Entries Tagged as 'podcasting'

free podcamp toronto 2009 audio promo

podcamp_toronto

[audio:http://www.audioconnell.com/clientuploads/mp3/pcto09_promo_audiconnell.mp3]
Right click here to download this promo!

For those podcasters or bloggers who would be so inclined, please feel free to download and use my contribution to the “call to arms” (or promos, actually) for Podcamp Toronto 2009.

If you would be willing (you don’t have to) please tag the spot with the mention of the blog address (www.voxmarketising.com) the website address (www.audioconnell.com) or the audio tag “audio promo courtesy of audio’connell voice over talent – the perfect choice for an awesome voice!”

Thanks and we’ll see you there!

podcamp toronto 2009

podcamp_toronto

I hope, if you’re going to be within 2-3 hours of Toronto on February 21-22, you’ll stop by Rogers Communications Centre at Ryerson University for Podcamp Toronto 2009.

To learn about social media at any level (newbie, intermediate, pro) and maybe even more importantly to actually meet the people who make up the community, this event is unparalleled.

The event is free. The people are smart and friendly. Go there.

It looks like this event will conflict with my son’s birthday party on Saturday (discussions are on going though I do prioritize birthday cake over podcamps) but I fully intend to be there on Sunday.

podcamp toronto 2009

podcamp_toronto_icon

Got word last night off the wiki from Connie Crosby that Podcamp Toronto is set for February 21 and 22 again at Ryerson University (a great set up for the camp).

Now I am pretty sure already that some how that date could interfere with my son’s first birthday party unless we do it the weekend before or the week after….and if you’ve got people traveling from out of town, the later in February they have to travel to Buffalo, the better. So we’ll see how THAT discussion goes.

But be that as it may or may not, save the date and stay in touch. It should be great, especially if YOU are there.

blog day 2008 is today? whoops!

blogday2008

OK, not to criticize the founders of Blog Day 2008 but I only found out about it today by reading another blog. And picking the Sunday of Labor Day weekend would not have been my first choice from a publicity perspective.

OK I guess I did criticize but I’m done now being Mr. Cranky Pants.

So the concept is thus:

BlogDay was created with the belief that bloggers should have one day dedicated to getting to know other bloggers from other countries and areas of interest. On that day Bloggers will recommend other blogs to their blog visitors.
With the goal in mind, on this day every blogger will post a recommendation of 5 new blogs. This way, all blog readers will find themselves leaping around and discovering new, previously unknown blogs.

So here are 5 blogs (in no special order) that I would recommend you check out from my personal RSS list of over 150 blogs on my Google Reader about voiceover, marketing, advertising, broadcasting and other crap (woe to you who should think all those categories fall under “crap”).

1. Trafcom News I can’t articulate to you how bright and talented I think Donna Pappacosta is personally but trust me when I say she is and when you want some generally interesting insight into print, new media (great podcasting stuff) and face-to-face communications, this blog from her business, Trafalgar Communications, is a worthy read.

2. The Daily Nightly this is the blog of NBC Nightly News anchor and managing editor Brian Williams who I first noticed as a top notch talk show host guest on late night talk shows. Bright, articulate and yet still knowledgeable about world and domestic issues. His writing style is something I appreciate and his content is insightful. Other NBC News folks contribute but Brian’s posts are the ones I most like to read.

3. NewscastStudio Blog Well, to enjoy this blog you have to be an admitted behind the scenes of broadcast news geek like me who loves reading about new news sets and graphics and promotion of news (local and national). You get to see the creation of sets (before and after) of stations and networks around the country. The only salvation in my public revelation of this (my) particular geeky trait is that if there is a blog about this, I can’t be the only geek around.

4. Copyblogger To quote its author Brian Clark: “What’s the missing ingredient that prevents most people from succeeding online? Copywriting skills. Content drives the Internet, and using the right words in the right way will determine not only how well your site converts visitors into sales, but also how well you rank in search engines and how many links you get.” Exactly. Every little thing he writes about will not directly pertain to your internet or marketing strategies but enough of it will to make it a read worth your time and subscription.

5. Brand New – It’s pretty evident to anyone who knows me I’m kind of a logo design slut. The creative, the methodology, the evolution and the final product is something I find very fun. And the fact that there is usually millions of someone else’s dollars riding on its success just adds to my fun. It’s logos before and after with some often funny critiques along the way.

