9 Social Media Topics that Need To Die

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Altitude Branding - 8 Social Media Topics That Need to DieDisclaimer: I’m annoyed. This post is probably crabby. Not my usual fare. Skip it if you like.

If you’re still here, can we, pretty please, talk to the people around us and do something to prevent these tragic conversations? Consider this a public service announcement or a rant, however you choose. But enough is enough.

1. Getting More Followers and Fans

Unless you can tell me what the hell they’re going to do for you, how you’re going to mobilize them, and what you’re going to give back to them that makes it worth their while to grant you their attention and continue to give it, who cares? People aren’t marbles, and you don’t get any points for collecting a bunch of staring eyeballs that are waiting for you to do something significant. Attention only matters if can move people beyond noticing, and into investing their time and energy.

2. Misdefined ROI

Google it. If you know what ROI really is, you’ll eventually figure how to do the work and connect the dots between your social media endeavors and your finances, your brand, or a combination of the two. You’ll find other metrics, too, that point toward success or lack of it.

If you don’t, quit bastardizing the term ROI and using cryptic, fluffy interpretations of it in order to avoid admitting that you don’t understand it, or to dodge the whole measurement and accountability issue altogether. If you’re using vague ROI arguments to stand in for what’s really a lack of a business case, you have work to do on explaining why you care about social media in the first place.

3. Entitlement to Free Stuff

The people on the web with knowledge, expertise, and information owe you none of it. Some will put it out there for free because they believe there’s value in contributing to the whole. But they don’t owe you a thing, and they can take it away or change the game anytime they want.

Whether they’ll be successful or not is for their potential customers to decide. But you are not entitled to a bit of it. Pay or don’t pay for what’s valuable to you personally, but quit with the naive notion that social media and money don’t or can’t go together, and that content creators are morally or ethically corrupt because they’re asking for compensation in return for making their knowledge and experience available.

4. Joining the Conversation

This was probably a great phrase at the emergence of all of this, but it’s become so diluted that it means little anymore. Join which conversation? For what purpose? With whom? And what then? Let’s start talking about the INTENT behind the conversation in the first place, and the underlying value of being present and engaged with the right people who give a rip what you have to say, not just anyone with a frontal lobe and an internet connection.

5. What’s The Next Whatever

We have all of the “new” we could possibly want, but we’re distinctly lacking in execution with what we have. Clamoring for the next big thing is looking for permission to be messy. It’s easier to latch on to something new and unproven, because then you’re not accountable. Instead, man (or woman) up, and get busy wrangling the things you already have at your disposal to do something worthwhile.

6. Content is King.

Like hell. Creating content is not what wins you the prize. It’s not enough to write something, or populate a blog, or create a video. Content is worth precisely ZERO until it’s being found, consumed, and then used to do something. It needs to drive people to action – sharing, buying, building, interacting.

And guess what, stargazers? If your content isn’t propelling people to act on something that eventually delivers something of value back to your business (provided you’re talking content marketing and not outright contribution for charitable purpose), it’s a time sink. That makes it decidedly less than king.

7. The Quest for Universal Constants

How many people do I need to manage social media? How many hours a day? How much budget? What should I put on my Facebook page? Do we need a LinkedIn Group? Where’s the case study?

Stop. There’s more than enough information out there to guide you toward the big picture constants. The rest you’re going to have to find out for yourself by actually doing something, and putting it all in context of your own situation. This is no different than anything else, ever. You still have to build your own sales strategy, HR plan, CRM approach irrespective of what’s been done before, no matter how long those concepts have been around. If you’re spending all your time building your cloned safety net based on other people’s situations, you’re already behind the game, and not focused on what your business needs.

8. Social Media Experts and Proverbial Snake Oil

Who cares? If you’re a business, do your due diligence the way you would with any other adviser you hire. Do some research. Ask hard questions about results, accountability, and strategies that can survive a shift in technology. Read the countless blog posts out there – like this awesome one by Jason Falls -  about how to find a professional that knows what they’re doing.

If you’re a fellow contender in the space that’s crabby because other people are stealing your thunder or making a mockery of the profession you hold so dear, suck it up. Go work hard. Prove your substance through what you do. Let the idiots hang themselves on the empty, shoddy frameworks of “strategy” that they’re peddling to those that are so desperate for a social media success story that they’ll buy anything. Sympathy time is over for the gullible, and it’s time for you over there to run your own damn race.

