Sunday, April 26, 2009

Corporate America's messy embrace of new media comes with pain

From LA Times

Amazon.com Inc. shut like a book.

Domino's Pizza was late but eventually delivered.

And CNN focused on the good news.

When the three major brands engaged with their Web-savvy fans and critics in separate incidents in recent weeks, their responses demonstrated how corporations are still learning how to control their messages --- and reputations -- in a fast-twitch online world.

The mixed track record so far shows that fluency in the evolving language of digital public relations comes easier to some companies than others.First, CNN. As Ashton Kutcher edged out the cable network to become the first to attract 1 million followers to his Twitter account, an odd quirk of the much-hyped race was overshadowed. CNN hadn't actually owned its account until a few days earlier.

For two years, the CNNBrk account (for breaking news) had been created, maintained, and run by a 25-year-old British Web developer who just wanted a way to beam short news alerts to his cell phone.

But when the cable network found that James Cox had appropriated its name and content, it took a direction that might seem a bit surprising. Instead of suing Cox or trying to shut down the account, the cable network quietly hired him to run it, then acquired it last week when Cox was visiting the company's Atlanta headquarters.

"We've been managing the feed through him," said a CNN spokesman, noting the huge increase in the number of Twitter followers since the November election. "As Twitter took off and became more prominent, we decided it was time to take our engagement and make it a marriage."

Other companies may find that unexpected uses of their brands have a less-than-fairy-tale quality.

A little more than a week ago, Domino's was handed a PR nightmare when a video showed up online showing two employees laughing as they prepared food in a deliberately unsanitary way.

The video quickly generated hundreds of thousands of views.

The pizza company's initial instinct was to try to dispose of the situation quietly by responding only to concerned consumers who had seen the video, rather than risk broadening its exposure by making a public statement.

But chatter about the problem spilled over into Twitter, whose expansive micro-messaging network is becoming an online circulatory system for news, pumping information between media organs, consumers and businesses themselves.

Domino's posted a YouTube response of its own, and even established a Twitter account to answer direct questions from customers. "If something happens in this medium, it's going to automatically jump to the next," Domino's spokesman Tim McIntyre said. "So we might as well talk to everybody at the same time."

When Amazon was faced with its own consumer outcry recently, it decided to forgo the social-media route. Without warning, many gay- and lesbian-themed books began disappearing from the site's search results and sales rankings. The Twittersphere instantly saw red, accusing the company of discrimination and censorship and demanding a response.

But Amazon stayed mostly mum. The company first waited most of a day only to cite an unspecified "glitch," and when that vagueness only fomented the outrage, it released a second clipped statement blaming a "cataloging error."

But Twitter abhors a vacuum, and commenters rapidly filled Amazon's silence with boycott threats, petitions and caustic accusations, an outcome that suggests that the growth of social media may be driving up the cost of inaction. Yet engaging with consumers can be dangerous, too. Skittles learned that last month when it invited users to post Twitter-like comments on a page that prominently displayed its logo. Along with positive comments appeared a colorful variety of profane ones.

"There's a mob mentality to social tools where people quickly try to put fuel on the fire, really encouraging brand damage and damage to individuals," said Jeremiah Owyang, a senior analyst at Forrester Research.

To stay safe in a social-media minefield, he said, brands need to make sure to secure their own domain names in social-media environments, before any squatters do,- and then start to build a community there. When a crisis happens, online or off, brands can then use that community to their advantage.

That's the opposite of how Hasbro Inc. reacted last year when it sued the India-based creators of Scrabulous, the popular Scrabble-like game on Facebook,- and forced them to take it down. Fans of the game formed "Save Scrabulous" pages on Facebook and posted angry messages about Hasbro. When a company-sanctioned version of the game appeared sometime later, fewer returned to play.

Sending in the legal posse is an old-fashioned response in the new media age, Owyang said. "It creates so much more buzz -- people wonder why you would beat up your most passionate customers."

That's why Coca-Cola Co. decided to let its users dominate discussion about the soft drink on Facebook.

The popular Coke fan page on the social networking site wasn't created by the company, but rather by Los Angeles actor Dusty Sorg and writer Michael Jedrzejewsk. It had more than a million fans when Facebook called Coca-Cola to alert it that the page violated the social network's terms of service because it wasn't operated by the trademark owner. Take over the site, Facebook told Coke, or we'll take it down.

Instead, the beverage maker flew the pair to its Atlanta headquarters in January, took them to a hockey game, gave them a VIP tour of the Coke museum and let them play Eric Clapton's guitar, then proposed that they officially run the page for the company. The two agreed. It now has more than 3 million users.


Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Microsoft, Google and Others Go All Earthy On Earth Day

From Mashable

It’s Earth Day today, and Internet giants are once again competing for the nicest Earth-themed logo. Microsoft has outdone themselves this year with a beautiful Live Search redesign; see our choice of the best Earth Day logos around the web below.

Of course, the idea of Earth day is to take some time today and think about what you can do to help protect the environment. If you’re not sure how you can help, see what the folks on Twitter are doing on Earth Day; you’ll find some amazing ideas.


Earth Day Logos


Live

live_earth

Google (Google reviews)

google_earth

Yahoo (Yahoo! reviews)

yahoo_earth

Ask

ask_earth1

AOL

aol_earth

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Beverly Macy in Bloomberg News

Twitter Posts on Paint Projects, Ear Infections Annoy Users

By Joseph Galante


April 17 (Bloomberg) -- Rachel Gard, who started using Twitter two months ago to keep in touch with friends, says she may stop using the site if companies keep contacting her.

Already Home Depot Inc. has wished her luck painting her room, a medical company recommended its device for her ear infection, and a DJ told her to check out his single.

“I don’t want random people contacting me,” said Gard, 21, who lives in Clearwater, Florida. “Don’t try to sell yourself through my Twitter.”

Twitter users post 140-character updates about their lives, making the site a potential goldmine for marketers wanting to know what customers are thinking about. While Twitter Inc. could make money by charging companies to send “tweets” to potential customers, the corporate babble may alienate users, threatening to stem the 18-fold growth in visitors in the past year.

“It is starting to get out of control,” said Christopher Peri, founder of TwittFilter, a Web site that lets users restrict who can follow updates they post to Twitter. “The original value of Twitter is friends talking to friends. When someone says, ‘I’m going to pimp this product,’ it’s no longer a social media.”

Visitors to Twitter in the U.S. increased to 9.31 million in March, up from 524,000 in the same month last year, according to ComScore Inc. Celebrities and politicians, including President Barack Obama, have embraced the service.

Business Model

For now, the San Francisco-based company lets consumers and businesses use the service for free. The site is only starting to generate revenue. Twitter has raised more than $50 million from investors, including Amazon.com Inc. founder Jeff Bezos, Benchmark Capital and Institutional Venture Partners.

As Twitter grows, companies are increasingly interested in reaching its users -- a group seen as less likely to respond to traditional advertising. Dunkin Donuts Inc. answers customer questions on Twitter, Best Buy Co. encourages its employees to use the site, and Hewlett-Packard Co. has about 50 people tracking Twitter every day.

While these approaches may not be intrusive, some companies are using the service to send spam and unsolicited marketing -- a problem Twitter is taking steps to fix. The company disabled a feature this month that allowed users to automatically “follow” people who follow them. Spammers used this feature to quickly set up mass networks.

Fighting Spam

Twitter also has a spam team developing ways to detect and delete spam, co-founder Biz Stone said. Users can already block people from sending them messages.

“Spam will always be an issue that requires attention,” Stone said in an e-mail. “Our goal is to stay ahead of spam and keep the user experience great for folks on Twitter.”

Twitter gets some revenue from Microsoft Corp., which sponsors a site that carries Tweets from executives. While Twitter hasn’t said how it will make money apart from that, the company has indicated that it may charge businesses for access to its users. There are numerous outside programs, such as TwitterTroll and Tweefind, that companies use to comb the site for references to their products.

For now, spam isn’t a crippling problem, said Jeremiah Owyang, an analyst at Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Forrester Research Inc. Businesses’ efforts to tap Twitter are a sign of the service’s success, he said.

“I don’t necessarily see it as a bad thing,” Owyang said. “They can’t stop it. It’s a sign that they’re becoming more mainstream.”

Red Pinstripes

Gard, who was planning to paint her bedroom gray with red pinstripes, posted an update April 1 telling her friends that she needed to shop for paint at Home Depot, Lowe’s or Ace Hardware. Within 15 minutes, Home Depot sent Gard a message on Twitter wishing her luck and telling her to let them know if she needed help.

Days later, when she complained about an ear infection, she got a message from Eardoc, which sells a device for treating ear ailments. The company sent Gard a message saying, “Fast and safe relief for ear infection is Eardoc.”

