Poisoned popcorn and following strangers

2008 has been an amazing year for me.

2007 was pretty good too; that year I started appearing on TV as a regular guest on The Lab with Leo Laporte on G4 TechTV Canada and the How Network in Australia. This was huge for me. I had no business being on TV, but I have a passion for helping people with technology and a need to encourage people creatively to embrace the freedom it can afford. This allowed me to get past my fears and actually do pretty well on camera.

In 2008, the Lab was cancelled and I lost that outlet. But, through the wonderful friendships I’d made while guesting on the show, I was encouraged to go it on my own and create a video podcast component for MacMerc.com…MacMerc.TV. The show is about ready to launch and I attribute much of the success I’ve had in even creating it and achieving it as a goal to two things: poisoned popcorn and following strangers on Twitter.

To explain this, we’ll go back to 2007 again. It was Remembrance Day weekend up here in Canada (November 11th) and my good friend Maria and I were going to head down to “The States” for a bit of shopping. Unknown to me at the time, the melted butter I had sprinkled liberally on my popcorn the night before had gone bad just enough that it made me violently ill, but not so much that it tasted in any way “funny”…so I polished off a whole bowl.

The next morning, yes, violently ill. There’s no need to give you details but, suffice it to say my abs got a workout that morning. I moaned and groaned and slept through most of the day.

Later that night, after the storm had passed, I checked Twitter for some happy news and found that someone I didn’t know (a follower of a follower of someone I did know) had invited the world to watch him as he tried to compose music in his studio. This stranger was Geoff Smith and that night turned out to be the very first of his many and awesome UStream concerts.

Note: if you happen to follow me on Twitter, first off, thank you and, secondly, if I every go off on a “come check out @geoffsmith ’s UStream concert” jag, understand that I do it because I honestly, deeply believe the experience is so worthwhile that you need to come take part.

He’s got a Christmas show coming up on December 15th, by the way…

From being in that first concert, I have “met” so many cool people and, through them, so many more. Each contact has been an encouragement to me at some time over the last year; the names Cali Lewis and Neal Campbell spring to mind, but their friends quickly became my friends too. Awesomeness.

So, the lesson?

Poison Popcorn: every so often an unexpected turn of events can be an chance to find other opportunities. Find value in failure.

Follow strangers: often breaking out of your established group yields a new group with its own benefits and strengths. If you’re on Twitter, look and see who the people you follow follow…watch to whom the people you follow send @replies… they see something in these people—find out what! It could be very valuable to you.

Published in: on November 19, 2008 at 1:15 pm Comments (1)

Heroes on Twitter

Twitter’s not that old but I’ve been doing it for a while. If you’ve been using Twitter since before it exploded at SXSW in 2007, you to are in the elite group that knew it was cool before it was cool.

Does that make me an expert? Hell no. It does give me a bit of perspective. I won’t even say it gives me a unique perspective, but I think it gives me enough seniority to prance around thinking I can talk about a few things that work and a few things that don’t. And so I’m going to take the examples of two people I follow on Twitter and show you how one way works, and another way doesn’t work as much (although there has been some improvement).

A little over a year ago, I bought the Heroes - Season One
DVDs at Costco and finally found out what everyone had been raving about. It rocks. Anyone who knows me, knows I hate TV. I keep it on in the background while I do other things, but I do not schedule my life around when certain shows are on…or at least I didn’t. I make a special exception for Heroes. And that’s it.

So imagine my excitement when I heard that one of the actors who plays one of the new characters form the third season is on Twitter. Yatta!!


Brea Grant, who plays Daphne "The Speedster" Millbrook on the show, but in the real world, she Twitters, she blogs, she UStreams and makes pickles. What’s more, she get’s it. She’s really on Twitter, really tweeting the answer to "what are you doing?" She works the Twitter. She follows a bunch of people; maybe they are her personal friends, maybe a few cool fans, who knows. And she interacts; frequently @replying to people both on and off her follow list. She is definitely following Gary Vaynerchuk beyond the scope of subscribing to his tweets—she’s building her brand on the interwebs.

(Click that link. Click it!!)