9. Social Media Is Hype, Stale, Old, Whatever.

If you think it has potential but you think we could be doing more, put your money where your mouth is. Don’t just brag about unfollowing someone who didn’t meet your standards as some self-righteous stunt. Offer something constructive of your own. Do it better. If it has practical uses but there are misconceptions, correct them through illustrating the alternatives, teaching, doing.

Think it’s lame altogether? Tired of hearing about it? Convinced it’s hype and bunk? That’s fine. Then close your Twitter account, get off Facebook, stop blogging, and go do something else. It’s all optional. We’ll be fine without you.

There. I said my piece on those for now. That feels better. What about you? I know this isn’t particularly useful  as a how-to, but sometimes even the most of constructive of us need to stomp and holler before we can get back to business.

Back to work, now.  I’ll be bringing you more positive solutions and ideas upcoming. Feel free to add yours the comments, too. We’re all in this together. Maybe we’ll even learn a thing or two.

special note to the lovely Meg Fowler: I promise I’ll write more about awesomeness very soon. There’s plenty of good to share, too.

image credit: Jon’s pics

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  • http://www.socialtriggers.com Derek

    There is a mismatch between what people like you (and me) want to read about and what most people want to read about. Sure, we think these topics are ragged, but they still pull a lot of traffic from services like Stumbleupon, Delicious, and Twitter. And if you’er a blogger trying to grow your audience, why would you ignore what works?
    .-= Derek´s last blog ..3 More Ways to Increase Customer Satisfaction =-.

  • http://www.socialtriggers.com Derek

    There is a mismatch between what people like you (and me) want to read about and what most people want to read about. Sure, we think these topics are ragged, but they still pull a lot of traffic from services like Stumbleupon, Delicious, and Twitter. And if you’er a blogger trying to grow your audience, why would you ignore what works?
    .-= Derek´s last blog ..3 More Ways to Increase Customer Satisfaction =-.

  • http://www.r3now.com Bill Wood

    Really, really great post! I recently posted something similar but at more from the perspective of the misguided “social experiments” in business.

    Social Media Fads and the Risk to the Enterprise

    This is a really great post and I would like your permission to re-post it on my own site with full credits and the original link back to your site. Can I do that?

    Thanks,
    Bill Wood – President
    R3Now Consulting
    No Nonsense Answers for IT Leaders
    .-= Bill Wood´s last blog ..IT Outsourcing, Off Shore Support, Cost Cutting and IT Department Changes =-.

  • http://www.r3now.com Bill Wood

    Really, really great post! I recently posted something similar but at more from the perspective of the misguided “social experiments” in business.

    Social Media Fads and the Risk to the Enterprise

    This is a really great post and I would like your permission to re-post it on my own site with full credits and the original link back to your site. Can I do that?

    Thanks,
    Bill Wood – President
    R3Now Consulting
    No Nonsense Answers for IT Leaders
    .-= Bill Wood´s last blog ..IT Outsourcing, Off Shore Support, Cost Cutting and IT Department Changes =-.

  • http://www.mltcreative.com Martine Hunter

    Excellent rant Amber:

    I’m with you on 2, 3 & 9. Entitlement for free stuff is the 21st century internet version of ‘steal this book.’

  • http://www.mltcreative.com Martine Hunter

    Excellent rant Amber:

    I’m with you on 2, 3 & 9. Entitlement for free stuff is the 21st century internet version of ‘steal this book.’

  • http://blog.cdginteractive.com Heidi Strom Moon

    Great stuff, Amber. I’ve noticed a welcome groundswell recently of smart social media folks getting beyond “the conversation” and “branding” and really talking about using this channel for concrete, measurable ROI. I was just in a great webinar yesterday from Marketing Experiments on getting beyond sporadic use of social media to planned, strategic effort, and many of their points were the same, based on a recent survey they conducted of over 2,000 marketers.
    .-= Heidi Strom Moon´s last blog ..Case Study Results: Optimizing Blog Post Landing Pages =-.

  • http://blog.cdginteractive.com Heidi Strom Moon

    Great stuff, Amber. I’ve noticed a welcome groundswell recently of smart social media folks getting beyond “the conversation” and “branding” and really talking about using this channel for concrete, measurable ROI. I was just in a great webinar yesterday from Marketing Experiments on getting beyond sporadic use of social media to planned, strategic effort, and many of their points were the same, based on a recent survey they conducted of over 2,000 marketers.
    .-= Heidi Strom Moon´s last blog ..Case Study Results: Optimizing Blog Post Landing Pages =-.