“I was like, ‘What?’” Gard said. “I was really confused. I didn’t even know businesses did that.”

Home Depot, the world’s largest home-improvement retailer, mainly uses Twitter to help customers, rather than pushing products, said Sarah Molinari, a spokeswoman who maintains the company’s Twitter account.

“If they want to engage with us, great,” Molinari said. “That’s their decision, but at least we were accessible at a time when they may have needed us to be.”

Eardoc didn’t respond to an e-mail seeking comment.

Fair Game?

Reaching consumers in this way is probably fair game for companies because users’ Tweets are available for anyone to see, said Greg Galant, CEO at Sawhorse Media LLC, a media research company based in New York.

Even so, companies that troll the site risk becoming overbearing, he said.

“You can imagine mentioning the word ‘paint’ and 10 paint companies contact you about ordering paint from their Web site,” Galant said. “Eventually Twitter may have to put in more filters.”

Twitter users can also be part of the problem. Services such as Magpie and AdCause pay Twitter users for the right to post ads in their streams of messages. The posts are formatted just like regular Tweets, with a label to show they are ads.

‘In Your Face’

Ann Finnie, a spokeswoman for Hewlett-Packard, monitors mentions of her company on Twitter. She says she tries to be helpful to people when reaching out to users, without being irritating.

“I’ve never had anybody say, ‘Leave me alone,’” Finnie said. “In my experience, they’re happily surprised that we’re paying attention.”

Companies are trying to figure out the best balance, said Beverly Macy, who teaches social media classes at the University of California, Los Angeles.

“Are we going to be seen as in your face or are we going to be seen as helpful?” Macy said. “What are the rules of engagement? Companies are grappling with this right now, and they’re sorting it out in different ways.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Joseph Galante in San Francisco at jgalante3@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: April 17, 2009 00:01 EDT

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Social Media Marketing News April 15, 2009

Thanks Mark VanBaale from Deere & Co for this news
roundup!

Amazon's Fail: Not Using Social Media to React to #AmazonFail Meme
MediaShift - CA,USA
With its reader reviews and customer rankings, Amazon is to a large extent a social media company. Why then was its response to this controversy somewhat ...
See all stories on this topic
Politicians connect using social media
Central Michigan Life - Mt. Pleasant,MI,USA
Gov. Jennifer Granholm enjoys going on 7-11 Slurpee runs with her kids and reading books like "The Secret Life of Bees." US Rep. Mark Schauer, D-Mich., ...
See all stories on this topic
Leveraging Social Media to Build Your Business
CPA Technology Advisor - Beltsville,MD,USA
When I work with tax and accounting professionals, they are constantly asking me to explain what social media is, what it can do for their practice, ...
See all stories on this topic
MediaShift
How to Teach Yourself About Social Media When J-Schools Fail
MediaShift - CA,USA
by Roland Legrand, April 14, 2009 Journalism is changing rapidly due to social media, and these changes can be bewildering as people wonder how to keep up. ...
See all stories on this topic
Buddy Media's Builder could help app-vertise
BizReport - USA
Buddy Media's new Builder tool is, thus far, the only social media development platform; it allows social campaigns to be branded and rapidly deployed ...
See all stories on this topic
How Big Businesses Use Social Media: Eight case studies on social ...
MarketWatch (press release) - USA
NEW YORK, Apr 14, 2009 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Big companies face complicated questions when they use social media. They have unique issues that don't apply to ...
See all stories on this topic
NBC4i.com
Small Business Uses Social Media To Survive, Thrive
NBC4i.com - Columbus,OH,USA
Another change helping the business is advertising—not through newspapers, but social media. “Customers are having conversations about your business. ...
See all stories on this topic
Online Marketing Summit in Boston Features Social Media, Email ...
GlobeNewsWire (press release) - Los Angeles,CA,USA
This will be the first city in the 18 city nationwide whistle stop tour that features social media, email marketing, web analytics, integrated strategy, ...
See all stories on this topic
Rules of social networking, revisited
Computerworld - Framingham,MA,USA
Social media "experts" are already batting around plenty of informal -- and sometimes conflicting -- rules of etiquette, so I've winnowed them down to five ...
See all stories on this topic
IBM math wonk: Social media another source of data
ZDNet - USA
As IBM execs were talking about fact-based businesses and better use of predictive modeling—across all industries—Dietrich was asked where does social media ...
See all stories on this topic
Google Blogs Alert for: "social media"
State Department Gets Hip To Social Media
By Jennifer Van Grove
Following in the footsteps of our very avant-garde President and his forays into Web broadcasting with the online town hall, Hulu-streamed press conference, and.
Mashable! - http://mashable.com/
Ari Herzog: How Social Media Today and its Online Communities ...
By Ari Herzog
How Social Media Today and its Online Communities Reinforce Blogging - The Huffington Post.
The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com - http://www.huffingtonpost.com/raw_feed_index.rdf
Digital Influence Mapping Project: 3 Trends in Integrating Social ...
By John Bell
Brands are doing three important things to get ready for this change: Demanding that their agencies - big and small - step in to train their internal marcom teams on thinking through the application of social media. Look at the...
Digital Influence Mapping Project - http://johnbell.typepad.com/weblog/
Leveraging Social Media to Build Your Business
By Feeds
When I work with tax and accounting professionals, they are constantly asking me to explain what social media is, what it can do for their practice, and most importantly, how to determine ROI. I’m not surprised. ...
WebGuild - http://www.webguild.org/
Two employees threaten pizza chain’s reputation
By Shel Holtz
This raises a question corporate communicators should ponder: What is an adequate response to a social-media generated attack on your reputation? A follow-up to the original Consumerist post included an email from Tim McIntyre, ...
Social Media Today - http://socialmediatoday.com/SMC/

