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Blogging and Other Social Mediaexploiting the technology and protecting the enterprise This is a guide to blogging and social media with a difference. It's aimed at professionals in business who might not have thought of using such communication techniques before. In fact it's written by people with a background in law - which doesn't at first seem like a zappy, media-conscious line of work to be in.
Even if you are constrained to write about your firm's business in waste management you have the chance to link up with others in the same field. You can create networks, develop banks of resources, post bulletins, capture the contract opportunities in your area, and make a name for yourself and your firm. You'll be doing this even though you are only dealing with issues you would be handling normally - with the difference that you are doing it as part of a social network. And that's the essence of what this book has to offer: it is showing you how to link up with other people who share your interests. After blogging come the variety of social media which have mushroomed in the last few years. There are services such as Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter which started out as networking sites for teenagers but developed very rapidly into large scale communication tools. Each of these seems to have developed its own special audience. MySpace for instance is the premier site for musicians who upload recordings and promotional videos for their performances. Twitter on the other hand has been embraced by media organisations such as the BBC and The Guardian - even though messages posted to the site are limited to 140 characters (like a text message). Similar opportunities exist at uploading sites such as YouTube and Flickr. They then cover the new generation of online office applications. These are word processors, spreadsheets, databases, and accounting software - such as Google Docs (http://docs.google.com) and Zoho (http://www.zoho.com) - which don't run on your own machine but which you access (free of charge) via the Web. These have the immense advantage that you don't have to pay for upgrades to the latest version. There's also an excellent chapter on podcasts, giving instructions on how to make them and examples of how they might be useful in business. And once again, full details are given of all the free software you might need. They then go deeper into the details of how companies might use these services internally - using what has come to known as an Enterprise 2.0 approach. Finally, and understandably since the authors all come from a legal background, they outline the law as it relates to the use of social media, covering copyright, trade marks, passing off, and brand names, defamation, privacy, and data protection. A number of complex cases have arisen as a result of bloggers writing about their bosses and the companies they work for. It's a risky business - so beware! © Roy Johnson 2008 [more eCOMMERCE books] Alex Newson et al, Blogging and Other Social Media, London: Gower, pp.182, ISBN 0566087898 |
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