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  • http://dannyfr.posterous.com @Danny_Fr

    I love it.

    Happy to know I’m not renting alone. I could write endlessly about the points you just mentioned, but I’ve done that already here and here.

    Feel free to visit, I’m looking for feedback. I’m not a consultant, so I won’t make money by promoting the writing. I’m just very, very interested in the topic :)
    .-= @Danny_Fr´s last blog ..36MFRRSWRSXF =-.

  • http://www.alyssagardina.com Alyssa Gardina

    This is a great post for both companies and individuals involved in social media. We spend so much time complaining about what it was or what we wish it could be, instead of adapting and just doing. For companies, as with any form of marketing – you have to have a plan and objectives. We’re not just playing with toys.

    Thanks for the great insight, as always!

  • http://writelife.net/ Bill

    This may be pie-in-the-sky nonsense but what always makes me scratch my head is how many people think of social media tools as supporting or even growing their business … and they never actually USE the tools the way their customers do! And they pay no attention to how their spouses use them, their kids, their friends and so on. How on earth are you suppose to know how to use them for your business if you don’t actually use them like your customers do?

    As for content, no one even knows what content is other than something that shows up in a spreadsheet or PowerPoint presentation. Comes in sizes small, medium, large and extra large. Is it a video? An article? Podcast? Even if they can identify it as something more specific than “content,” they have no idea what its value is. You can have “83 units” of content but if they’re all rubbish, they’re meaningless. Better to have one good item, video or whatever. But then you would have to do the work of figuring out what “good” would mean to your customers. Oops. Now you have to leave the office and go to where the real world is.

    Now I sound crabby. :-)
    .-= Bill´s last blog ..What is the story? =-.

  • http://www.business-blogging.co.uk Lance Concannon

    Excellent post – finally, a bit of good sense in the social media echo chamber!
    .-= Lance Concannon´s last blog ..Why PR needs to stop trying to understand blogs =-.

  • http://dannyfr.posterous.com @Danny_Fr

    I love it.

    Happy to know I’m not renting alone. I could write endlessly about the points you just mentioned, but I’ve done that already here and here.

    Feel free to visit, I’m looking for feedback. I’m not a consultant, so I won’t make money by promoting the writing. I’m just very, very interested in the topic :)
    .-= @Danny_Fr´s last blog ..36MFRRSWRSXF =-.

  • http://www.alyssagardina.com Alyssa Gardina

    This is a great post for both companies and individuals involved in social media. We spend so much time complaining about what it was or what we wish it could be, instead of adapting and just doing. For companies, as with any form of marketing – you have to have a plan and objectives. We’re not just playing with toys.

    Thanks for the great insight, as always!

  • http://writelife.net/ Bill

    This may be pie-in-the-sky nonsense but what always makes me scratch my head is how many people think of social media tools as supporting or even growing their business … and they never actually USE the tools the way their customers do! And they pay no attention to how their spouses use them, their kids, their friends and so on. How on earth are you suppose to know how to use them for your business if you don’t actually use them like your customers do?

    As for content, no one even knows what content is other than something that shows up in a spreadsheet or PowerPoint presentation. Comes in sizes small, medium, large and extra large. Is it a video? An article? Podcast? Even if they can identify it as something more specific than “content,” they have no idea what its value is. You can have “83 units” of content but if they’re all rubbish, they’re meaningless. Better to have one good item, video or whatever. But then you would have to do the work of figuring out what “good” would mean to your customers. Oops. Now you have to leave the office and go to where the real world is.

    Now I sound crabby. :-)
    .-= Bill´s last blog ..What is the story? =-.

  • http://www.business-blogging.co.uk Lance Concannon

    Excellent post – finally, a bit of good sense in the social media echo chamber!
    .-= Lance Concannon´s last blog ..Why PR needs to stop trying to understand blogs =-.

  • http://www.mediabadger.com Giles (Webconomist)

    Ah! Thanks so much for addressing these topics…the rules of business and economics still apply as they always have. Why do we think they should be tossed out along with common sense?
    .-= Giles (Webconomist)´s last blog ..Keeping Your Mouth Shut In A Social Media Crisis =-.