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Weekly Digest of the Social Networking Space: April 12, 2009

This might be a helpful link for everyone - Jeremiah Owyang is a Forrester Analyst.

I’m respecting your limited time by publishing this weekly digest on the Social Networking space, which I cover as an industry analyst. By creating this digest (I started this over a year ago) it really helps me to stay on top of the space I cover.

I used to publish these on Wednesday, but now I’m spending more quiet time on the weekend reflecting on this fast moving space, do you know of any other industries that have this much movement?

I’ve created a new category called Digest (view archives). Start with the Web Strategy Summary, then quickly scan the succinct and categorized headlines, read text for my take, and click link to dive in for more.

Subscribe to this blog in your feedreader, or use the email subscription box in the right column. Or you can subscribe to this digest tag only and not receive my other posts.

Web Strategy Summary
It’s interesting to watch the bridges being drawn between the different players moving into the social space, such as Webtrends partnering with Radian 6 to offer a social media offering to traditional web analytics customers. Secondly, there’s reports of growth in a variety of areas of Facebook, Twitter, and Chinese social networks. Finally, more mobile devices and deployments are occurring, as Sony’s latest phone comes pre-installed with Facebook, and SalesForce offers a mobile version. Read More and Subscribe

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Top 100 Tools for the Twittering Teacher

From BestCollegesOnline.com:

Twitter has become a powerful tool for community organizers, marketers, and others who want to share and receive information in a fast, friendly environment. It’s no wonder, then, that teachers have also found success on Twitter, using the tool to connect with students, share information with parents, and find useful resources. Here, we’ll take a look at 100 tools that can help twittering teachers make the most out of this helpful microblogging tool.

Managing Twitter

These tools will help make managing your Twitter account just a bit easier.

  1. TweetDeck: You can create Twitter groups on TweetDeck, so you can keep your school and personal contacts somewhat separate.
  2. twitTangle: twitTangle will allow you to rate and tag your friends, then filter your timeline based on those that are most important to you.
  3. TweetBackup: TweetBackup offers a great way to back up your tweets and friends.
  4. RSSFriends: RSSFriends will give you an RSS update of new followers and unfollowers.
  5. EmailTwitter You can post Twitter updates using email with this post.
  6. Tweetreplies: Use Tweetreplies to have your @replies sent directly to your email in real time.
  7. Splitweet: Get multi account management using Splitweet, so you can separate your educational and personal accounts.
  8. Followize: Use Followize for a fast and efficient way to read your tweets.
  9. Qwitter: Find out when students and other followers stop following you.
  10. Tweet Later: With Tweet Later, you’ll be able to schedule your tweets for specific times.
  11. HootSuite: You can manage multiple Twitter profiles and more using HootSuite.
  12. Twitblocker: Use Twitblocker to temporarily hide your friends that are updating a bit too often.
  13. twAitter: This Twitter web client will allow you to schedule, and create recurring Tweets.

