Blogathon ATX August 2010

Austin's first Blogathon will be held August 28, 2010. This site is to introduce the participants and document the day.

#BlogathonATX Twitter Highlights!

Hi everyone, it was so great to meet you all Saturday!  It's a perfect combo when you can mix good people and good information.  And special thanks to Ilene, organizers, helpers, and sponsors!

 

I pulled a selection of 70 or so tweets from the #BlogathonATX hashtag using the tool my company is working on - to serve as a fun little archive of the event.  Thought I would share it with you all!

http://keepstream.com/TimGasper/-blogathonatx-highlights

http://keep.la/cofeqJ is the short URL

Cheers!
-Tim

P.S. If you have some down time and would like to be a beta tester, shoot me an email at tim (at) keepstream (dot) com.  I don't usually do personal advertisements, but I figure some of you might be interested in this kind of thing.

 

More photos!

Yet more blogging gone wild (in the words of blogger/singer/songwriter
Gina Chavez).

Hope you enjoy!

--jackie dana

Getting Dirty Designs
Bending the Web to my Will

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Ten Words Or Less...

My video (starring Blogathoners!) is up on my blog:  http://amandaquraishi.com/?p=86

Enjoy!

ADQ

BlogathonATX Pics - Set 2

More of our glorious sponsors and a few "action" shots from our day.

Well, no one can say we didn't EAT WELL today!

Let the Hour of Happy commence!

-Lori Luza
As You Wish photography
@AsYouWish

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How to Speak in Public: Advice from Bloggers?!?

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Blogathon was created as a great opportunity to blog in a communal environment.

But I'm using it to write a speech instead of actually blogging.

What I discovered, however, is that bloggers also make good public speakers (or at least givers of advice on public speaking...more on that in a minute).

A little bit about Blogathon: they've divided the separate rooms at Conjunctured into functional rooms. There's the Techathon room, where people like Jeremy (@jeremya) and Erick (@txhoudini) were giving technical advice. Then there's Writeathon room where people were actually blogging, and finally the Talkathon room.

I went into the Talkathon room to ask Tom Myer (@myerman) advice on how to give an interesting, relevant speech.

While I expected Tom to give me some good advice, I didn't expect what I got instead...awesome advice from two other people as well, Dara (@dquack) and Jennifer (@jenztweets).

A little about the Talkathon room: it's where bloggers talk. Well, they also held a couple of stimulating roundtable discussions about blogging issues while livestreaming to the Internet. It was a free-for-all of ideas, passionate discussions, and laughter.

I went in and asked Tom some questions, thinking that everybody else was absorbed in their blogging activities. Little did I know they listening in.

Dara, a college professor at Texas State University in San Marcos, immediately offered some advice. Tom and Dara then played off each other, and then Jennifer joined in with an additional angle.

I've summarized the four "wisdom of the crowd" golden nuggets I received from Tom, Dara and Jennifer:

  1. Don't bore your audience. That's the number one sin of public speaking, especially if you're presenting after lunch and you're behind a podium.
  2. As an antidote to boring your audience, you've got to immediately "click" with the crowd. Do some pre-presentation research on your audience. Talk to two or three people before your presentation and get their stories, goals and desires. When you give your talk, speak to them, and use them as examples.
  3. Talking about examples, use case studies to validate your points. If you're giving practical advice, especially if you're speaking to a younger audience (I'm presenting to college students) give them examples they can relate to that is immediately actionable by them.
  4. Finally, keep your presentation to three points, and leave 15 minutes for Q&A.
Extremely valuable advice obtained during 15 minutes of free-form discussion in the Talkathon room at the Austin Blogathon.

Bloggers can dispense any types of advice (you can find a blog about every subject under the sun), and I just discovered they can help you become a better public speaker.

Blogathon Panel Take 1

A group gathered in the talkathon room and chatted about different bloggy topics. This is a quick and dirty rundown of what was discussed.