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  • http://www.mediabadger.com Giles (Webconomist)

    Ah! Thanks so much for addressing these topics…the rules of business and economics still apply as they always have. Why do we think they should be tossed out along with common sense?
    .-= Giles (Webconomist)´s last blog ..Keeping Your Mouth Shut In A Social Media Crisis =-.

  • http://kjamindfinds.com/ The KJA Crew

    “Attention only matters if can move people beyond noticing, and into investing their time and energy.”

    Otherwise it’s just white noise. We don’t need more noise.

    This is superb Amber from 1 – 9. Thanks for cutting through the BS and glorified “expertise”.
    .-= The KJA Crew´s last blog ..Tasty team-building =-.

  • http://kjamindfinds.com/ The KJA Crew

    “Attention only matters if can move people beyond noticing, and into investing their time and energy.”

    Otherwise it’s just white noise. We don’t need more noise.

    This is superb Amber from 1 – 9. Thanks for cutting through the BS and glorified “expertise”.
    .-= The KJA Crew´s last blog ..Tasty team-building =-.

  • http://orange-envelopes.com/blog/ John Heaney

    Thanks for another thought provoking post, Amber.

    Spot on that the discussion needs to shift from “you need to be here” to dissemination of best practices and an exploration and sharing of innovative applications and accomplishments. We don’t read endless tracts from direct marketers insisting that you just have to be doing direct mail – it’s proven effective for some applications and the discussions have evolved into examination and analysis to determine if, when and how you should use the platform. No different, really, from any social media platform.

    We don’t need more social media evangelists, we need insight, expertise and ingenuity.
    .-= John Heaney´s last blog ..Nestle Tastes Social Media Failure =-.

  • http://orange-envelopes.com/blog/ John Heaney

    Thanks for another thought provoking post, Amber.

    Spot on that the discussion needs to shift from “you need to be here” to dissemination of best practices and an exploration and sharing of innovative applications and accomplishments. We don’t read endless tracts from direct marketers insisting that you just have to be doing direct mail – it’s proven effective for some applications and the discussions have evolved into examination and analysis to determine if, when and how you should use the platform. No different, really, from any social media platform.

    We don’t need more social media evangelists, we need insight, expertise and ingenuity.
    .-= John Heaney´s last blog ..Nestle Tastes Social Media Failure =-.

  • http://www.obsessedwithconformity.com Jim Mitchem

    #6 – finally. Not only is content not king, bad content is like hemlock. i could write my ass off on something, but if there’s not a goal for it, if it doesn’t invite some kind of interaction or persuade people to do something, it’s freaking worthless. How about this for content, “Just do it.” Three words. Power.
    .-= Jim Mitchem´s last blog ..The Least Worst Option – Revisited =-.

  • http://www.obsessedwithconformity.com Jim Mitchem

    #6 – finally. Not only is content not king, bad content is like hemlock. i could write my ass off on something, but if there’s not a goal for it, if it doesn’t invite some kind of interaction or persuade people to do something, it’s freaking worthless. How about this for content, “Just do it.” Three words. Power.
    .-= Jim Mitchem´s last blog ..The Least Worst Option – Revisited =-.

  • http://www.mrwrite.biz Joe Zeigler

    <3 this Amber.

    I can't possibly add to your salient points – other than to suggest everyone go back and read through them second time, as I did, to assure you don't miss anything.

  • http://www.mrwrite.biz Joe Zeigler

    <3 this Amber.

    I can't possibly add to your salient points – other than to suggest everyone go back and read through them second time, as I did, to assure you don't miss anything.

  • http://www.twitter.com/beccabernstein Becca Bernstein

    Thanks for a refreshing no-holds barred commentary on all of this. Especially love the tone. Seriously, it’s about time someone said it without the saccharin.
    .-= Becca Bernstein´s last blog ..beccabernstein: @rpulvino Ok, Richy Richenstein. Get ready for me to whip your booty into shape on the hardwoods. #140bracket =-.

  • http://www.twitter.com/beccabernstein Becca Bernstein

    Thanks for a refreshing no-holds barred commentary on all of this. Especially love the tone. Seriously, it’s about time someone said it without the saccharin.
    .-= Becca Bernstein´s last blog ..beccabernstein: @rpulvino Ok, Richy Richenstein. Get ready for me to whip your booty into shape on the hardwoods. #140bracket =-.

