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I first started looking down the lists of lists, the Twitter lists list, to see if there were any that I had to remove myself from. One removes oneself from Twitter lists by blocking the person who created the list . Stands to reason. I thought I’d remove myself from any list like “bitch” or “annoying”, and go downhill from there. After all, we are told time and again that online, give people half a chance and they will be negative, right? Negative reviews, negative comments, negative ratings, negative words, negative all the way. Which begs the question that if the only conversations online are bad, why would you go there? Wouldn’t you be terrified every time someone followed you on Facebook or Twitter? Ghostmunching on Twitter But as I read down the list I went from nervous to smiling to a bit gooey -not a single public negative list in over 300 I am on -here’s a few that were special to me: @LoriGama/ realwomen @velvetskirt/ fascinating-engaging @robertstanke/ community-managers @ZhangNuLi/ my-devoted-followers (ok) @gtveloce/ someseriouscommentary @gtveloce/ miscoolaneous @idmacman/ actually-worth-reading (*laughs*) @KubilayUner/ bloggers-and-such @franmolloy/ interestingtweeps @meredithcarson/ earths-future-inheritants (cool!) @MarketingDom/ thebestinsocialmedia @warringa/ my-favstar-fm-list @estateofflux/ wise-and-inspiring @kristinrohan/ sassy-souls @design_finder/ supportive-tweeters @santa__claus/ good-boys-and-girls-3 (YAY!) @drwarwick/ megastars @adambateson/ interestinghelpfuthought @Nigel_Dobson/ money @docatseatbats/ i-love (love you too!) @MPWillHodgman/ zomglolpewpew (:D) @MPDavidBartlett/ yes-people (No) @MPDavidBartlett/ stoogesandpoopheads (maybe) @delunna/ inspiring @mastertek/ elite @lozz/ women-i-admire @haikugirlOz/ chicks-with-attitiude @SexySEO/ sexy @davidrivier/ onlinecommunities @HowToMakeMyBlog/ power150 @axalis/ internationaltweeties @inJenious/ they-make-me-smile (not a bad group to be in ) @NicoleJensen/ high-profile @lizhover/ social-web-superstars @StorySeeker/ interactionists (some ppl would say I interact/tweet too much) @nwjerseyliz/ wild-things (OK) @smange/ internet-dwellers-profs @Nightwyrm/ convicts (Australian?) @mariasipka/ intheknow @alj000/ cartoonish (me… or my avatar?) @MegsaMommy/ mommies (nope, no little Silkcharms running around) @MrsLPikon/ out-of-nz-favs (almost as good as in-nz-favs but not quite) @fishmouse/ brain-food @lozz/ fave-bloggers @pekaynelson/ coolaussiefolk @suigenerisnyc/ mediamavens @Raydacteur/ listen @Avinio/ myfavtwitters @gmc71v8/ qualitative Two used the term “expert” (not noted to protect their own safety. Heh) I’ve skipped the repeats: social media or people I have met . How we are “tagged” through life, tells a great deal about us. I’m not keen to put myself in a box – “marketer”? “PR”? “teacher”? “doer”? but seeing how others saw me, for a minute or two was better than any testimonial requested on email and received. Not all the adjectives were practical, which I guess I thought they would be “marketer” “pr” “ online communities ” – many were emotive and positive inspiring , fave , they make me smile. A lovely unasked for, unbidden gift on a Friday afternoon – I shall raise a glass in cheer to all named on here today. And another glass for those not named, and a glass for tomorrow’s… Chris Brogan feels that the lists exclude. Scobleizer reminds him that it’s all about the perceivers not the subject. TechCrunch reported on how great Country Lists would be. Note: I know the lists are killing off #FollowFriday and moving spam around, but I don’t care… Twitter Lists I Am On is a post from: Laurel Papworth- Social Network Strategy Technorati Tags: Australia , cute , friendly , funny , lists , Online Communities , social media , social networks , Twitter Tags: Australia , Australia , cute , friendly , funny , lists , Online Communities , Online Communities , social media , social media , social networks , social networks , Taxonomy , Twitter , Twitter Related posts Twitter: Reputation Management in Social Networks (18) Twitter Terrorism and Australias Net Filters (1) Social NETWORKS are much more than Social MEDIA (6) Social Network Economy or new Digital Economy (3) Social Currency: What am I worth? (8)
Things appear to be picking up in the economy, and I’d like to continue to recognize those moving in the social media space. I’ve started this post series ( see archives ) to both track and congratulate folks who get promoted, move, or accept new exciting positions. Please help me congratulate the following folks: Mike Pascucci leaves AAA Mid-Atlantic, and accepts the job of Social Media Strategist with Ektron , a Content Management System (CMS) company based out of Nashua, NH. Find him on Twitter at @mikepascucci . Kingsely Joseph leaves Salesforce and joins Digital Chocolate an digital gaming company in San Mateo as Sr. Product Manager , Social Games at Digital Chocolate. I’m sure I’ll be hearing a lot about his new ventures, as we share the same building (keep it down up there alright? kiddin), find him on