You ARE A Content Manager – With or Without An Internet Connection
Content. It’s everywhere. Tons of it. Anytime you open your web browser, you are opening a virtual vortex.
You search. You learn. You connect. You are in control of your Internet adventure and you can type, click and link your way to anywhere. Sometimes you know where you want to go and sometimes you happen upon an new place after following an unexpected trail of clickthroughs.
The networking possibilities online are mind-numbing. The educational opportunities, abundant. The chance to make quality connections simply rests in HOW you consume, manage and distribute content. Period.
There is so much information out there…you can truly get lost in it.
Or…you can do your best to manage it.
As the Internet grows and new content is published at incomprehensible volumes, how on Earth can you maximize your Internet experience—and your time? I think it all starts with a 3-step approach.
- Search. EVERYTHING online comes down to search. That is, it’s all about how you find things and how you can optimize your own content so it can be found easily. There are search tools for everything. Use them. Want a list? Start here.
- RSS. You guys, I’m telling you…this is the secret sauce to content management. If you do not know what an RSS feed is or if you DO NOT HAVE AN RSS FEED READER, PLEASE learn what it is and how to use it TODAY. Information is currency…whoever finds the best information (and shares it) WINS on so many levels. Find good content, automate its delivery, organize it and distribute it to your network. How? RSS. It takes WAAAAAAY less time than you think, if you take the time to learn how to use it. Speaking of your network, this brings me to my third key to being your own best content manager….
- Networks/Communities. Still poo-poo the “social media craze?” Be my guest. But what good is having information if you don’t USE it. Write a book, tell a story, pass on a bad joke…whatever. The point is, you distribute content, somewhere and somehow. Every day. You know people – online and offline – you are connected to people. When you have a phone call to chat…there’s content in that call. When you send an email…again, you’ve created new content. When you have a face-to-face chat, your conversation is content. So, you see, you’ve been managing content your entire life – sharing it with your friends, family, coworkers…um…you know, your social circles. You don’t have to “join” a community, because you’re already part of one, or two or three. The question is, how are you managing the sharing of that content with those communities and how much time does it take you. You add an Internet connection to all of the content you were creating and sharing anyway, and you are suddenly positioned to share more content with more people in less time.
This all seems obvious, right?
Well if it were, I wouldn’t STILL be having discussions with people about why I don’t think twitter is stupid and why facebook is about so much more than “information I don’t care about from people I’m not really friends with…” Baloney, I say. I don’t care if you think twitter is a waste of time or if facebook is juvenile. You can use them or not. The fact is, if you have an Internet connection, you consciously or subconsciously manage the content you consume online in one way or another.
So pick your platform(s) – online or offline – and pay attention to managing your time and your content.
Doesn’t matter how you communicate, as far as I’m concerned. But recognize this: the web has put the power of information into the hands of anyone with an Internet connection. There’s content all around you. Do you feel overwhelmed? Or empowered? If you’re dismissive of “social media,” could it be because it overwhelms you? It doesn’t have to…just remember it’s all about three things, IMHO: 1) Search and the tools that enable quality search, 2) RSS automation, and 3) Sharing your content with your network.
Social Media is a contact sport. Get in the game and find out what’s behind door #3. You have nothing to lose…except some really great content.
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Tags: Community Managment, Content Management, Content Manager, Internet Vortex, Networking, RSS, Search, Search Tools
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April 17th, 2009 at 2:22 pm
I just stumbled onto your site. I have a new book coming out in July and my publicist has told me I need to twitter etc. But a teaching colleague of mine told me that twitter is only for the arrogant. Yikes! I certainly do not want to appear arrogant. But I know it’s important to get the word out there and so I am grateful to this article and the others on this site that support the connectivity endeavor.
April 17th, 2009 at 3:16 pm
Thank you for your feedback, Charlotte. Congrats on your new book!
Glad to have you visit “the minute” … you know, I would be interested to have a conversation with your teaching colleague to understand the rationale behind his/her thinking on twitter. It’s one thing to decide it isn’t for you but another all together to suggest a few million people are communicating with each other on twitter out of “arrogance.” I can tell you that I, for one, would not spend my time among arrogant people on purpose. I think your teacher has a few things to learn about Web 2.0.
I would be more than happy to speak with you further online or off about social media as it relates to business and/or publicity. As for its use as a promotional tool, it is all in “how” the promotional information is shared. (One may be considered “arrogant” if one uses twitter to push a product or hard sell.)
Twitter is about conversation…and, yes Word of Mouth…but not sales.
You may find helpful info on this blog’s resources page (http://www.graymatterminute.com/resources ) that talks to this point… just scroll down to the bottom for all the good twitter links and even some case studies that might be useful to you.
If you venture onto twitter, please do connect with me to say hello. I’m at http://www..twitter.com/usegraymatter .
Again, very nice of you to stop by and leave a comment. Appreciate it very much and I wish you every success with your new book.
-R
“The best teachers are the ones who never stop being students.”
May 6th, 2009 at 7:43 pm
Great post, Grey Matter! Loved your distinction between “overwhelmed” and “empowered,” and your excellent suggestions for searching, sharing & managing content.
Charlotte, one can Twitter in moderation & with humility.
Don’t pass over this excellent book platform-building tool without giving it a go. It can be fun & rewarding to Tweet, but isn’t easily understood without trying it out yourself.
Looking forward to more GMM!
Coach Marla (@MarlaBeck)
http://www.Twitter.com/MarlaBeck