Posts Tagged ‘social media’

Keeping Up with the Cyber Current

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

From Octane magazine: “Keeping Up With the Cyber Current”:

In the June 2009 issue of Octane, Entrepreneurial Organization’s quarterly magazine, I outlined SSRN’s “three-step approach” to expanding our online presence through social media.  The approach is an ongoing process that allows us to evolve and accommodate the needs of our users as technology evolves.  As part of this expansion, SSRN added sharing technology for popular sites, such as Digg and Del.icio.us, and joined Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter.  Our three-step approach is:

  1. Know your users - who are they? what are they trying to accomplish?
  2. Create the conversation - how are you going to communicate with them?
  3. Adapt to meet our communities needs - what do you plan to do to keep it current?

It is definitely a learning experience for us and I look forward to your feedback about how we can improve.  Please comment below or write to me Gregg_Gordon@SSRN.Com .

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Differing Views of Social Media

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

Richard Stacy had an interesting blog post about journalism and the sanctity of publication. In this post he discusses the indignant attitude of journalists as it relates to the social media and how traditional journalists view traditional publications as the only forms of discourse to be valued.

I am excited that we are seeing a contrary attitude in scholarly publishing. I have participated in two very forward thinking blogger symposiums: Bloggership - How Blogs Are Transforming Legal Scholarship* at the Berkman Center at Harvard Law School in April 2006 (yes, 2006!), and the more recent Economics Bloggers Forum at the Kauffman Foundation. The participants of both symposiums accepted social media as being part of the discourse and Bloggership produced several interesting papers. Even the staid, traditional group of scholarly publishers at the Society of Scholarly Publishers Meeting in Baltimore had a Twitter following with 170 Tweets during the conference, and about 40 since the conference.

There is a lot of change needed in scholarly publishing but at least some in scholarly publishing are not looking at social media with an indignant attitude.


*Click on “more>” after “How Blogs Are Transforming Legal Scholarship” on Berkman’s website for more information on the Bloggership Symposium, including Podcasts of all sessions.

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SSRN joins Twitter, Facebook, & LinkedIn

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Today’s post was originally going to be a quick one describing what we are doing with “social networking” and how to follow us.  It still includes instructions below, but I was reviewing my notes from Clay Shirky’s Here Comes Everybody for my AACSB presentation last week and realized a couple of fairly obvious points.

First, as scholarly research has moved from a model of scarcity to one of information overabundance, content is no longer king.  The conversation that surrounds the content is king, along with the innovation that occurs because of the easier access. My simple definition of innovation is the ability to create new things by being exposed to a broader and deeper set of existing things.  Easier access to research and the conversation facilitates innovation.

Second, access needs to be based on each user’s perspective and personal style.  Just as we digest food in different ways (sitting at a quiet table for two, standing at the sink, etc.) at different times, we digest information in different ways at different times.  The key is to provide access in variety of ways that work for different people at different times.

Thus, we are expanding how you can get content from the SSRN eLibrary and will continue to expand as new and different means are created.  As Chris Anderson wrote, “Long tail businesses treat consumers as individuals, offering mass customization as an alternative to mass market fare.”  We aren’t there yet, but we are trying.

OK, back to the originally scheduled post …

With the growth of the Internet, social networking has expanded to allow a person to connect with another person in real time regardless of geography or to access information no matter where it is stored.  We see a plethora of opportunities for the SSRN Community using these tools.  As a first step, we have joined Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn and will post updates, announcements, and other items to them regularly.

Here is how to find us:

Twitter:
http://twitter.com/SSRN

Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Rochester-NY/SSRN/36086731835

LinkedIn:
http://www.linkedin.com/groupRegistration?gid=40866