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Tara Mahady

I love public radio. In fact, I’m a public radio junkie. I worked for New Hampshire Public Radio as the Senior Director of Marketing and Development, and it was there that I fell in love with social media. Public radio is leading the way in social media innovation and there is much to be learned from stations across the country doing good work in this realm. Stations like Vermont Public Radio, New Hampshire Public Radio, KCRW, KEXP, WNYC, and Chicago Public Radio are experimenting with social media and finding ways to start meaningful conversations with their listeners. Community engagement at its finest. Today, we presented the second in a series of webinars on social media: Sharing Your Social Part 2: Getting Started with the Right Communication Strategy and Social Media Tools. Check out the presentation and get some great ideas from all the cool things that public radio folks are doing.

And if you missed the first presentation, you can check that out here.

While you’re cruising public radio social media presences, remember that it’s fall fundraising pledge drive season and consider making a donation to your favorite public radio station today!

Socially yours,
Tara

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Kelley-Sue and I did the first webinar in a two-part series last week for DEI – the national group for Public Radio marketing and development professionals. Sharing Your Social – The 4 P’s of Social Media talked about the pillars of any successful social media strategy – Planning, Policy, Privacy and Participation.

Here’s a link to the presentation.

We hope you find it useful!

Socially yours,
Tara

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Social media didn’t just happen. We’ve evolved into a culture that demands immediate, transparent, and authentic communication. We desire this not only with each other, but with the companies and brands with which we affiliate. Understanding how we arrived at this place, and how marketing and communication has evolved helps us understand the context as we move forward.

Read our brief white paper here.

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Adventures in the Social Universe

by Tara on April 7, 2009

Discovering Ways for Nonprofits to Thrive Online

So, it’s been about two months since I left my job at New Hampshire Public Radio as the Senior Director of Marketing and Development to join Aleuromedia and immerse myself in social media and online marketing. I’m absolutely loving working for myself, and having a blast meeting and talking with nonprofit professionals and business leaders looking to put social networking to use at their organizations. So much fun and so much more to learn!

I’ve been thinking a lot about the things I want to explore with you in this blog… And when it comes right down to it, I want to discuss everything I’m learning as I become more and more obsessed with and excited about interactive media and the evolving online Universe.

Yes, obsessed and excited are strong words – but hey – I’m a superlative sort of person. I really do feel like an adventurer… learning and discovering new things each and every day. The really cool part is I see so many ways in which nonprofits can use the things I’m learning about to thrive, both online and off.

Twitter, Facebook, Yammer, Social Actions, delicious, Digg, Flickr, blogging… they all allow you and more importantly your constituents to tell your organization’s story in incredibly dynamic and vibrant ways.

Think of my space within this blog as a travelogue through the social universe, exploring successful online communities and why they work, finding the best nonprofit social and online straetgies and tools, discussing how you can delve into this world efficiently, and have fun doing it at the same time.

What questions do you have? What worries you? What excites you? What confuses you? Let me know and if I don’t have answers – you can bet I’ll find them for you! I’m having the time of my life connecting nonprofits with the social universe… lucky me!

You can contact me here, on Twitter, through Facebook, through LinkedIn, or email me at tara@aleurosolutions.com.

I’d love to hear from you any time!

Off to distant online lands…
Tara Mahady
*********
TMahady

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Multiple Brand Disorder…

by Tara on March 20, 2009

I was talking with a friend (we’ll call her Mary) recently and she really worried about what she perceived to be another friend’s (let’s say…Julie) faux pas on Facebook. Julie is a writer, and she posted a fairly revealing and intimate ‘break up’ post. Mary was worried that this would damage Julie’s reputation in some way and advised her not to continue to publish this sort of material.

I had a very different reaction.

“What does Julie write about?” I asked Mary.

“Oh, she writes all about relationships. Intensely,” she responded.

“So – what she wrote on Facebook was very much in line with who she is and what she writes?” I prompted.

“Yes.”

“So why shouldn’t she extend who she is online?” I asked. “I think it reinforces her brand.”

The idea of a personal brand has gone mainstream recently, but it dates back to 1997, and started to gain legs around 2005 with the inception of LinkedIn. But, 2007 is when we started to see articles about it in Fast Company and hear from ‘personal brand’ gurus like Chris Brogan. Now, people talking about online identity management are everywhere. There’s even a site – PersonalBrandingBlog.com.

The basic premise is this… personal branding is essentially all the ways you create a web presence for yourself online that distinguishes you from the maddening and ever growing crowd. This can be done intentionally or unintentionally. It can also be done by omission. If you aren’t participating online in this day and age, that also sends a very distinct message.

Online – you are what you publish. Your ‘brand’ is created by all the content you put out there… pictures, comments, links, etc. (Go to www.pipl.com and search on your name… see what comes up. This aggregated content gives you a snapshot of your ‘brand’). Your online personality evolves over time through the interactions you have with people via social networks, your avatar (the picture or animation you use in your profiles), the information you share, the groups you join, the causes you support, the people you follow and who follow you and anything else you send out into the online universe.

Your online brand should be worth something. The stronger and more dynamic it is – the more it’s worth. Marketers are used to thinking about brand equity – but there is such a thing as personal brand equity as well. If you fully embody your own personal brand, if you are someone online that others respect and follow, if your voice is heard in certain niches, or with certain groups of people, that has value to potential employers. Your successful online brand will elevate their brand (it could also kill it – so do keep that in mind). A strong personal brand can also position you very well to be your own boss. The idea of the valuable rolodex that a person brings to a for-profit or nonprofit business has expanded exponentially.

Your personality and your ‘brand’ are really the same thing, or at least I think they should be. Currently, our culture embraces openness, transparency, and authenticity. The people who have the strongest online personalities are those with acute self-awareness and the ability to just ‘be who they are.’ They love to share information, don’t hold back with their opinions about things, and are often passionate about it. Belief in your own voice is critical to personal branding success. So when you’re wondering if you should ‘share’ something be self-aware. Would you share it in a room full of casual acquaintances. Who are the people in your network? How much would you share with them if you were all at a big dinner table? Then, once you’ve figured that out, just be you.

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Don’t Get Twitter? Learn by doing…

March 10, 2009

At the same time as Twitter is going mainstream (okay – maybe not as mainstream as Facebook – but it still has a faster adoption rate than blogging did), I hear from people all the time that they just don’t ‘get’ it. So – let’s break it down. Twitter is a ubiquitous micro-blogging application that [...]

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Eavesdropping is fun but Facebook is better…

March 5, 2009

I’m an eavesdropper. I listen in on conversations everywhere I go, often to the chagrin of whoever I happen to be out with (and probably those whose privacy I’m invading). I can’t help it, I’m fascinated to hear little snippets of other people’s lives. Morning conversation overheard in a coffee shop: “My daughter is going [...]

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We the people of the United States of Facebook… What’s Your Moral Obligation?

February 18, 2009

The hullabaloo over the recent change in Facebook’s Terms of Service (which today they returned to their previous TOS until they can come up with something better), has been fascinating and all – but something else has captured my imagination. Just within the last twenty-four hours there’s been a shift in language around this online [...]

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Splash into social media…

February 9, 2009

You know how you have these voices in your head sometimes – waging war over what you should or shouldn’t do?  Well, mine have been vacillating between “Jump!” and “Don’t Jump!” for over three years. Why? As the daughter of a political-junkie-turned-judge father I was bred for fundraising. Memories of my first house party reach back [...]

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