Finding Friends

Connect with other teachers, people in your local community, and more by finding followers through these tools.

  1. Twits Like Me: Find other users in education through Twits Like Me.
  2. Nearby Tweets: You can find Twitter users near you using this tool.
  3. Twubble: Twubble will help you find people who have interests that are compatible with yours.
  4. WeFollow: WeFollow offers a user powered Twitter directory.
  5. GeoFollow: GeoFollow offers a location-based Twitter user directory.
  6. Twellow: This Twitter directory is sorted by application.
  7. Twitter Packs: Twitter Packs makes it easy for you to find new people based on interests.
  8. Follow Cost: Use this tool to determine how much effort it takes to follow a specific Twitterer.
  9. Atlas: Using Atlas, you can watch Tweets that are shown on a map.
  10. TwitterLocal: TwitterLocal will help you find Tweets from a specific location.

Sharing

Make Twitter a sharing tool for photos, video, and more with these resources.

  1. Twitxr: You’ll be able to send photos from your mobile phone using this app, great for teachers and students alike.
  2. Annotated Links: You can put a bunch of links and a note into one URL to share on Twitter with Annotated Links.
  3. LiveTwitting: During lectures, events, and more, you can use LiveTwitting instead of liveblogging.
  4. SnapTweet: Use SnapTweet to post your latest Flickr photos to Twitter.
  5. TweeTube: Share videos on Twitter using TweeTube.
  6. DreamTweet: Post your dreams and nightmares to share with the world using DreamTweet.
  7. Private notes: Send password protected private notes using Twitter with this tool.
  8. TweetCube: You can share files via Twitter using TweetCube.
  9. Twitter Weather: Share daily weather updates with your class by using Twitter Weather.
  10. TwitPic: You can share photos on Twitter, or find photos from all around the world using this service.
  11. PhotoTwitter: Use PhotoTwitter to take snapshots with your iSight and post to Twitter.

Games

These tools offer a way for you and your students to learn through Twitter gaming.

  1. Outwit Me: On this site, you’ll find intelligent Twitter games.
  2. Plinky: With Plinky, you’ll get a daily prompt question or challenge to answer.
  3. TweetTest: TweetTest offers a collection of mini games that use data from your tweets.
  4. Tweet Words: Get clues and guess the answer from this Twitter game.
  5. Twrivia: Twrivia gives a daily pop quiz with a new trivia question every day.
  6. Whose Tweet?: Test how well you know your Twitter friends with this game.

News & Research

  1. Twitscoop: This tool tracks events as well as trends.
  2. Twiggit: Using Twiggit, you can find news and articles related to your curriculum.
  3. QuoteURL: You can quote a number of different tweets at once on one page with this app, great for presentations.
  4. TweetScan: TweetScan will make research on Twitter a breeze, allowing you to set up an alert to be emailed every time there are tweets matching your keywords.
  5. Twups: This Twitter news aggregator makes it easy for you to follow all of your favorite subjects.
  6. Just Signal: Using Just Signal, you can create a filter to only get tweets that discuss keywords you choose.
  7. twAnswers: Ask a question, and get an answer from Twitter by using twAnswers.
  8. TweetGrid: Make your Twitter searches easy with this customized search dashboard.
  9. TwiST: This Twitter search tool will help make your searches more efficient.
  10. Twilert: Get email updates of tweets that contain keywords you define.
  11. twitority: Perform Twitter searches that offer authoritative sources by using twitority.
  12. Twitter Search: Twitter Search will help you find out the latest Twitter trends.

Twitterers

Follow these Twitter accounts for useful educational resources.

  1. @weather: You’ll learn about weather news from the Science News Blog from @weather.
  2. @donorschoose: Follow @donorschoose to learn about funding for public schools.
  3. @TWord_Chains: This account is a word game where you change one word into another.
  4. @eduguru: You can learn about Internet marketing and web development in education from @eduguru.
  5. @pbsteachers: Through @pbsteachers, you’ll get resources and more for teachers.
  6. @BBCeducation: Check out this Twitter stream to learn about education and news in the UK.
  7. @upromise: @upromise will help you get the latest news about savings, tips, and deals from Upromise.
  8. Pulse of Education: The Pulse of Education aggregates tweets from the education community.
  9. @educationweek: @educationweek shares news about American education.
  10. @CollegeBloggers: Be a part of this Twitter network to connect with college students, faculty, and alumni.
  11. @EarthquakeNews: Learn about earthquakes around the world from the USGS Earthquake Center’s account.
  12. @LearnHub: Follow @LearnHub, and you’ll find lots of education-related links.
  13. @digidirections: Check out @digidirections to learn about trends and advice in K-12 technology.