Twitter at Kingsley2 Former Facebook platform marketing manager Josh Elman joins Twitter as the Product Manager . I’ve interacted with Josh frequently during his role at Facebook, and found him insightful, helpful, and now a friend. Best wishes to Josh on his new adventure at yet-the-next-big thing. Find him on Twitter at @joshelman Warren Sukernek leaves Radian 6 and was hired at Lift 9 as the Partner & VP of Strategies . Warren will be responsible for leading teams in providing actionable insights from the company’s socail media research and analytics solutions, find him at @warrenss Gwen Peake joins Ford Motor Company as the Digital Communications Manager Reporting to Scott Monty, and will coordinate digital communications & social media efforts for Ford . Find Gwen on twitter at @gwenj . Mike Osswald is promted at Hanson, Inc., a digital agency as VP, Experience Innovation Where he will focus on identifying future-forward, significant trends and technologies. His focus on, social technologies will allow co-workers and channel partners to engage in all facets of product and service design. Additionally, Lisa Wilberding also joins Hanson, Inc as the Midwest Social Engagement & Messaging Strategist where she will define, plan and execute long-term Social Engagement solutions for clients, as well as create messaging for web sites and interactive communications. Dan Kidd is hired at community platform vendor Neighborhood America as a Senior Director, CPG, Custom Research where he’ll be focused on Social Media Campaign Analytics. Last but not least, congrats to Augie Ray, who was hired at Forrester Research as an industry analyst covering Social Computing For Interactive Marketers. We wish him the best in this fantastic new role –congrats to the team! Find him at @augieray How to connect with others (or get a job): Several people have been hired because of this blog post series, here’s how you can too: Submit an announcement If you know folks that are moving up in the social media industry, fill out this form . Seeking Social Media Professionals? If you’re seeking to connect with community advocates and community managers there are few resources This list, which started with just 8 names continues to grow as folks submit to it. List of Social Computing Strategists and Community Managers for Enterprise Corporations 2008 –Social Media Professionals . Job Resources in the Social Media and Web Industry Web Strategy Jobs powered by Job o Matic (Post a job there and be seen by these blog readers, these affiliate fees pay for my hosting) Read Write Web keeps announcements flowing at Jobwire , although is broader than just social media jobs Facebook group for community manager group in Facebook Jake McKee’s community portal for jobs Chris Heuer’s Social Media Jobs SimplyHired aggregates job listings, as does Indeed ForumOne Jobs for Social Media and Community Teresa has a few jobs, some around community New Media hire has an extensive job database Social Media Headhunter Social media jobs Jobs in social media Altimeter Group’s list of social media consultants and agencies Hiring? Leave a comment If you’re seeking candidates in the social media industry, many of them are within arms reach, feel free to leave a link to a job description (but not the whole job description, please)
Episode 3 focusses on monetizing APIs and looking at revenue streams from widgets. Companies that open their business databases and stream that data out, can have an army of hundreds of thousands (mostly) unpaid developers creating Facebook apps, iPhone apps and blog widgets to help sell their products and services. Web 3.0 is “little bits everywhere” – don’t force customers to come to your site, let them do purchase your products on their site, where they are, and let their social network be informed. An overview of social media monetization revenues . Note: you can subscribe to video on iTunes and also the AUDIO version ! API Widget Economy: Social Media Business Ep.003 from Laurel Papworth on Vimeo . If you release data such as what products you sell, how much for, if and where they are in stock, including the address of the reseller, this can be “mashed up” into a widget application. One popular widget was the Nintendo wii (see programmable web) mashup of available/in stock Wii’s and a Google map. Embeddable media is critical for spreadability and distribution – YouTube is a clear example of content that is watched 30% or more of the time “off site”… through an embed on Facebook, blogs and so on. Ebay API eBay offers solution.ebay.com – APIs and widgets that emplower people to do distributed sales and monetize goods and services. In November 2000 they opened up the API and by 2006 had 5 billion API calls a month. 60,000 developers in 2005 creating apps using the APIs and forming an ecosystem of development. eBay increased sales by 86% in that quarter. Whether the 3rd party widgets work or not is kinda irrelevant to corporates – the developers will make it work or not. Amazon API Amazon and eBay dominate shopping widgets – Amazon lets you embed book widgets on your blog, and you get between 4-10% affiliate revenue. But clicking through to Amazon site is not ideal – so much nicer if you can complete the sale on site. Monetize your blog or social network site AND keep them on the page. For the member it’s a “in house” experience. Amazon’s AWS offers merchants an “in the cloud” service including a fulfillment API. CHART: 2008 Amazon traffic. 2005 -140,000 API developers and in 2003 made $480million in one quarter from 3rd party resellers – not all API sales but affiliates are powerful. GetTailGate.com makes interactive banner ads where the purchase is completed in the wiget. Paypal API information is available on their new site: As expected , eBay’s PayPal division launched PayPal X on Tuesday, an open API designed to allow third parties to easily add payment mechanisms to their own services.According to Osama Bedie, vice president of platforms for PayPal, PayPal will help facilitate $70 billion worth of electronic transactions this year, a sizeable amount, but a drop in the bucket compared to the $30 trillion or so that consumers spend globally. PayPal’s goal is to try and grab a larger piece of that pie, by making it easier to build in those PayPal links. An additional hook will be a lower processing fee: down to 50 cents per transaction or 0.75 percent, depending on the “use case,” executives said. By opening up the API, eBay can allow others to drive the technology forward, eBay chief executive John Donahoe said. “Historically we’ve had gigantic global platforms, and we’ve done the developmnet work on these technologies,” Donahoe said. “No longer are we the bottleneck of innovation.” “I believe that PayPal can be bigger than eBay because PayPal is all about online commerce,” Donahoe said. The APIs will be housed at X.com , a development Web site first registered by eBay in 1999. The “X factor,” as PayPal president Scott Thompson, was the developer community. (Note: Podcast was before this announcement) Alvenda.com offers shoplets for Facebook – does the network settlement in the widget on Facebook. Kirketon Hotel – book and pay for a hotel room All my slides are on Slideshare.net/SilkCharm Salesforce.com do 30% of their revenue from APIs not on the Salesforce.com site. Salesforce.com: Reported on their blog on Jan 8th of this year (2006) that over 40% of all of Salesforce.com traffic comes from their API. Tesco the grocery chain, a year ago started offering an API for grocery shopping – eggs, bread and milk applications on Facebook or iPhone anyone? And in conclusion: We love Progammable Web ! Etsy API Note: to be edited further on Friday when I get back from Gov in Tas and Media140 in Sydney. For the time being, it’s up here in it’s naked glory Social Media Business Anyway, I hope you enjoyed the episode. This Social Media Business series is available on a variety of video hosting sites such as YouTube . Donation as Revenue – Social Media Business Ep 2 (audio) You can also subscribe/download Social Media Business from iTunes (launches iTunes) to your iPhone or iPod as a video. You can subscribe using the RSS feed for the Social Media Business video here or grab the Social Media Business audio version. Previous Shows Donation as Revenue – Social Media Business Ep 2 Experiential Economy – Social Media Business Ep 1 API Widget Economy: Social Media Business Podcast is a post from: Laurel Papworth- Social Network Strategy Technorati Tags: Amazon , API , ebay , John Donahoe , Monetization , Money , network settlement , Online Communities , Osama Bedie , PayPal , revenue , Scott Thompson , social media , social networks , widget economy , widgets , X , X.com Tags: Amazon , API , ebay , Featured , John Donahoe , Monetization , Monetization , Money , Money , network settlement , Online Communities , Online Communities , Osama Bedie , PayPal , revenue , revenue , Scott Thompson , social media , social media , social networks , social networks , widget economy , widgets , X , X.com Related posts Social Media Monetization and Revenue (24) Social Media Monetization: Craigslist hits $100m (1) Revenue: Events in Social Networks (2) Monetizing: Virtual Goods venture capital 2009 (2) Twitter: Reputation Management in Social Networks (18)
ABC TV show sacks their host – excuse me, founding host – Jeremy Ray. In the old days, after a week of phone calls and letters to the station that would be the end of it. But now? In today’s social media climate? nuh uh. Jeremy gets online and says it’s cos he’s not a woman he got sacked, the GoodGame crew go the forums and say it was their decision, the community get their knickers in a knot and start a petition , a Facebook goup and a website called SaveJunglist (his gamer handle or nickname). Active anti-brand communities are an increasingly interesting phenomenon. I’m not always a fan of the ABC social network policy as sometimes they set up communities in direct competition with Australians who are already running communities, which I don’t think should be the object of a taxpayers funded service. Why can’t media organisations work with communities that create content instead of turning them into competitors with sore feelings? The Facebook group The site -looks like Drupal is called SaveJunglist How can you help? You can help us try and get Junglist back on the air in a number of ways. Please try and do all of the following if you get the time. The list keeps getting longer so keep checking back and do the best you can. Thanks guys and gals! Join the facebook group – “Save Junglist!