Award

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This past weekend my recent film about political blogger Steve Benen, Digital Pamphleteer, won the James Goldstone Award at the Vermont International Film Festival. The film is a short documentary about Steve and his blog and about political blogging, in general. The award, presented annually by the Vermont Film Commission to “an emerging Vermont filmmaker,” is named after the late Vermonter, James Goldstone, who directed the pilot episode of Star Trek back in 1966, among other things. I am very honored by the Commission’s recognition.

Media 2.0

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The new Business People Vermont is out and features a piece by me about new media marketing tools for Vermont businesses.  You can read it here.  Here’s a snip…

Along with these Web 2.0 technologies has come a new culture with a new set of cultural norms. As a result, some traditional assumptions about marketing may not be as effective in these new media.

Young is an active blogger (champlainprofessor.com) and uses Web 2.0 tools regularly. She points out that just having a blog doesn’t mean it will automatically be a successful marketing tool. “A blog can do a lot for a company’s online visibility,” she says, “but it must be authentic.” A blog shouldn’t be about how great the company’s products are, but should be more focused on the particular expertise of the blog’s author. She points to inspiredprotagonist.com, Seventh Generation’s blog, as a good example of what she means.

Many of the blog’s posts are written by Seventh Generation CEO Jeffrey Hollander; others are written by staff. “Notice that they aren’t aggressively hawking products,” she says. They manage to showcase their products and mission on the blog just by writing about the things that the staff members are passionate about.

Young encourages honesty. “If your blog is about getting people to know about the products you offer, don’t try to hide it,” she warns. “The worst thing to do is to disguise what or who you are.”

This new model of marketing is encapsulated in a 1999 publication called The Cluetrain Manifesto, a list of 95 “theses” (intentionally aping Martin Luther’s list of 95 theses that started the Protestant Reformation in the 1400s). They posit the central message that “markets are conversations.” The authors of the manifesto make the case that because of the interconnected nature of the new media, person-to-person conversations are not simply possible, they’re the norm, and that this environment is fundamentally different from traditional modes of mass marketing.

Winslow cites a coffee blog run by Winooski coffee roaster freshcoffeenow.com as a good example of how a blog can be used effectively. Joe’s Coffee Blog is just that: a blog about coffee written by a guy named Joe. The posts at Joe’s Coffee Blog are all about coffee, but they include anecdotes from Joe’s life and his personal musings on being a coffee roaster. It’s a combination of Joe’s expertise as a coffee roaster and his personality that makes the blog work. “We put links in there back to freshcoffeenow.com, but we never sell directly from the blog,” says Winslow. “He’s building ‘buzz’ as the go-to guy for espresso or anything coffee-related. That’s how a blog should really be used.”

New media crazy!!!

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So I’ve just been asked to contribute an article to next month’s Business People Vermont about new media marketing tools for businesses.  I’ll be interviewing and writing that piece for the next week or so.

I’m also flying out to Minneapolis in two weeks to attend the National Alliance for Community Media conference there.  I’ve been invited to participate in a panel discussion on video blogging and community media centers.

I guess I can also report that starting in August I will begin giving little blogging/podcasting/social networking talks to Vermont state agencies.  At least two informal talks are scheduled with more to follow if they’re successful.

I guess I’d better brush up on my Keynote kills.

Feeling Minnesota

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I just got the go ahead today from the E.D. at VCAM. I will be attending the national Alliance for Community Media conference in Minneapolis in July. I believe that I will be participating in a panel discussion about videoblogging while there. The last national ACM conference I went to was in Tampa two years ago. They’re always in the summer so I’m glad it’s in a northern state this time. I’ve never been to Minneapolis but I hear it’s a nice city and I have a good friend who works for the University of Minnesota, so I’m hoping I’ll get to see her while I’m there. w00t!

News!

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Well, I guess the newest news is that I have created this site.  This is a blog within the billsimmon.com site that I plan on using for news about my professional life primarily.  I’ll likely cross-post any items here at Candleblog too.  We’ll see how much use this gets.