A final note- you’ll notice not one voice over blog on my list. You’ll also notice a plethora of links in column on the right of this post to darn near every voice over blog that I am aware of…a list that’s posted 24/7/365; not just on August 31st.

Enjoy the reads.

subscribe and save*

Mark your calendars for September 1, 2008. You NEED to know this date.

Why?

BECAUSE that’s the date we will be changing this blog’s current RSS feed address exclusively to a Feed Burner subscription address.

For subscribers and potential subscribers its an easy more effective way to subscribe. For voxmarketising (we, us, me), it offers better analytics. There will be no major change in what you see and the writing will remain as unreadable as always. You will also be notified when and if we ever publish another voxmarketising podcast with this feed (oy, are we behind on THAT!)

YOUR JOB NOW is to delete the old RSS address in your reader and click on that big bright orange button on the right hand corner of the blog that says “subscribe to the new RSS feed”.

See it up there?

I just did it in about 15-20 seconds. And you’re probably more coordinated that I am so for you it won’t even take that long.

For the next 30 days, we’ll keep both subscriptions available but as of September 1st, subscription notices will ONLY GO TO FEEDBURNER SUBSCRIBERS.

We hope you’ll make the switch with us…we’d miss you terribly if you left. (*Oh, and there really isn’t any kind of savings in this for you, as the title suggests. That was just an ugly marketing ploy to draw you in.)

And for those of you who think RSS stands for “Really Smelly Sink” (and you know who you are) here is a classic video from our friends at Common Craft to explain what RSS really is.

some folks go splat! (fail) in social media

Whether its blogging, podcasting, social networks (like LinkedIn etc) and the other tools, some folks either understand social media or they don’t.

But just because they don’t understand the tools and more importantly the community, doesn’t mean they don’t pick a channel and run amok. They just look a little foolish doing it.

New Blog

I was pinged to a new blog today being written by a fairly well know broadcasting name. That’s about as much information as I am willing to share as I’m not looking to bury the person. But in this individual’s frequent communications via various media over many years (long before social media was even a concept) this individual’s writing and attitude kind of rubbed me the wrong way.

Hyper-critical when critical would have been fine. Self-aggrandizing and always selling something (and for those who may be confused, I am not talking about myself in the third person here).

For what its worth, this same individual seems to make a good living at communicating and selling his/her wares. For my taste, it lacks a kind of style but maybe that’s just me.

So as I read this new blog I see some terrific content! Read some stuff, watch some stuff and think to myself “hey, good effort.” Then I read the very bottom of the blog.

Splat!

It’s a disclaimer about the content contained on the blog. I’ll have to offer a paraphrased summary to maintain the blog’s anonymity but also because as this disclaimer intimates ‘woe to the persons who tries to use any of my stuff elsewhere’. What?

Basically if you post something on this blog, you can use “your” content anywhere you want and (the author notes) so can they in her/his various communication tools. It goes on to say that no one can use any of his/her stuff anywhere.

This person does not understand social media and how to be successful in it.

Different Rules

I am no stranger to copyright and ownership laws etc. And those laws can be applied to content in social media. Certainly nobody wants their content stolen and repackaged under another author’s name. I get that.

But have you ever looked up the definition of social media. I don’t think this person had. Let’s check in with our friends at Wikipedia.

“Primarily, social media depends on interactions between people as the discussion and integration of words builds shared-meaning, using technology as a conduit.

Social media utilities create opportunities for the use of both inductive and deductive logos by its users. Claims or warrants are quickly transitioned into generalizations due to the manner in which shared statements are posted and viewed by all.”

Do you see a word that dominates in those graphs? Shared. In fact, in the blogosphere, the more you’re quoted or linked to the greater your popularity. People feel your content is worth sharing and discussing. That’s a compliment, hello!

To not allow sharing, indeed to forbid it, is akin to buying the car and not bothering with the gasoline. What’s the point?

Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell

If there is content you want to hold sacred (and that’s true in my case, on occasion) then don’t post it. The community (probably also a foreign concept to this person) will only absorb what you put out there. In social media, the rules are completely different from “what was”.

People can produce podcasts and twitter and blog until their blue in the face but if they don’t bother to understand the foundation of social media, they are only communicating with themselves.

And in high school they told me I could go blind doing that.