- Keep Junglist as Host of Good Game” at http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=189532430599 Also make sure you post plenty of comments on the wall of the facebook page. Send a complaint email to the ABC by going here – http://www.abc.net.au/contact/contactabc.htm Try and state the reasons why you loved Jung and why he was a great presenter of the show. Sign the petition at – http://www.gopetition.com/online/31631/signatures-page16.html Please use your real name for credibility of the petition Email Good Game directly at – http://www.abc.net.au/tv/goodgame/contact/emailform.htm Make a video, upload it to YouTube or Facebook and post it on the wall of the facebook group mentioned above Make a poster, or print one off here – http://www.savejunglist.com/?q=posters and stick it up everywhere! Get creative people – Uni, Work, Shops, Internet Cafe’s, ABC Studios (ABC Ultimo Centre 700 Harris Street, Ultimo NSW 2007) the list goes on… Change your gamertag or gamer motto to something like HELP SAVE JUNGLIST! www.savejunglist.com Make a photo and unpload it to the facebook group mentioned above Send an email to Game Scoop at gamescoop@ign.com If they get enough emails they may put it in thier upcoming vodcast. Vote on the poll on the bottom left of the page at http://www.tvtonight.com.au Let your feelings be heard in the Good Game forums at http://www.abc.net.au/goodgame/community Bombard the ABC by sending them a fax! Make your own or print off one of the posters ( http://www.savejunglist.com/?q=posters ) and send that. ABC Head Office – (02) 8333 5344 (Attention it to: Mark Scott) and ABC TV Head Office – (02) 8333 3055 (Attention it to: Kim Dalton) Tell everyone in your own gaming community, in forums, in your friends group, facebook, myspace, twitter…. you get the rest. Nominate “whoever was in charge for axing Jungalist from Good Game” for Triple J’s friday f–k wit Email to Friends of the ABC – this organisation is not the ABC but influences the ABC. It gets on ABC’s back with proper submissions of discontent, etc, and i’m pretty sure has contact with the ABC decisionmakers. http://www.friendsoftheabc.org/ or email Darce Cassidy at darce@friendsoftheabc.org Write to the ABC Board (Important Boss People) “The duty of the Board is to ensure that the functions of the ABC are performed efficiently with maximum benefit to the people of Australia” Board members can be contacted through the ABC Secretariat, GPO Box 9994, Sydney NSW 2001, telephone (02) 8333 5312, or email: board@your.abc.net.au Send an email to Media Watch. Hopefully they can highlight ABC’s management flaws again. The address is mediawatch@your.abc.net.au MOST OF ALL JUST SPREAD THE WORD -THEN ACT ON IT! Thanks very much for all everyones help so far. Keep It up guys! None of this is original – American directors like Joss Whedon have tapped into TV Fan activism for years. But The ABC which provides social network tools yet does not do well with communities is seeing the other side of viewer engagement. The audience here and overseas are only just starting to realise their power, and a playing with it tentatively…. stay tuned. Whether you are in favor of bringing back Junglist and viewer-choice or whether you think the content provider is King and should stick to their original vision, it’s an interesting story. If the ABC responds incorrectly, like Kellogs social media war with Parents Jury , it could become a very hot story indeed. Hat Tip Asher Moses from Sydney Morning Herald who rarely hat tips anyone. Bad Asher. Good Game: ABC TV Show and online communities is a post from: Laurel Papworth- Social Network Strategy Technorati Tags: ABC , asher moses , good game , Jeremy Ray , junglist , Online Communities , smh , social media , social networks Tags: ABC , anti advertising , Anti Marketing , anti-branding , anti-PR , asher moses , Australia , good game , Jeremy Ray , junglist , Media , Online Communities , Online Communities , smh , social media , social media , social networks , social networks , TV Related posts Social networking is a waste of time/money (11) Marketing Course & Traineeships: MFA (Media Federation of Australia) (0) Bigpond brands Uluru (30) Australia: Twitter for Business (2) Australia ROI: Investment and Revenue in Social Networks (5)