  • http://martinpigg.com Martin Pigg

    Amber,

    Thanks for your outstanding post. I’m with you on all of your points, especially number three: Entitlement to Free Stuff. This really hit home with me after seeing the heat a well-known blogger took for telling the social media world how much he charges for his services, while trying to explain that he gives away a lot of his information for free. He, and everyone else that does this work for a living, should never have to justify charging money for talent, knowledge and experience! In an ideal world, I guess we could all pay our mortgages and food bills with sunshine and rainbows. But until then, my message is this: If you don’t place a value on your time, talents, knowledge, and experience someone else will!
    .-= Martin Pigg´s last blog ..Will Your Life be a Foot-note or a Foot-print? =-.

  • http://martinpigg.com Martin Pigg

    Amber,

    Thanks for your outstanding post. I’m with you on all of your points, especially number three: Entitlement to Free Stuff. This really hit home with me after seeing the heat a well-known blogger took for telling the social media world how much he charges for his services, while trying to explain that he gives away a lot of his information for free. He, and everyone else that does this work for a living, should never have to justify charging money for talent, knowledge and experience! In an ideal world, I guess we could all pay our mortgages and food bills with sunshine and rainbows. But until then, my message is this: If you don’t place a value on your time, talents, knowledge, and experience someone else will!
    .-= Martin Pigg´s last blog ..Will Your Life be a Foot-note or a Foot-print? =-.

  • http://www.socialmissfit.com Nicole Hamilton

    Amber – good thoughts here. On a positive note, I would like to see more discussions around leveraging social media inside organizations…with your employees, stakeholders, etc. and the impact it has on the culture of your organization. I loved your post, “Getting Real About Creating Change,” it was refreshing and touched on a challenge our company faces everyday with our clients, but rarely seems to be talked about. Hope to see more of those discussions in the future!

    Nicole
    .-= Nicole Hamilton´s last blog ..Putting a Plan into Action =-.

  • http://www.socialmissfit.com Nicole Hamilton

    Amber – good thoughts here. On a positive note, I would like to see more discussions around leveraging social media inside organizations…with your employees, stakeholders, etc. and the impact it has on the culture of your organization. I loved your post, “Getting Real About Creating Change,” it was refreshing and touched on a challenge our company faces everyday with our clients, but rarely seems to be talked about. Hope to see more of those discussions in the future!

    Nicole
    .-= Nicole Hamilton´s last blog ..Putting a Plan into Action =-.

  • Duke Long

    Whew!!!I feel better. Posted out to all my Commercial real estate peeps.

  • Duke Long

    Whew!!!I feel better. Posted out to all my Commercial real estate peeps.

  • http://webandyou.avelient.com Mariano

    Amber,

    This. Is. Awesome.

    I wouldn’t necessarily call myself a social media expert, nor would I consider myself a motivational speaker, but I do speak to people regularly about social media and how it can be useful as a tool for one’s business, and I run into everything you talk about all the time.

    Thanks so much for the terrific insight!
    .-= Mariano´s last blog ..Simply SEO =-.

  • http://thesocialrobot.com Kelsey

    Great thoughts here– I try not to follow into these topics, but sometimes it’s hard because there are so many people who are uneducated about social media and ask the same questions over and over.
    .-= Kelsey´s last blog ..How to get your social media profiles crawled by search bots =-.

  • http://webandyou.avelient.com Mariano

    Amber,

    This. Is. Awesome.

    I wouldn’t necessarily call myself a social media expert, nor would I consider myself a motivational speaker, but I do speak to people regularly about social media and how it can be useful as a tool for one’s business, and I run into everything you talk about all the time.

    Thanks so much for the terrific insight!
    .-= Mariano´s last blog ..Simply SEO =-.

  • http://thesocialrobot.com Kelsey

    Great thoughts here– I try not to follow into these topics, but sometimes it’s hard because there are so many people who are uneducated about social media and ask the same questions over and over.
    .-= Kelsey´s last blog ..How to get your social media profiles crawled by search bots =-.

  • http://www.rnrprogram.com Jackie Savi-Cannon

    As someone who is finally discovering how social media makes sense for my work, I think this article is great. I think social media’s stealth like impact has taken many businesses by surprise and now everyone is scrambling trying to use old marketing tools that no longer have relevance. It is like wearing a baby-blue tux from the seventies to a formal event. Only certain people can actually pull that off. I am attending A day with Seth Godin in a few weeks so I am excited to learn more about this amazing way of connecting with people that make sense for the life you want to create – business or otherwise.

