NutShellMail Making Life Easier in Social Media Land

Last week I learned about NutShellMail. They dub themselves as the “DVR for your social networks” and the more I think of it, the more I agree with the name… and the more I am liking the service. So much, that we rolled out NutShellMail on TuDiabetes this week.

What do I like about it? I am constantly on top of 3-4 sites that I monitor for content and conversations, among them TuDiabetes and EsTuDiabetes (of course) but also, Twitter and Facebook, where I spend most of my social media time these days.

NutShellMail precisely hits the sweet spot, by allowing me to configure the combination of updates (from the combination of sites -my network on Ning + Facebook or not + Twitter if I want to), and sends me an update via email up to 3 times per day.

“Email?!!” you may say. Yes. I find it convenient, b/c it combines updates in a single place that happens to be another space I spend quite a bit of time on (my inbox). So, while it may not be for everyone, I find it to suit my needs and I highly recommend it!

Update (Feb. 1, 2010): I have stopped using this service. However, we continue to offer it as an option for our members on TuDiabetes. My reason for stopping its use was related to an already high volume of emails I receive.

Do Facebook, Twitter and Ning compete? They do… for our time

This weekend, I was reading the interview of Techcrunch with Gina Bianchini (CEO of Ning) in Davos. In it, Gina argues that that she doesn’t see Nign as a competitor of Facebook or Twitter.

I agree with Gina’s statement to a certain extent. Quote:

“Facebook… is actually going more in the direction of connecting you with the people you have strong relationships with your real identity, with status messages, and with photo sharing… Twitter’s about news and real time events.”

Ning instead is about building (strong) relationships with people you may not know in real life. So they overlap nicely to a certain degree, in terms of what they allow you as an individual or as a business to do.

But I still feel they are in direct competition, not only against each other but with all other things that pull us in different directions in our lives. We each may belong to dozens of social networks (online), be a part of multiple networks (offline -think your children’s PTA, homehowner’s associations, trade groups, etc.) and each of these expect a chunk of our time. No matter how effective we are, days are still 24 hours long and we have a few hours we need to sleep every day. So in the end Ning, Facebook, Twitter and all manifestations of social media in our lives are in direct competition for our most valuable asset: time.

How do you manage your time in social media?

Twitter for Nonprofits: a Great Presentation!

While preparing for an upcoming presentation on Social Media for Nonprofits, I ran into this magnificent presentation put together by Amy Sample Ward (who will be joining me next April at NTC 2010 for a panel about Community Management for Nonprofits). I will let Amy’s slides speak for themselves:

Add a Tweetmeme Button to Blogger

Since it took me a bit to figure out (it’s more straightforward to do in WordPress, not surprisingly), here are the steps you need to follow to add a TweetMeme button to Blogger:

1) Insert the Tweetmeme code as explained here. Before you start banging your head against the wall, note the subtle checkbox (thank you Blogger!) you need to check to uncover the Widget Templates:

2) Then, you want to customize the username that appears by default when people click on your newly inserted Tweetmeme button. Nothing against @tweetmeme, but follow these steps to switch it to your own Twitter username (askmanny, in my case)

Save and VOILA!! Happy tweetmem-ing!

Viral Loop: From Facebook to Twitter, How Today's Smartest Businesses Grow Themselves

Great starting point to make sense of viral business growth

Adam Penenberg first entered my radar in 2008, when an interview he wrote about Gina Bianchini (co-founder of Ning, a platform that lets you create your own social network) was published in Fast Company. In it, he also interviewed Marc Andreessen and introduced the rest of us to viral loops, showing how Ning was growing virally by virtue of a “double viral loop”: every social network creator is a user and every user is a potential network creator. At the time of this review, there are nearly 2 million social networks on Ning.

Penenberg breaks down Viral Loop in three parts: Viral Businesses, Viral Marketing and Viral Network. In the first part, he walks the reader from the original viral models (Tupperware and Ponzi schemes); through a fascinating story of the first online expansion viral loop which led to the introduction of Andreessen’s Mosaic and, later, Netscape too; and wraps up with a detailed explanation of Ning, how it accomplishes its viral growth and the elements (technical and cultural) that make viral businesses possible.

The Viral Marketing part, shares stories of Hotmail and the Diet Coke-Mentos Geysers video among others, giving interesting insights into accomplishing viral growth through marketing. The Viral Networks part takes up almost half the book. It dedicates individual chapters to the most successful networks that grew virally: I only wish he had dedicated more space to discussing Twitter.

It was very interesting to read how initial stiff competition between PayPal and eBay (two of the companies covered) resulted in the latter buying the PayPal (dubbed as “the first stackable network” by Penenberg), after eBay attempted to go against them with their own flavor of the service. Viral Loop closes leaving the door open to the future, discussing the search for a new ad unit to adequately fit the new space of viral networks and privacy matters in this new era.

Although I felt there was a missed opportunity to discuss more in depth about the importance of interactions between users (there seemed to be more emphasis on just number of users alone), if you want to understand of how companies like Ning, Facebook and Paypal have grown virally, this is a great starting point. Another title I recommend in connection with this one is Sarah Lacy’s Once You’re Lucky, Twice You’re Good: The Rebirth of Silicon Valley and the Rise of Web 2.0, another great title that complements Penenberg’s book very nicely.

Google Results Highlighting Tweets ABOUT People and Places

Google is doing interesting things about tweets, displaying them as “bubbles” at the top of the search results. Is this the start (to my knowledge) of Google getting creative about Tweets to not miss out on a huge chunk of information that it could make sense of? I think so.

I learned about this by performing a simple search for “chezpanisse twitter“: I was trying to find the Twitter account for the famous Berkeley restaurant, after watching a fascinating interview of Alice Waters, founder of Chez Panisse, with Charlie Rose.

What if Twitter and Facebook vanished?


Am I the only one who felt this way? No, not like an atomic bomb had gone off… but rather that the web attack targeted at a pro-Georgian blogger that took down Twitter and partly affected Facebook, LiveJournal and Google, was simply unbelievable! And it made me wonder: “What if Twitter and Facebook vanished?”

Until now (to my limited network security knowledge) the DDoS attacks were sort of like getting back at “the man,” at the big corporation, in retaliation for something.

But yesterday’s attack was different. It was aimed at an individual (I don’t know how powerful or influential of an individual, but a single person nonetheless). It can be compared to taking down an entire city with an atomic bomb just to quiet a single voice.

What are the things I am most impressed with?
1) An attack of this scale is possible and Twitter is vulnerable to it, as well as FB, Google and LiveJournal too, to a certain degree).
2) Because this kind of attack is possible and because we’ve gotten to depend so much on social media and the Web for our communications, as crazy as it sounds, this kind of attack partly accomplished its purpose (while disrupting the day/s of many more people and groups, naturally).
3) In the future, attacks of this kind could become more common, because of (1) and (2). So organizations (and individuals) need to think about building redundancy in terms of the channels they use to communicate and disseminate information (while keeping them manageable -not easy, I know). Companies like Twitter need to look real close at what happened in order to protect themselves (and their users, in the process) from such dramatic disruptions in the future.

How to become a Twitter Trending Topic?

Nearly 20,000 outraged (or inspired) people that feel deprived from their freedom of expression will do it!

The chart from WhatTheHashTag? says it all:

The Twitter hashtag #FreeMediaVE made it to the list of Twitter Trending Topics today (shortly followed by the hashtag #Venezuela) as a result of the decision by the Chavez administration to silence 34 Venezuelan radio stations.

On this other screenshot, from the home page of #hashtags, you can see how #FreeMediaVE was the third most popular hashtag today, with nearly 4,300 occurrences: