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- Making Grand Rounds SubscribableNovember 20
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In September I wrote a blog post about reading RSS feeds for, if not at, your work. (”Reading Blogs at Work: Why You Should Do It & How You Can Make it Worthwhile“) One of the things I discovered in writing that post was the fantastic weekly carnival of medical blogs called the Grand Rounds. This wonderful series has been running for more than 4 years now and man of its participants put great care into their hosting efforts. When it's their turn to play host the solicit, search for, organize and sometimes summarize an awesome selection of the best posts on medical blogs that week.
Unfortunately, I haven't found any way to subscribe to an RSS or email list of those posts - and I've looked really hard! Tonight I'm preparing for a presentation I'm giving tomorrow to a medical tech and civil liberites organization and I really wanted to make such a subscription available for them. So I bit the bullet and made it myself. It was not as easy as I'd like and is going to take a few minutes each week for me to maintain - so if any participants are here reading this and would like to take it over, I'll show you below not just how I created the feed but how you can help too.
Read on for RSS and email subscription options and step by step instructions describing how this was done. I
- louisgray.com: 15 Secrets of FriendFeed's Power UsersNovember 19
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Guest poster Daniel P. offers some truly useful tips on building your rep on FriendFeed. Even more in comments.
Saved By: Marshall Kirkpatrick | View Details | Give Thanks
Tags: toshare, FriendFeed, marketing, promotion
- Add Rev3 to the Deadpool « Kent's Official BlogOctober 27
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Ask A Ninja dude tells it like it is in the video content world. Worth a read, whether he's correct or not we'll see but a very informed post.
Saved By: Marshall Kirkpatrick | View Details | Give Thanks
- Would You Like a Job as an Online Community Manager?October 17
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One of the services that I provide for consulting clients is assisting with blogger and social media expert recruiting. In the past 2 months I've helped 3 companies find company bloggers or community managers. Right now I'm working on a list of 3 to 5 high-quality candidates for a community management position for a very innovative and cool startup.
What would a job like that involve? If you're a startup company reading this post, should you hire a community manager? To explore this question in general, I've reposted below a post I wrote this Spring at ReadWriteWeb. It's titled Do Startup Companies Need Community Managers? I've posted it in full below for the benefit of casual readers, but the original post has been read by more than 10,000 people, 69 of whom left comments, many of which are also worth reading. I should also take this opportunity again to thank the 22 people who contributed their thoughts to my research on the article.
If you'd like to learn more about the particular community manager role I'm trying to fill, email me at marshall@marshallk.com. This position in particular is best for someone on or willing to move to the East Coast, but that may not be 100% essential (and other companies will be looking to hire for similar positions in the future) so… if you'd like to do this kind of work now or later, drop me a line. Whether this kind of position is of interest to you or not, I hope you'll enjoy the following discussion.
Do Startup Companies Need Community Managers?
You know what little startup companies need these days? They need to hire more people! It may be a frightening thought, but in an increasingly social world - being social is becoming an important full time job.“Community Manager” is a position being hired for at a good number of large corporations (see Jeremiah Owyang's growing list of people with that kind of job) but what about smaller companies? We asked a number of people what they thought and the following discussion offers some great things to think about, pro and con.
What Is a Community Manager?
A community manager can do many things (see below) but the most succinct definition of the role that we can offer is this. A community manager is someone who communicates with a company's users/customers, development team and executives and other stake holders in order to clarify and amplify the work of all parties. They probably provide customer service, highlight best use-cases of a product, make first contact in some potential business partnerships and increase the public visibility of the company they work for.
![endif]-->!--[if> - Hire The Best People: 10 Easy StepsOctober 16
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A smart little article on Vitamin from someone at Freshbooks about how to hire the best. Some good insights like: resumes from Joel on Software posts are good, resumes from 37Signals job board postings are not.
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