the tech community (meaning, people who like to talk about science and technology — career not required), they felt compelled to help others find work and/or workers. Firefly Logic isn’t even hiring any new positions, which was also stated. From the few months that I’ve been attending the Geek Social, I’ve never once seen them put up a company logo either. So, a board for jobs is a responsible action for anyone who can gather those kinds of numbers.


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