Posts Tagged bookmarking
May’s 7

Picking up on my friend Gabe Bullard’s tradition (in turn borrowed from the Thomas Crone), here’s a monthly list of 7 things I’m enjoying these days. There is no particular order to the list, just a chance to pass along some genuinely worthwhile ideas and trends that wouldn’t warrant a blog post otherwise
Blog: Dork Yearbook. This is why Tumblr is great; Like Mortified, only geekier. I could probably submit my own pics here, except I didn’t have a computer until I was 9 years old. Just because a good blog doesn’t fit into a professional website’s blogroll doesn’t mean it need remain my guilty pleasure.
Meme: #sillyhats . It started out innocently enough when @laurenreid photoshopped a whimsical hat on top of @gbullard’s profile pic. At some point, we’re not sure when, it became a meme of sorts. You’re more than welcome to join in of course, with the right hashtag.
Music: Cover songs. All my favorite musicians are making cover songs (or having their songs covered). Nothing new there, except there seems to be a dearth lately, or at least I finally have taken an interest. This started well before Beck/Sonic Youth’s split-single covering each other’s songs. Why re-invent the wheel when you can acknowledge your influences directly.
Social Network: FourSquare. Before I moved to DC I couldn’t really use Dodgeball, now resurrected as FourSqaure. So I was skeptical about the usefulness of the network, versus my beloved Brightkite. Something about the gaming aspect, earning badges like Mayor of local establishments, makes this incredibly addictive. Try the iPhone app, connect with Twitter, and see you around town!
Theory: Social Marketing. Contrary to the online connotations of it’s name, social marketing does not describe social media marketing. Applying marketing techniques to positively change behaviors that benefit the public good has impressed me with it’s results. And it’s not Plato’s Noble Lie.
Video: Let Me Twitter That. As if my obsession with all things Twitter weren’t enough, this Andy Milonakis video has become something like a theme song. The video itself is ironic, original, and full of in-jokes that Twitterati will recognize immediately.
Word Game: Scrabble. I never thought I’d give this Hasbro classic a try after the Scrabulous fallout. But now that I can play with friends on Facebook, and make plays on my iPhone, this game is hard to put away.
The Twitter Internship?
Sure Twitter is great for getting feedback from your work and building relationships online, but what if Twitter actually helped generate work opportunities instead of just creating work for you? That is exactly the opening I discovered for myself, and all I had to do was make a comment on Twitter to find it.
In my search for a summer internship in DC, using Twitter has become indispensable for learning about the social media and PR firms I might apply to for work. Not only does it help me understand those communications companies on the cutting edge, but the participatory nature of Twitter helped a company find me. Before I knew it I had the inside-line on internships offered to me, even as no such positions are being publicly offered.
About 3 weeks ago I bookmarked the website for New Media Strategies, using a service which publicly shares my bookmarks through Twitter. I was surprised when NMS, who must have been following public discussion of their company using Twitter (as they would for any of their clients), replied almost immediately to my update on Twitter directly. I was impressed, and we started to follow each other on Twitter.
Almost a week later I had finished a short internship inquiry application, with the intent to discover any more job openings at NMS, but their website did not make it entirely clear where such applications might be sent. So I sent another message on Twitter directed towards NMS, inquiring about where to send my application, which replied to me a name and email address of the right HR rep for social media. Their employee was also polite enough to include their personal Twitter feed, giving me access to someone inside of their organization that could help keep track of my application.
After a few modifications to my resume and a new cover letter, I am happy to say my application has earned the attention of New Media Strategies. I am definitely excited in learning more about this possible internship, although I am still seeking and applying for positions around DC.
To me the most revealing aspect of this whole development is how new communication tools, like Twitter, mirror the process of networking in real life. While NMS took advantage of Twitter as a tool to monitor public opinion about their organization, it also gives individuals like myself powerful access to information that might otherwise have been achieved with a phone call or a fishing letter.
At the very least, the counselors at American University were impressed with the job offering I found outside of those being posted online. Perhaps a little initiative and novelty in communication might help me stand out from the rest of the job market in my internship applications for this summer.