Not long after I found out that Brea was Twittering, I heard that Greg Grunberg was on as well. Greg "Grunny" Grunberg plays the part of Matt "The Mind Reader" Parkman on Heroes and was no doubt hipped to Twitter by Ms. Grant who plays his foe/friend/wife on the show (depending on what version of the present or future you happen to reside in).

I’m not trying to be mean here, but Grunny doesn’t grok Twitter. He’s getting better, but he has a way to go. I had originally written the meat of this post as a private page especially for him to read, but he misread my @reply or didn’t know what I meant when I asked him to "follow me" so that I could direct message him the link to the page and the username and password to access it. (You can only privately message people who follow you on Twitter) I was just trying to help a guy out. I like Grunny. He seems like good people to me, and he has a lot to gain from Twitter and social media.

 

Greg Grunberg is a founding member of a musical group called Band from TV. It’s aptly named since the members of the band consist of actors from popular TV shows. They currently have a DVD available on Amazon.com and the proceeds of the sale of the disc go towards many worthy charities; Grunny’s being The Epilepsy Foundation in honor of his boy. The opportunity is ripe for Grunny to work social media and sell DVDs for this great cause in November: Epilepsy Awareness Month.

I want Grunberg to succeed at this. So, screw it, all the advice I was going to give to him privately, I’m posting here. I’m sure it applies to a lot of people, so maybe this will be useful information to others as well.

Here are the "Secrets of Twitter Success"…as I see them.

  1. Don’t talk about wanting to boost your Twitter numbers or hold informal competitions with friends to see how many followers who can get in what amount of time. No one wants to be a number. Here’s the reason (at least publicly) that you want to get the numbers up: Band From TV (for everyone else, ask yourself what you have to offer the community).
  2. Follow people. This might be one of the few times where it’s almost more important to receive than to give. It has been said that people don’t care what you know until they know that you care. Care about some people—follow them. Don’t follow everybody and don’t follow just anybody. Your "follow" is seen as a gift by your fans—it’s an honor. Any Heroes fan you follow is going to be very, very proud of that. There are a lot of influential people in the geek community you might want to follow too.
  3. Twitter isn’t chat, but it is a conversation. Proper and judicious "@replying" is key. You don’t have to @reply to everyone who @replies you, but it will be a very big thing to the fan you do @reply to. If you are speaking to a specific person, preface the tweet with an @reply. @reply to people you follow also—start the conversation. Don’t go crazy with it though—you want each @reply to be worth something and @replying to everything devalues it.

    Ask us questions? Again, it’s flattering to a fan to have their “hero” care about their opinion.

  4. Twitter about behind the scenes stuff. No spoilers obviously, but if you can convey the kind of feeling Adrian got with his YouTube stuff that will give fans a sense that they’re getting let behind the curtain a bit. Post pictures via TwitPic if you can. (He’s already started doing that. Yay!!)
  5. Mundane isn’t always mundane. Let your followers know what you’re doing today…even if it’s boring. (Note: I have pretty much proven through my own Twittering that this rule only applies to people with a decent amount of fame. My mundane stuff really is boring to people.)
  6. Work away from work. Tell us about your side projects. Let your followers know how the Band from TV album is doing.

I think if Greg Grunberg, or anyone else who has the "I’m a famous guy on TV" edge applies this kind of strategy to Twitter, big things can happen. Being famous is going to get you followers regardless, but being famous and working Twitter, can be huge. Fans will be able to see that it’s really you, they will know that there is a chance that you might follow them and even reply to them. That’s magic.

Published in: on November 8, 2008 at 11:06 pm Comments (3)

Obligatory title referring to my lack of posts here recently

Hey! Nothing really to report except that I just bought the new iPod touch and this post was composed on it.

I have avoided much comment on iPhone and iPod touch news on MacMerc up until now since I had neither and didn’t feel like I could speak intelligently about them having only very limited experience with them. This had now been remedied to some degree.

So, if your an iPhone/iPod touch developer or make hardware devices for the iPod touch and would like them reviewed on MacMerc.com or even featured on MacMerc.TV, email me at rick@macmerc.com and let’s talk.

Published in: on October 1, 2008 at 3:20 pm Comments (0)
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