Social Media Year in Review - May 2010 Victoria BC

Paul Holmes organized a second WordCamp May15th.  Attendance at both has been over 100 each time.

Wordcamp_victoria
Don't miss the third WordCamp Saturday January 22nd. Registration costs are modest, and the speaker line-up  includes options for beginners, advanced and technical users. I'll be moderating a blogger panel with Rebecca Bollwitt (Miss 604), Mike Vardy (Eventualism) and Lorraine Murphy (Raincoaster) and speaking on "Promoting Through Blogging".

Pecha Kucha Night volume 2 was held on May 27th. Speakers included Ben Ziegler and Karen Rivers.

Salim_jiwa

from The Vancouverite

May 25th @RealReporter Salim Jiwa spoke to Social Media Club on "Trends In Journalism Today & The Impact of Social Media". Here's some thoughts from one of the attendees, Yule Heibel.

Judges_poutineoff_may_2010

photo from youcookca

Kudos to the Fairmont Empress and Inn at Laurel Point for innovative marketing. May 12th saw the inaugural #poutineoff on the lawns of the Empress Hotel. Judges, sourced via Twitter, were @cqwww @toots11 @flygirlWS @seedtocup @lacouvee @EATmagazine @TravelWithTaste @youcookca. Mayor Dean Fortin was the MC. Fairmont Empress Chef Ito's "Tiger Poutine" was narrowly declared the winner.

Tiger_poutine

photo from youcookca

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Social Media Year in Review - March 2010 Victoria BC

Babes Go Bare For Cancer  had a scheduled Head Shave and silent auction March 6th and, on a whim, the week before, I tweeted that I would shave my head if I could raise $1000. Guess what? 

Babes_go_bare_head_shave_2010_photo_from_facebook

Babes Go Bare was founded by Trish Caddy in the fall of 2009. She connected with the local social media community for much of her sponsorship. Total fundraising efforts for the 2010 calendar were $19,000. The 2011 calendar features many "babes and blokes" from the local Twitter community. Please consider donating or purchasing a calendar. Here's why I decided to become a model.

Chris Causton announced his Liberal Party of Canada candidacy at an "un-press" conference and invited local social media enthusiasts and supporters.
 

"Recognizing the role online media plays in local news and opinion, this event is an opportunity for bloggers, online citizen and professional journalists, and social media enthusiasts to meet Christopher. Video cameras are welcome!".

 

Twestival Victoria  returned March 25th and raised over $8000 for Concern Worldwide. Victoria was the 8th city worldwide (per capita) and the 16th in total funds. Thanks to an amazing @yyjtwestival organizing committee, and Twitter community! To date we have raised over $13,000 in two events for Victoria based Power To Be Adventure Therapy Society  (September 2009) and Concern (March 2010).

Stay tuned for another Twestival Victoria local March 24th 2011.

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Social Media Year in Review - Victoria BC 2010

At the end of 2009, Social Media Club Victoria was 9 months old, most traditional media in Victoria did not yet have a social media presence, and the only regularly scheduled tweetup was the am #Victoriatweetup held the 2nd Thursday and 4th Wednesday of the month at Cabin 12

Social media successes for 2009 included Twestival Victoria (September), WordCamp (November), Johnson Street Bridge.org and presentations by Raul Pacheco, Lorraine Murphy and Joe Solomon @engagejoe  at Social Media Club.

2010 saw incredible growth, not only in the numbers of active users of social media, but in the offline events, groups, and meetings. The online to offline community blossomed!

Here's a Social Media Review for Victoria BC in 2010. It's highly subjective. What have I forgotten?

Since this post originally ran to over 3000 words - I've decided to break it down by month (below). Enjoy reading - comments welcome!

January February March April May June July August September October November December

 

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Building A Brand - Lessons Learned From Twestival Victoria

Click here to download:
Building_a_Brand.ppt (96 KB)
(download)

In April 2010 I was invited to present at BC Social Media Summit, organized by Rob Cooper as a fundraiser for his participation in The Ride To Conquer Cancer. Here are the slides from my presentation "Building a Brand, Lessons Learned from Twestival Victoria".


Thanks for the opportunity Rob!

 

 

 

 

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Community Engagement - Talk at #smcv10 Social Media Camp, Victoria BC #yyj October 3 2010

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I had the opportunity recently to speak at Social Media Camp #smcv10 in Victoria BC.