If you're starting a company/corporate blog, here are some of the things you want to do:

  1.  Find other, relevant blogs. Read them, comment on them and provide links back to your blog.
  2. Follow people in similar fields on Twitter.
  3. Get your name other areas. Do it organically if you can. Get out there in the general space as well as in your specific business area.
  4. Find someone in your expertise area with a larger following and do a guest post.
  5. Interview an influencer/someone in your field for your blog. They will send the link to family, friends, etc.
  6. With a company blog give each person a personal brand and community. Go into the community and comment on other blog posts, promote blog - but do it organically - make sure promotion isn't all you do.
  7. Find "juicy bits" to share with others. It will get people talking

 

Random ideas and topics discussed:

Give it at least six months to see if its working. Use google keyword tool to measure. Also use It's imporant to understand your audience. Find out how many people are retweeting, commenting, count page views, visitors, etc. Get in the mind of your customer.

It's important when dealing with clients to build relationship slowly. Could take a few months, could take a few years.

Engage and understand. Instant gratification won't happen and companies don't understand that.

Tools to use: Google alerts (not real time), socialping, activechat, Radian 6, Google Real Time search, Scout Labs

Put industry related blogs and people you aspire to be like in your RSS feed. Do search within feed.RSS feed – go to industry related blogs, people you aspire to be like – put in RSS – do search within feeder

Creating content: Figure out what your goal is. Why are you blogging? What is your ultimate goal? Also need to know who your audience is. Emotion only gets you so far.

Blogging needs to be organic. But at the same time, come up with a 6 or 12 month plan of posts. Social media, blogging and others are PR tools. Figuring out your audience and your theme will help leave time and space to be flexible. Respond to trending topics and have a plan.

Use your blog as a portfolio. White a piece you'd like to see in a magazine you admire. Make calls, include photos, etc.

Stop using your blog as a repository of random crap. Be intentional about blogging. Even though blogging should be spontaneous, write something others would give a damn about. If you want to be aware of audience and message, must be aware of planning.

Ideas: Designate certain days for certain subjects to help sement out ideas. Treat writing like a business. Turn off phone, set timer, if you can't work at home, go to a coffee shop or somewhere else where you can work.

Being social and writing don't overlap on a venn diagram.

Break writing up into 90 minute cycles. Write 90 minutes, then take a walk or get coffee. Go back to writing later. Let it out in tiny bursts.

The death of the dialog – people are only using quick posterous posts instead of long-form posts

You can't sit down and predict which posts will get the most traffic.

The writing process never gets easy, you just have to do it. You edit yourself when you say you have writer's block. Just start writing whatever, whether it's "I don't know what to write right now" or something else that's random. Evenutally you will get to what you want to write about. Don't worry if you're grammatically correct. 

An idea: Leave censors at blogathon for the month of September. Reconvene in October and see how everyone did.

Another idea: Use blogathon blog as a blogging community for Austin bloggers. Would be broad with a broad range of topics. Would get people to meet each other, comment, hopefully encourage others to write more. Others would be able to learn something from posts.

 

*Hope I didn't leave anything out!

-Kristin

 

 

 

Why I am spending my day in an old house instead of on Lake Travis today.

It is a beautiful day in Austin, Texas. The kind of day that I would usually be on the lake, but instead have decided it with dozens of my social media friends and some new folks I am just meeting for #blogathonatx at Conjunctured.

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The energy, the chatter and the snacks are plentiful. Some people are being more productive blogging while others are chatting away. Have a feeling it is going to be a great day. I am going to force myself to focus and actually write some log form blogs and hope to learn how to take my Posterous blog to the next level with some customization and maybe play around with creating a Tumblr blog to see if I like that platform better. If one of my colleagues sends me the log-in for the Lotus Knows blog (which I have somehow misplaced) I may do a little real work too!

Kat Mandelstein

 

We be bloggin' fools!

Some early photos from today's crazy Blogathon action! Coffee, cupcakes and lots (and lots!) of happy people.


I'm hangin' in the "Tech Cave" so look for me - I'd love to meet people I can help!

--jackie (@jadana17)

Getting Dirty Designs

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BlogathonATX Pics - Set 1

Here are some first event and food photos from the event.

More to come later in the day!

-Lori Luza
As You Wish

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First live stream is up!

Hi everyone!

It's 9:52am and #BlogathonATX is already rocking! Our first live stream is up at http://www.livestream.com/talkathon - the Talkathon room is all abuzz!

Julie Gomoll
@JulieGomoll