Groups

Make use of these tools to better manage your classroom group on Twitter.

  1. Tweetizen: You can start your own group, or find groups with specific interests on Twitter.
  2. HappyTwitday: Celebrate classroom birthdays on Twitter by using HappyTwitday.
  3. twtpoll: Take classroom polls and surveys with the help of this app.
  4. GroupTweet: You can make twittering in your classroom group-easy using this tool.
  5. Tweetworks: Tweetworks offers groups and threaded discussions on Twitter.
  6. tweetparty: Communicate directly with your Twitter group by using tweetparty.
  7. TwitOrg: TwitOrg offers a great way to create, manage, and join organizations.
  8. StrawPoll: Get tiny polls from StrawPoll.
  9. ConnectTweet: ConnectTweet will help you combine the voices of your group.

Organization & Productivity

With these tools, you’ll find that your life on Twitter and beyond will be more organized and productive.

  1. Tweetree: With Tweetree, you’ll be able to view your tweets in a conversational context.
  2. 21Tweets: With this tool, you can create a new habit.
  3. Twit2Do: Use Twitter to manage your to-do list using Twit2Do.
  4. twtvite: This event management Twitter app can help you plan classroom events.
  5. Twtask: Use Twtask to create simple tasks lists on Twitter.
  6. TwitterNotes: Make private notes for yourself on Twitter by using this tool.
  7. Twitterlights: Get one-click tweeting and content saving through Twitterlights.
  8. TrackDailyGoals: TrackDailyGoals will help you keep track of your productivity and goals.
  9. postica: postica will let you post sticky notes on Twitter for reminders and more.

Integration

Make Twitter work with other apps by putting these useful integration tools to work.

  1. TwitterBox: Use Twitter from within Second Life with this tool.
  2. LoudTwitter: LoudTwitter will send tweets to your blog, so you can keep parents and other contacts updated even if they don’t read your Twitter.
  3. 30 Boxes: 30 Boxes offers easy integration with Twitter.
  4. TwitterFeed: TwitterFeed will automatically post content from an RSS feed to Twitter, so you can update your timeline with educational blogs as well as your own.
  5. Twttrstrm: Using Twittrstrm, you can ask a question and have others contribute answers to your Squidoo lens.
  6. twiggit: Let your students know about the articles you digg by using twiggit.
  7. SI-Messenger: SI-Messenger is a service that integrates IM, Twitter and more in Second Life.
  8. Twoxit: Twoxit makes it possible for students and other users to update their Twitter profile from your website or blog.

Classroom Tools

These tools seem to be designed specifically with the Twittering classroom in mind.

  1. Twishlistter: Create a wish list for classroom supplies using this tool.
  2. Weatherizer: Weatherizer will update the background of your Twitter homepage to reflect your local weather.
  3. Book Price Check: Check prices of books from your mobile device through Twitter using this tool.
  4. MoochFly: Create a classroom library that you can easily keep track of with MoochFly.
  5. FuelFrog: With FuelFrog, you can use Twitter to keep a log of your fuel and mileage.
  6. Ququoo: Ququoo can turn your Twitter timeline into a timesheet.
  7. Twitrans: Twitrans can translate your tweets to any language using human translators.
  8. Tweeteorology: Tweeteorology will show you tweets about the weather.
  9. Xpenser: You can use Xpenser to track your time and expenses related to education.

Did you enjoy this article? Bookmark it at del.icio.us »


Thursday, April 2, 2009

crowdSpring

Thanks to Rodney Rumford (@rumford) for the heads up on this site. It's all about using the wisdom of the crowds to create:

We're the marketplace for creative services.

It's easyjust post your project, watch the world submit ideas and choose the one you like

Benefits of crowdSPRING

Name your priceLaunch your project on your budget, not someone else's.
Name your deadlineSee entries within hours and be done in just days.
Ridiculous choice The average project getsa whopping 68 entries.
Money back guarantee 25 entries or your money back.
15,000+ creatives Your virtual creative team
in over 140 countries.
We're here to help seven days a week. (although we occasionally sleep).
Exceptional quality Never sacrifice qualityfor budget or deadline.
Free contract So you know you have full ownership of your final design.