For those of you in the Philadelphia area, you might have noticed a little bit of snow this morning. But in case you haven’t looked out the window, you can always head over to Twitter (in a window of course) and see what is trending: Blizzard
Again, an example of the “Collective Mind” that Twitter often displays. Trending topics now has localization for some cities. Of course you can always Twitter search to see very specific things in your area and related to keywords.
My question for the day is whether someone has rigged a snow thrower to Tweet, along the same lines as the Twittering Office Chair.
(Again, a shameless plug) Looking on more insight into how you can use Twitter for business, please register for the “What in the Heck is Twitter?” workshop on February 16, 2010 at 8:30a. It is only $15.




David and Goliath, or Why Social Networks Scare the Heck Out of Companies
The war was waged on Twitter, and on blogs, and on podcasts and onto CNN, Los Angeles Times, People Magazine, etc.
Ouch if you are Southwest Airlines. Apparently they didn’t realize that celebs sometimes fly coach. To their credit, they are handling this in the open instead of trying to hide.
Thank goodness you aren’t a large company, right? Wrong.
Every business, be it a solopreneur, SMB, franchise or Fortune 500 company, works with customers. Customers are people. All people have some form of social connection, both online and traditional.
Marketing is a double edged sword. The forces that create lines at the Apple Store for whatever the latest i-Product may be are the same forces the Kevin Smith tapped into this past weekend.