Why traditional media editors will turn to bloggers for articles in the future. Social media = content PLUS audience. If you are managing a newspaper or TV station or radio, will you contract out work to a freelance journalist… or will you ask a known expert that blogs to write the article? Someone who is held in high regard in that industry or specialist topic, who has an audience of other people interested in that topic and who has now had 3 or 4 years of writing/blogging and retaining interest of the online community? In a decent than syndicating your posts deal, Mashable announced yesterday that they’ve signed a deal with CNN to link to their posts from the CNN Tech page. In a serious bout of new speak, Mashable’s founder (and good guy) Pete Cashmore said in a post that “We’re in the middle of an exciting transition as social media and the mainstream begin to overlap in all sorts of interesting ways: this underlines our belief that social media isn’t some marketing fad, but rather a fundamental change to the way we consume and interact with content. We’ve been covering this transition for four years, from the rise of social networking to the birth of the “social media” movement as people began to use these tools of personal connection to pass content around the web.” If I didn’t make it clear already, as much as I love Pete, that quote is pure waffle. The deal with CNN positions Mashable to pull massively clear of their main rival TechCrunch on a page view basis , having overtaken the old Michael Arrington guard in April this year. (From Inquisitr which will probably do a similar deal soon). A bigger example than what I was thinking of, but it works just the same. If you are a freelance journalist investigating social media , particularly one with a specialist ken, get blogging. Pronto. At the moment, CNN are linking to Mashable. But soon they will pick up the popular content – similar to Australian newspapers that have business news “by Washington Post” or something. Syndicate, syndicate – the more content is read, the more it will be read. There are NO diminishing returns, or flagging interest, no matter what traditional media people say. You can show something for free and still sell it when it become popular. I know it seems odd, but we buy what we value- hence people buying a DVD then buying it again later when the Director Edition comes out. Get your stuff onto as many channels as possible, as spreadable as possible and that will conversely build you an concentrated audience. But I digress… Newspapers aggregating content from popular blogs is a no brainer. And it beats them skimming the cream off now, by paraphrasing what we are blogging. Incidentally, I’m available for hire to write a column on social networks and online communities . You just have to edit out a few *giggles* and *heh*s along the way. I’m cheap too. Hmm what’s that? You want me to write an article based on this but longer? Oh ok. And … I can blog about it but I can’t repeat the full article? > oh. ok. I guess so. How much??? – You’ll bring traffic to my site… are you kidding ? Oh , ok, Mr Boss Man. One blog post, errr article comin’ right up! Mainstream editors will get articles from bloggers with audience is a post from: Laurel Papworth- Social Network Strategy Technorati Tags: audience , cnn , editors , journalists , mashable , Pete Cashmore , reach , readership , social media Tags: audience , Australia , cnn , editors , journalists , mashable , Media , Online Communities , Pete Cashmore , reach , readership , social media , social media , social networks Related posts Social Media Monetization: Leo Laporte TWiT (13) Mumbai: Breaking News… (14) Different types of Social Networks (3) Corey Worthington and Wikipedia and Admin Zealots (8) Australian Journalists on Twitter (44)
Episode 2 of monetizing online communities looks at donations – an overlooked revenue stream and the social media tools that enable donations online. Currency has no inherent value itself – only what we, the community, say it’s worth. Sometimes $2 coins are annoying – we throw them in a jar or give them to a busker rather than have them rattling around in our pocket. Other times, we will give a stranger a $5 note because we desperately need $2 for the car parking meter, and don’t have any change. So currency can change in it’s value contextually depending on what is being transferred. Donations play very much into the socailized aspect of money transfer. What do we value, how do we show we value it, how do we feel and what good will it do? This does NOT have to be Not For Profits – social networks that have a “community” feel, can also connect with the goodwill of the members and seek donations as a revenue stream. Note: you can subscribe to video on iTunes but I’m waiting for them to offer the audio RSS version too! Donations as Revenue: Social Media Business Ep.002 from Laurel Papworth on Vimeo . Caring But Not Committed Online social media services provide scope for members to donate time, resources and money how and when they want. There is not the traditional requirement to “see things through” or “commit to a regular volunteer service”. Caring but not committed is typical of the internet communities – shareware, freeware, postcardware, donateware. If you are interested in a large scale, scaleable community that where one member may drop a development of opensource projects and another member will pick it, have a look at sourceforge . I also mentioned The Burrito Project