3 Articles match "Flickr","Public Sector","Twitter"

The Latest from the Nonprofit Marketing Community

Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Friend and colleague Jeffrey Levy , in conversation the other day, said he went back to the beginning… of his days on Twitter that is, to see who he first started following. It caused me to reflect on my own Twitter activity. Therefore, without further ado, my first Twitter 10: (take-aways listed afterwards).
 
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Today, I was skimming through my RSS feeds and one of my favorites had an update: Mike Kujawski’s Public Sector 2.0 For example, I tease that in 10 years, we will be doing public health campaigns for internet addiction…but how far away is that really? flickr photo credit: Wesley Fryer. being cool or shiny).
 
Sunday, March 1, 2009
Quantcast Analytics is a very useful, publicly accessible analytics site. How social media can be used to demystify public service institutions to encourage civic engagement -  Jairus Pryor (Bank of Canada) and Audra Williams (Parliament of Canada). This is more than enough to eat up all of my time.  Monitoring 101: What did they do?
 

The Best from the Nonprofit Marketing Community

Friend and colleague Jeffrey Levy , in conversation the other day, said he went back to the beginning… of his days on Twitter that is, to see who he first started following. It caused me to reflect on my own Twitter activity. Therefore, without further ado, my first Twitter 10: (take-aways listed afterwards).
Today, I was skimming through my RSS feeds and one of my favorites had an update: Mike Kujawski’s Public Sector 2.0 For example, I tease that in 10 years, we will be doing public health campaigns for internet addiction…but how far away is that really? flickr photo credit: Wesley Fryer. being cool or shiny).
Quantcast Analytics is a very useful, publicly accessible analytics site. How social media can be used to demystify public service institutions to encourage civic engagement -  Jairus Pryor (Bank of Canada) and Audra Williams (Parliament of Canada). This is more than enough to eat up all of my time.  Monitoring 101: What did they do?