ayo tech

WTF is "Social Media"?

It's an exciting time over at Journalists for Human Rights with new projects and new hires flying left and right. But excitement is often a sign of hectic schedules and that was definitely the case yesterday with the office buzzing with our new batch of interns. It was a full day of training and introductions trying to get our fantastic new team ready to take on the craziness that's in store for the next few months. Anyway, just thought I'd fill you in on what I've been up to and share a presentation I had to deliver yesterday afternoon...enjoy :)

 

 

 

Guest Blogging Stint over at Ben's Blog - Social Media for Non-Profits

The potential of social media couldn't be any greater and more valuable than for the non-profit sector, where resources are often scarce and funding is hard to come by. So the question that plagues the minds of thought leaders in the field is “how can we tap into and harness the power of this so-called ’social media’ to help create a real, meaningful, and lasting difference”? It’s a formula that no one has quite yet perfected and one that will undoubtedly take much time to figure out.

Working at Journalists for Human Rights for a few months now, I really feel like we've made real inroads in developing a multifaceted and always evolving social media strategy. Read about the lessons I've learned while treading the unsteady waters of this new phenomenon here on Ben Peterson's non-profit management blog.

Guys, My Bra Colour is Pink - Let the Cries of Controversy Begin!

So this seemingly playful bra colour meme that's been taking over Facebook for the past few days has, well, proven not to be so playful anymore with many crying out with controversy.

Rethink Breast Cancer's Save the Boobs Campaign For those of you who don't know, here's a brief run down...basically, some time last week a message going out to girls (and some guys) went viral asking us to change our 'status' to the colour of our bra as a way of raising breast cancer awareness. I got the message last Thursday from a good friend of mine and yes, I most definitely changed my status. Before long, my entire news feed was filled with a fabulous array of colours. Okay, fantastic! People are participating! I thought it was a fun and clever way to generate buzz on such an important issue but of course, it had to turn sour with some women outraged by the whole concept's sexual undertones and the supposed objectification of women. Personally, I think that's a whole load of feminist baloney. If you ask me, this whole line of reasoning only fuels the whole image of the woman as the victim and personally, I'm tired of being portrayed as such because uh, I'm not. And I know a hell of a lot of other women who aren't either. Have we not reached the point in time where we can quit the whining bullshit? Plus, has the brassiere not been used as a strategic tool in the past to make such important statements? Why not now? Crying foul at announcing one's bra colour is a) so immature and b) incredibly passé.

This is not to say, of course, that the campaign is a good one. Sure, I think it's cute, clever, simple and has the potential to accomplish some real concrete changes. But like many other cute, clever, and simple ideas out there, this one is lacking and most certainly not infallible. The problem with the whole bra colour meme for me is not the intimate details that it reveals but the whole campaign's lack of direction. Yes, people have changed their status but what does that translate to?  Who even started this trend? Because apparently, no one knows. Was it a cancer research organization, a patient/survivor, or just some random individual? And even if we do know, does that matter? How exactly has it raised awareness about breast cancer? And in any case, how would we define and measure "awareness"? What actions are taking place because of this? Are people donating more money to cancer research? Are more women getting mammograms because of it? Have more people researched breast cancer because of this development or has this all just been a silly game of sexual innuendos?

Rebecca Leaman of the Wild Apricot Blog asks the most appropriate question in this case, "Did it work?". So what the focus should be and the question that people should be asking is 'what exactly has this whole thing accomplished?'. Yes, awareness is the first and most necessary step but awareness without action is worthless. We need to think impact! And when it comes down to the nitty gritty, I think that's what really matters....that's all that really matters. 

cystems launch

I kick-started 2010 with the launch of a project I've been working on for a bit now: the rebranded website of our family business, Cystems Inc. The site went live on New Year's Day and let me tell you, there is just no better way to start a new year than feeling totally productive and accomplished! So with that said, check out the website here at cystems.ca and feel free to give me any feedback/comments.

via Pop + ShortyAnyway, building the site reminded me of my early days working with HTML...way, way back during the time of AsianAvenue (which I have just recently discovered is now known as "AsianAve"). I know there are a number of you who still remember that site (don't lie now!). It's probably the first social networking website that I was ever involved with and now looking back on that, it's easy to see the seeds of this whole social media/social networking revolution. I remember back in the late 90s to the early '00s (yeah, it's been that long), all my friends and I would be on this site 24/7...it was the Facebook of that time, no doubt, and that's where I first learned the magic of markup languages. We'd all show off our "AA page" whenever we had a new layout up or any other kind of new addition. We'd write about our thoughts and about our day to day life...like an unrefined version of how we blog today. And we'd write on "guestbooks" just how we'd now write on each others "walls" or write each other a "testimonial" (remember Friendster?).

So even though I cringe at the thought of my AsianAvenue days, the truth is that I owe a lot of what I'm doing professionally to that time in my life. It's funny looking back and tracing the path of technology at a time when it was just bursting at its seams and being in the middle of its incredible explosion right now.

...But anywho, just thought I'd share some memories with you before I shamelessly plug Cystems Inc. one last time! Check it out, check it out!