Social Media Camp is the brain child of Paul Holmes, Idea Zone, and Chris Burdge, B West Interactive. I've known Paul and Chris since early 2009, ever since getting involved in Victoria's social media scene.  Paul is the co-founder (with Catherine Novak) of Social Media Club Victoria, the first Canadian chapter of the much larger Social Media Club. Chris is a member of the local leadership team. Together we've been involved in regular Social Media Club Victoria meetings, tweetups, meetups, Twestival Victoria and Mashable Social Media Day.

Nothing had prepared me for the awesomeness that was Social Media Camp - over 450 attendees, 60 speakers, countless volunteers and ENERGY!

I'm still processing (mostly due to the fact that the day after, October 4th was my birthday).

But - here are the notes from my speech.

Know your value- what unique contribution do you bring to the table?

Social media is about transparency and authenticity - you can't pretend to be something you are not. Be you!

Don’t be afraid to state your passions and organizations that you support – what’s important to you??
Your passions will resonate with people (your tribe). I've met people from around the world (and in my community) because of shared interests.

If the community is already built – don’t go re-inventing the wheel – it’s respectful to LISTEN to others first.  Your ideas will be welcomed if you have some idea of why things have evolved the way they have.

With deepest gratitude to Paul Holmes and Catherine Novak for founding Social Media Club Victoria, and to Tim @howlabit and Doug @dougsymington for starting tweetups in Victoria BC. They laid the foundation for everything that has come since.

Be humble. Look outside yourself for inspiration. Be open to possibilities and synergies. Social media is not linear.

Have you ever wondered where the #yyj hashtag (used as shorthand to mean Victoria, BC) comes from?  #yyj is the airport code - the idea of using an airport code to shorten a city name (important on Twitter due to limited characters) first came to @wintur in #yyc (Calgary). It was picked up by @mastermaq in #yeg (Edmonton) and was then used in Victoria by people who knew @JenCrosby, a news personality in Edmonton. Edmonton and Vancouver's social media communities precede ours by many years. We continue to be inspired by them!

Be the leader and the steward of your community

It depends on you. You - be the leader! Transitioning an online community offline requires immense social capital. What are you doing to strengthen the links in your network to build that capital?

Volunteer in your local social media community

Any community depends on volunteers. The social media community is still in it's infancy. Don't expect others alone to nurture it. Get involved! The rewards are immeasureable - in friendships, connections, relationships, business building.

Collaboration vs competition. Help others, promote others before yourself.

Social media is still very new, and largely unknown to others outside our circles. What better way to destroy our credibility than to compete? And what amazing things we can accomplish when we collaborate. Thanks to the many people who have collaborated with me on ventures during the past year and a half.

Reach out to people first. You can’t do it alone – recruit a great team. Don’t be afraid to ask for help. Work with the people you’ve got.

People are very willing to help - if they are asked. It takes leadership to form teams with a disparate group of individuals, but if you are working toward a common goal, the rewards will be huge.

Thank people – over and over and over.  Celebrate successes.

Thank people publicly. Be grateful. Don't stop thanking people. Be kind.

Brand ambassadors – what do you need to do to find them?

People who spread your messages are your brand ambassadors. Cherish them. (see point above). They help you to amplify your message, far beyond what you alone could accomplish.

Build alliances – do not neglect traditional MSM.

I have had the opportunity to work with many main stream media outlets and channels in Victoria.It's my pleasure to have them as partners in fundraising ventures. Together we are learning about the intersections between traditional and social media. Most MSM now have additional social media channels that further amplify your message.

Persistency and consistency are key – social media moves FAST – one post occasionally is not going to suffice. Over communicate. Use every social media platform available

Consider first what you are capable of maintaining. It does your brand no good to start, then stop, your social media efforts. Think about your demographic before engaging in a particular platform - is your audience better served by Facebook, or Twitter? Do you need to incorporate email and phone calls too?
 

Everything is amplified – there is NO room for negativity.

Everything you post online can eventually be seen. How do you want people to remember you? 


Social media takes time – it’s not FREE!!! The learning curve is steep! It’s not something you can put on auto-pilot (at least not ALL the time)

 

Show up! Be present……

 

Revise, recap, measure – get better!

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