friendfeed

FriendFeed Stats from FeedStats

by Andy Brudtkuhl on May 26, 2009

It’s no secret that I’m a big fan of FriendFeed and I find more value with it than Twitter.

That being said I am very excited about the release of FeedStats from my fellow Iowans over at Microblink

From their release

Today we’d like to announce our second public project, FeedStats. FeedStats exists for the purpose of visualizing FriendFeed users’ data to see how they interact not only with the service, but with other users. It’s a quick way to find what services they’re using, when they post, and who interacts with their content the most.

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9 Web Services I Use Every Day

by Andy Brudtkuhl on May 6, 2009

  1. DiigoResearch, Bookmarks, Community, Syndication, Archive
  2. TwitterCommunity, Syndication, Research, Content Discovery
  3. FriendFeedContent Discovery, Community, Syndication, Filters
  4. MeeboInstant Messaging
  5. FeedlyContent Discovery
  6. Google ReaderResearch, Biz Intelligence, Information, News
  7. GmailEmail, Research, Archive, Filters
  8. Google Calendar – Track and Plan Stuff
  9. Bit.lyURL Shortener, Analytics

What web services do you use every day? Let us know in the comments!

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Mark All As Read

by Andy Brudtkuhl on April 28, 2009

I find myself clicking “Mark All As Read” a lot when I succumb to information overload. I used to make myself read all my subscriptions. Nowadays if I’ve missed my Google Reader for more than a few days I assume anything relevant or pressing will bubble up on Twitter, FriendFeed, or Feedly. These tools are becoming increasingly important in consuming information – moving beyond communcation platforms.

How do you handle information overload? Just give up and “Mark All As Read”? In a future post I’ll discuss systems I’ve setup to automate a lot of the filtering process for me – yet I still have trouble.

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5 Reasons I Love FriendFeed

by Andy Brudtkuhl on February 9, 2009

I love FriendFeed because:

  1. It has become my First Stop information source, before my beloved Google Reader
  2. There is a great community of people there having amazing conversations
  3. Threaded conversations are easy to participate in (take that Twitter)
  4. Niche, topical rooms create sub communities and organization
  5. Extremely powerful search (that Robert Scoble LOVES)

FriendFeed is the first thing I open in the morning and something I dip into about every hour throughout the day…

Are you on FriendFeed? Leave a link to your profile in the comments and let us know what you like about it.

Don’t know who to follow? Start here and here. Enjoy!

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Budgeting 2009 Web Strategy – Social Media

by Andy Brudtkuhl on January 13, 2009

Today we’re covering Part 4 of our Budgeting 2009 Web Strategy Series – Social Media.

Social Media
Cost: Free – Completely variable depending on scope
Time: An hour a day – at least

As a preface – I am not a social media expert. If you want expert analysis, see the resources below.

Social Media is all about community and conversations. You cannot simply sign up for Twitter and Facebook and consider it social media marketing. The biggest part of a social media budget, at least for us at 48Web, is time. It takes time to build community – and community is one of the most powerful facets of a an effective web strategy. There are three steps to using social media as a marketing tool – listen, join the conversation, and engage discussions. (If you think there are more or less, please share them with us in the comments).

Listening is easy and can be automated. This is the simplest step to get into social media – start listening. Subscribe to Twitter and Google Blog Searches to get started. Set up Google Blog Alerts for your company. All these listening tools are free. And if you want to really start researching – start using Trackur or FiltrBox. Setting up this research environment is easy and takes little time – but has a HUGE ROI. Joining the conversation is often the hardest part because social media is very adverse to traditional marketing messages. In fact – I’d just start joining discussions without any marketing broadcasts. Next up – engage conversations.. Start discussions and gear them towards your brand. Again – I am not a social media expert, but these methods do work. If you have other recommendations, please leave them in the comments.

Social media is a low budget (time and cost), high ROI method of marketing – It’s a must-do internet marketing tactic for an effective web strategy. If you are looking to get started in Social Media, check out Zane’s simple Social Media Starter Kit… Or, check out the Social Media Cheat Sheet. Or, see the resources below. [click to continue…]

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