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January 21st, 2011 by Wadds

Overcoming #ff abuse; meet @AdamWestbrook

The Follow Friday hashtag (#ff) on Twitter used to be a means of discovering new people and making new connections.

But the hashtag has become abused. More often than not it’s become a means of giving your mates a virtual slap on the back. Fair enough, but it doesn’t help any of us develop our networks or meet new people.

I’m keen to return to #ff to its original premise. Starting right now.

I’d like to introduce you to Adam Westbrook (@AdamWestbrook).

If you’re interested in the media and how the role of a journalist is changing as media fragments I’d urge you to follow Adam. He’s a freelance hack, publisher and lecturer working at the frontline of the media and writes an inspiration blog about entrepreneurial journalism.

I’d love you to help return #ff to its original premise and introduce me to someone new.

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November 17th, 2009 by Wadds

Don’t sync updates: different networks, different audiences (lessons from a 13-year old)

I got an ear bashing from my 13 year old goddaughter this weekend. Why, she asked, do you keep posting nonsense on your Facebook news feed. It’s because I’ve synced my Twitter feed with my Facebook feed I explained. “Twitter?” she said.

My Twitter network is made up of a different group of people from my Twitter network. Facebook is family, friends, mates from school, university and stalkers. Twitter is mainly people from my professional life.

Don’t get me wrong, there’s some crossover between the different networks. Life isn’t perfectly ordered. But inevitably when I push a message automatically from one network to another some folk get confused.

It could be about to get a lot worst. Thanks to a deal between LinkedIn (exclusively professional contacts in my network) and Twitter last week I can sync my LinkedIn feed with my Twitter feed, either automatically, or selectively by adding a hashtag #in to my tweets.

By syncing updates between various networks I’m not sharing a message with a network but have reverted to an aged-old broadcast model. Each network has a different audience and I should tailor my content appropriately.

Stephen Davis has made this case to me on numerous occasions. Have a read of this aptly titled blog post – Tweeters: Stop spamming my Facebook! I’m starting to see his point.

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