I was invited to speak on social media in the Enterprise by Cadre eLearning to a group of corporate training people. Here are the slides for them.

The diagrams I used are on Flickr.

The key points I covered:

  • we can use social media internally to distribute (broadcast) our own training material, or we can use community tools to create the material right through to peer to peer training
  • Pedagogical studies show we learn more effectively from our peers than from exams, teachers or books.
  • how we “discover” educational information is by searching exactly for what we want when the timing and context is right
  • Yammer for adhoc training and Q&A
  • Deloitte’s use “reverse mentorship” – older senior staff train younger members who in turn train the older staff on social media tools and iPads etc.

Note, in my experience, the over 45′s could teach the kids a thing or two about social media, but hey, what do I know? :P

  • Social media improves staff retention (thanks again Deloittes!)
  • Broadcast training is eyeballs attentively paying attention, social media training tools often means empowering the ripple. One person finding a social training object e.g. a video and passing it to others.
  • Social Training Objects – make them likeable, favouritable, bookmarkable, embeddable, transferrable. All the ables. :)
  • Follow Training Influencers e.g. @JaneBozarth and follow those curated on her social media and training lists.
  • Understand the Ripple means they often connect and redistribute on Facebook, LinkedIn, blogs etc as well as Twitter.
  • how to deal with negative comments.

So this post is mainly for the attendees looking for a refresher and the slides but if you find it useful, please let me know.

On a final note – except for laughing babies and crying cats on YouTube – most of what I connect to in social media is “educational” and “training” and information gathering and distribution. Training for Corporates is changing…

 

Yay! Another set of social media classes for Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane at the end of June. Hands-on Computer based social media classes are being run again June 2011 in Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne. These are small classes, in front of the computer for those who want to set up their own social media sites and tools. PREREQUISITES Please bring your email logon and password details for social media sites that require email verification. This course is not for absolute beginners – some familiarity with social media recommended. The Dates: Brisbane, Tuesday 21 June BOOK HERE Sydney, Thursday 23rd June Continue Reading…

 

The Oscars are currently on TV. I’m not watching it – sorry Channel Nine – but I am flicking between the streaming webpage, tweets and other bits an bobs of sites. When I speak and write on the COI of Social Media – the Cost of Inaction – one cost is cultural relevancy. If you are no longer relevant to a whole generation or two, what will happen? Televising the Oscars I mean imagine if the Academy had refused to allow the Oscars to be televised? Betcha there was a fight about putting the night of nights on the box Continue Reading…

 

Podcaster Leo Laporte explaining how much income and expenses he has for This Week in Technology podcasts: he makes $1.5 million per year, doubling every year and spends $350,000 on costs including 7 staff.

 

Computer based social media classes on how to use Twitter, Facebook fanpages, setting them up and also blogging and rss readers and so on.

 

Thailand have a social media competition – inviting bloggers to undertake a “team” holiday set with challenges they have to blog about.

 

MIT Personas – how does the internet see you?

 

Wherever the grandkids are, the grandparents follow. This is not a-typical. MySpace has been primarily women over 35 since 2005, and 11% of members there are senior citizens. Who has the highest disposable income, most free time and greatest need to connect with family and friends at a distance? Particularly keeping uptodate with young members who don’t come to visit enough? Grandparents. I know a few people who have connected their mothers (in their 70′s) to Twitter. It just takes time for the older generation to find out where the photos are being uploaded, lives being discussed, and they want Continue Reading…

 

Looking for a career change? Want to be an indentured slave to a marketing agency? ho ho ho. MFA (Media Federation of Australia) has some traineeships coming up – and a course. Have a look through and then read my “extra month” at the end. – traineeship applications have to be in by NOVEMBER 8th!!!!!! MFA 2008 Trainee Program The MFA is calling for applications for the 6month traineeship. The program offers extensive training and provides experience in all facets of the media communications industry. For an overview of the program please review the training manual. Applications must be lodged Continue Reading…

 

Poking around on upcoming.org (directed me automatically to Sydney events) I found this, and decided to go: When Saturday, February 24, 2007 12:00 PM – 6:00 PM Where LiquidLounge – The Meeting 298-303 Sussex StSydney, New South Wales 2000 (Yahoo! Maps, Google Maps) Category Other Exploring and Building your own Video Social Community Description Im fed up with not having any comrades in my immediate area to discuss internet/online issues important to me, issues like video sharing, online social communities, internet freedom, DRM etc etc. Im starting this group for die hard technies/internet fenatics that are looking to one day Continue Reading…

 

One for the chix from my friends at LaVolta: Online Editor Wonderful opportunity to work with this start-up in building their Online Content strategy. The role reports directly to the MD and is responsible for the editorial voice and tone of the network of sites. It’s a web 2.0 publishing enterprise offering an online community for women and so much more. LaVolta is delighted to be working with this new Online business. We always find start-ups invigorating and good to see that they are back in vogue. The role is a senior editorial position created to drive editorial quality and Continue Reading…

 

Research and Markets – a company that sells business reports – has one called Customers as Creators on its books by the Patricia Seybold Group. Or at least a draft chapter of it.In this draft chapter for the authors upcoming book, Outside Innovation, she provides examples of companies in which customers play the role of creators—content creators and product creators. Tripod.com was one of the first successful online communities in which customers created the content that kept them and others coming back several times a week. Customers came to Tripod to “strut their stuff.” The site earned money through advertisements Continue Reading…

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