on my “ Social NETWORKS are much more than Social MEDIA ” here is the wikipedia page. WordPress blogging platform has people donating plugins or using money donations to have work done. Here is a typical widget from WordPress 3rd party developers which allows bloggers to ask for donations on their blog, and uses PayPal as the backend for donations across the online community. Drupal , Joomla , and LAMP – Linux, Apache, MySQL and Perl/PHP/Python are also mentioned as examples of donation social economies. While they also encourage a whole ecosystem of monetized services such as value-adds, training, customization… donation continues to play a role particularly as Paypal and other services offer easy to implement widgets for collection of the monies. Crowdfunding of films through Fundable.com and other projects. There are many many sites like Fundable (e.g. Pledgie ). They have a clip-of-the-sale revenue model themselves. Or in this case, a clip of the donation: Completed group actions (and only completed group actions) have a 10% fee taken from their totals. Remember, there is no cost to set up a group action and everyone receives a complete refund if a group action expires. ChipIn donation widget – and my microfinance through social media blog post supporting wonderwebby Ripple Effect diagram showing that social media works opposite to traditional media. With traditional media Paypal widgets are quickly embedded in social network sites and make transactions such as donations across the online community relatively easy. Donations PayPal Donations Collect donations from a button on your website, or even using a link in an email! PayPal Donations is a low cost way for you to accept credit card and bank account donations. Integrate PayPal Donations with your website in a few easy steps Benefits Save time and money collecting donations with PayPal: Easy to implement – no CGI scripting necessary No up-front costs – you’ll have the same low fee schedule used when you receive other PayPal payments Collect with ease – PayPal maintains detailed transaction records on our website Freedom for your donors – donors can choose the amount of their secure donation, or you can set a fixed amount I mentioned tweet4good on the podcast – but please be aware that they are affiliated with NetworkForGood which focusses on fundraising for Not For Profits i.e. real world communities with needs, not online communities looking to monetize. Still it’s a no-brainer that Fundable or similar will have or already have a Twitter addon service. The Age of Stupid – you can delve into their crowdsource fundraising here on their site. Pligg donation drives – I donated a few bucks to the PHPBB bulletin board (creating a forum plugin) drive they had. Kinda funny now, reading the thankyou posted on their site: ———————– Everyone should thank forum users lpapworth for covering the majority of the ChipIn fund ( started on another thread ). His financial contribution is what allowed us to develop this module. In case you haven’t noticed, I’m a girl. I was also attributed as a coauthor/supporter, which is a good way of rewarding donations, of course. Finally I mentioned Whedonesque, the fansite for Joss Whedon, TV director. They have a paypal plugin though they also use merchandising, which I will cover in another episode. Paypal plugin on right hand side Donations As Revenue: Social Media Business Podcast Social Media Monetization Models The first part of the series on social media revenue is dedicated to showing case studies referring to the chart above. Social Media Business Anyway, I hope you enjoyed the episode. This Social Media Business series is available on a variety of video hosting sites such as YouTube . Donation as Revenue – Social Media Business Ep 2 You can also subscribe/download Social Media Business from iTunes (launches iTunes) to your iPhone or iPod as a video. You can subscribe using the RSS feed for the Social Media Business video here or grab the Social Media Business audio version. Previous Shows Experiential Economy – Social Media Business Ep 1 Donations as Revenue: Social Media Business Podcast is a post from: Laurel Papworth- Social Network Strategy Technorati Tags: age of stupid , chip in , chipin , donations , drupal , fundable , joomla , LAMP , monetize , Money , Online Communities , open source , paypal donate , pledgie , pligg , revenue , Social Media Business , social networks , sourceforge , whedonesque , wordpress Tags: age of stupid , chip in , chipin , donations , drupal , fundable , joomla , LAMP , Monetization , monetize , Money , Money , Online Communities , Online Communities , open source , paypal donate , pledgie , pligg , revenue , revenue , social media , Social Media Business , Social Media Business , social networks , social networks , sourceforge , whedonesque , wordpress Related posts Social Media Monetization: Craigslist hits $100m (1) Monetizing: Virtual Goods venture capital 2009 (2) API Widget Economy: Social Media Business Podcast (11) Social Media Monetization and Revenue (24) Social Media Emmy: Australia’s Scorched.tv (5)