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Pew Report dispels the Digital Native myth
While many people align technology adoption and use with age, the facts show it’s not all that easy to stereotype the creators of content in the online media.
Today’s Pew Report on Teens and Social Media amplifies a very real issue in the US. Our teens and young adults are engaging in “new” media, but on a very limited level.
The majority of them are not creating new content.
In...
Unmoderated reader comments are a news fail
Some mainstream media have incorporated the fantastic ability of the web to allow reader comments to stream live.
Apparently, the misguided professional believes this is a wonderful way of operating public journalism, which seems to be so popular right now. Really, we’re demonstrating our real connections with our audience.
Unfortunately, when reader comments are opened on every story, and allowed...
For mommybloggers at Nestle, the medium was the message
If you are unfamiliar with the Nestle Family incident on social media last year, there are myriad blog posts about it, as well as a single piece of mainstream traditional media coverage.
In a snapshot, Nestle brought a number of bloggers to the company’s headquarters in California from September 30-October 1, 2009, showing them the full range of its products, and using them as a focus group...
2010, the year of the Active Voice Blog
As more bloggers, blogs and readers enter our universe, companies begin to more fully recognise the power of their voices. These companies approach us all with opportunities to “work together” and it can be tough to navigate that landscape.
Take a step back. Look at your blog with a reader’s eye.
Just as you were taught in school the difference between writing in active voice and...
Sydney Morning Herald blames bloggers for incorrect Haiti image
In The Sydney Morning Herald’s role as gatekeeper/the fourth estate, those paying for its content deserve a standard of professionalism that is better than those it does not pay for.
Is a t-shirt necessary to tell the difference between professional journalists and citizens? You can buy this one at www.zazzle.com.
That’s the idea, anyway.
The Sydney Morning Herald, however, doesn’t...
The latent sphere of the network society
Time for a brain dump. I have just completed reading work coming from Mor Naaman, Jeffrey Boase and Chih-Hui Lai at Rutgers, slated for CSCW 2010, on the content of messages in what they’ve decided to call “social awareness streams.”
And right there I have an issue. I’m lumping it together with the term “weak ties” which found prominence in the 1940s (well before...
I'll pay for content when there's Twitter with penguins
Usually, I don’t consciously pay for content. I say ‘consciously’ because if I click on a link and there’s a paywall, I won’t do it. I also don’t subscribe to any newspapers or magazines (online or in ‘dead tree’ format). Basically, the quality of the content I’m seeing doesn’t make me want to pay for more of it.
Mr Murdoch does have the...
Glade's sweet smell of good social media PR with Edelman
This week I was happily invited to join some other Colorado-based bloggers for a few adult snacks, refreshments and the opportunity to build a basket of goodies to take home. It was a great evening, put on by Glade’s parent company, S. C. Johnson’s wonderful PR team from Edelman in Chicago, to promote their Sense & Spray product.
This event demonstrated Edelman actively identifies...
NestleFamily, breastfeeding and social media
I have a great amount of data from the recent NestleFamily twitterstorm. Luckily, I was able to see the storm coming. As a few of the attendees began tweeting about meeting up a few days prior to the start of #NestleFamily, I could see that there was going to be some fallout. My interest had been piqued a few months earlier with the Nestle “What’s for Dinner” junket that received...
The three steps to being influential in social media
To be influential in social media takes effort. It doesn’t just happen. You can’t buy it. It’s not advertising.
So if that’s what it’s not, how can organizations and people get to be really influential? Here are the steps to influence. When you and your brand get it right, that’s when you get to influence others.
Find Relevance
Your first mission is to produce content...
Disrupting the barriers of media in the 21st Century
This pre-internet installation was and remains a vital consideration in the future of media. It has been supposed for a long time that communication and media technologies allowed people who already knew each other to improve existing relationships. Alternatively, broadcast media were used to send corporate-owned messages to the ‘masses’. There has been very little in the understanding of communities...
Do online communities pretend to care?
I am fortunate enough to have been invited to attend IMSI, the Invitational Masters Student Invitational, to be held at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, the weekend of October 16-18. Given Rutgers received over 100 applications, to be one of the 25 students invited to discuss their current research and proposed dissertation topic with Rutgers faculty, existing doctoral candidates, and other invitees...
Tags: citizen journalism, college, Colorado, Education, graduate school, media, new media, social media, Twitter, university, USA, Web 2.0
Don't think influence, think resonance
The new buzzword in social media appears to be Influence. According to conferences, some marketers it’s what people want. To influence others.
This is a mistake. It demonstrates a very shallow, one-sided view.
(cartoon from xkcd.com)
Talk to most people in social media for example, and they’ll tell you the truth. What they’re doing is looking for, and responding to resonance,...
More than deputies: A definition of journalism for the 21st Century
Let’s confirm who professional journalists are: People (trained or not), paid to produce content under the mastheads of traditional news outlets.
Let’s confirm what they’re supposed to do: This is a tricky one. No matter how many times I have asked, and how many people, across Australia, the USA and the UK, nobody can give me a core definition of journalism. Maybe it’s a secret. A magician’s...
How to create a stir – write about women in startups
I’m writing for the online news site, Examiner.com as the Boulder Startup Examiner.
Why? Am I insane? Don’t I have enough to do?
I felt compelled to do it. Boulder is a wonderful town, with a fantastic tech community of people. It’s a really big community, for a small town. It’s exciting, vibrant and smart. It’s full of incredible people. And they’re all doing their...
The chick flick of startup founders
Sometimes I get reminded why I’m doing this.
There’s so much going on right now. I’m exhausted a lot of the time. I have no idea how Jed keeps this relentless pace up. No wonder I’ve called him robot boy for so long.
Today I managed to squeeze in coffee with my good friend, Mark (@soctechnologist) after my first meeting for the day, and before I came home to hit more screen...
A win for the little guy? Ashton Kutcher plays tag with CNN.
By now even your grandma knows about the race to a million. Ashton Kutcher, old-media celebrity turned digital insider with various multimedia projects and Twitter groover challenged CNN to a race to a million followers on Twitter.
And after a nice little campaign, last night he won.
It was really fun to see the video of him crossing the victory line. He was really, truly excited. That’s impressive.
What’s...
What kind of Twitter identity do you seek?
There are some very interesting psychological theories used in Marketing and Business which explain why people behave the way they do. Put simply, people buy different brands and products to fulfill external and internal needs. These needs reflect their sense of self. And people can generally be placed in one of three categories:
1. Affiliation needs – people who primarily want to ‘belong’....
Why I Stopped Following Guy Kawasaki
Twitter is a curious beast. It has morphed as it grows, due to the community of people who use it. And in researching the online social sphere for my graduate thesis, there are some key aspects of how people use Twitter that are indicators to how this is going to go.
Twitter is a tool used by a community. The tool of Twitter is no different to any other tool. The tool of Twitter exists as an infrastructure,...
Why my family loves Boulder
I never dreamed I’d live anywhere other than Sydney, Australia.
When you’ve got a good job, a house you’re constantly doing ’something’ to, kids, dogs, routine… the last thing you think of is moving. Anywhere. Least of all to a country you’ve never been to before. But then I came home from work one day and Jed told me his start-up dreams weren’t done...
Tags: Australia to USA, Boulder, boulder.me, Colorado, family, Home & Family, moving, moving to USA, new media, rocky mountains, travel, USA
A completely new form and hope for democracy
I do wish people would stop analysing the ‘death of print’ and focus on the future of journalism. There are so many traditional media with stories like the nicely titled “Is democracy written in disappearing ink” which attempt to say journalism will die along with the traditional formats. While I like the title, the answer if obviously “only if you guys want it to!”
Suck...
Getting beyond "Do you want fries with that?"
So now the can of worms is opened. As expected, newspapers are closing. Many print journalists are inexplicably in shock. Their next paid employment may well include the words, “do you want fries with that?”
And that, truly, is devastating.
But we still have new people entering schools, wanting to be journalists. Play with me here:
Let’s say we have a new intake this year. They’ll...
MSM journalism and Twitter
Moving online has caused Mainstream Media (MSM) quite a few headaches. I explored this a little during my Pubcamp presentation earlier this year.
Unlike many, I believe there is still life in MSM yet - they just have to learn to adapt to the new environment and, staying true to their code of ethics, make the most of new media in a way which better serves the audience.
Too many MSM consider they...
Tags: journalism, MSM, new media, news media, newspaper, online journalism, online media, pubcamp, Twitter





This is the blog of Jo White, aka Mediamum - it's Aussie for mom. I'm an Aussie mum of four living in Colorado working on a startup, and I'm the 60 Weeks Program Director at Boulder Digital Works. I do graduate research in social media at CU. I miss Weetbix and Vegemite, but love to ski.
These are my stories.