    Great post thanks,
    Jackie

  • http://www.rnrprogram.com Jackie Savi-Cannon

    As someone who is finally discovering how social media makes sense for my work, I think this article is great. I think social media’s stealth like impact has taken many businesses by surprise and now everyone is scrambling trying to use old marketing tools that no longer have relevance. It is like wearing a baby-blue tux from the seventies to a formal event. Only certain people can actually pull that off. I am attending A day with Seth Godin in a few weeks so I am excited to learn more about this amazing way of connecting with people that make sense for the life you want to create – business or otherwise.

    Great post thanks,
    Jackie

  • http://www.kamihuyse.com Kami Huyse

    So let me see…Are you saying that we should have a PURPOSE and REASON for the things we do? And that we should also measure our RESULTS?

    I am aghast!

    Funny but your #3, about Free Stuff, fits right into a rant that I need to have today. I think a link is in order here.

    To be constructive, I will say that my clients have really moved away from the “we need a Facebook page” phase into the “how does this fit with our business phase.”

    The only people really still talking about these points (except #1 which still has a lot of legs in the marketplace) are social media consultants.

    I will also defend the “universal constants” point a bit since bigger corporate clients need some guidance on what resources they will need. That goes back to the ROI point, and the true meaning of ROI. Part of the Investment is human resources. I find that this is a pretty straightforward education point for clients. But, I realize this was a rant.

    A very entertaining one, too. :-)

    @kamichat
    .-= Kami Huyse´s last blog ..Perspectives: Conference Etiquette for Social Media Celebs (and the Rest of Us) =-.

  • Steve

    10. Amber Has Straight Hair in Her New Avatar Pic
    Get over it already, people.

    Great stuff, Amber – as always. Everyone loves a good rant.

  • http://www.kamihuyse.com Kami Huyse

    So let me see…Are you saying that we should have a PURPOSE and REASON for the things we do? And that we should also measure our RESULTS?

    I am aghast!

    Funny but your #3, about Free Stuff, fits right into a rant that I need to have today. I think a link is in order here.

    To be constructive, I will say that my clients have really moved away from the “we need a Facebook page” phase into the “how does this fit with our business phase.”

    The only people really still talking about these points (except #1 which still has a lot of legs in the marketplace) are social media consultants.

    I will also defend the “universal constants” point a bit since bigger corporate clients need some guidance on what resources they will need. That goes back to the ROI point, and the true meaning of ROI. Part of the Investment is human resources. I find that this is a pretty straightforward education point for clients. But, I realize this was a rant.

    A very entertaining one, too. :-)

    @kamichat
    .-= Kami Huyse´s last blog ..Perspectives: Conference Etiquette for Social Media Celebs (and the Rest of Us) =-.

  • Steve

    10. Amber Has Straight Hair in Her New Avatar Pic
    Get over it already, people.

    Great stuff, Amber – as always. Everyone loves a good rant.

  • http://realityuniversityandcheck.wordpress.com/ Nicholas

    So, so true.

    There is nothing like reading-a-rant to soothe the mind. Thank you.

    I’m currently developing the social media for a new company and it is laborious, but rewarding.

    N
    .-= Nicholas´s last blog ..Living in Halls, Halls, Halls. A Life of Luxury? =-.

  • http://realityuniversityandcheck.wordpress.com/ Nicholas

    So, so true.

    There is nothing like reading-a-rant to soothe the mind. Thank you.

    I’m currently developing the social media for a new company and it is laborious, but rewarding.

    N
    .-= Nicholas´s last blog ..Living in Halls, Halls, Halls. A Life of Luxury? =-.

  • http://www.aircut.com Russ

    Agreed, Amber. I’ve been calling myself a “Social Media Brat” since the beginning just because I hate the term “Guru” or “Expert” in terms of social media. No one is a guru, we’re all in this together. That should be the new slogan for social media: “We’re all in this together”.

  • http://www.aircut.com Russ

    Agreed, Amber. I’ve been calling myself a “Social Media Brat” since the beginning just because I hate the term “Guru” or “Expert” in terms of social media. No one is a guru, we’re all in this together. That should be the new slogan for social media: “We’re all in this together”.