And did I mention we have a new office?

September 9, 2006

On September 1st we have moved into the Looksmart building in the South of Market (SOMA) district of San Francisco. Brick walls, open floor plan, and a block from the ball park. Perfect space for the Social Media Club/BrainJams collective headquarters.

While we could have continued working out of our respective homes, there is something to be said for us all being in the same building, and being able to have a professional looking space to meet clients.

Our new mailing address is:

625 Second Street,
San Francisco, CA 94107

Phone: 415.348.7355 (Chris Heuer)

Feel free to call if you are in the area and we would be happy to give you the three second tour.

Sphere: Related Content

Rented a few Experts, Had Some Fun

July 20, 2006

Lawrence and Chris Talk SEOLast night we held our first ever Rent an Expert event. Despite some initial logistical confusion since so many people had come to offer their expertise, things worked out pretty well. We are going to take August off so we can focus on building the Social Media Club, but will be doing this again in the middle of September, so pay attention and look for the announcement.

All in all, everyone seemd to come away with some value and everyone had a fun time with our experiment. Thanks again to Joel Sacks and CNET for providing us with the venue, Rate It All for buying the beers, MindJet for donating the copy of MindManager, Stormhoek for the wine with limited edition Hugh Macleod signed prints and most importantly, my wonderful fiance Kristie Wells. Not only did she take care of all of the logistical details, she also did all the shopping, prepped the venue and kicked in some of her own cash so we could have extra munchies.

A few highlights:

We hosted 3 rounds of 30 minute expert sessions, including

All in all, it was a great event, we learned a lot, we had some fun and we are really looking forward to the next one in September.

Sphere: Related Content

I believe in karma.

July 19, 2006

I believe if you help others, good things will come back to you three fold.

I believe if you let go of a little, you will gain a lot.

I believe karma prevails in all situations.

———

Want to know who is testing karma tonight? Folks sharing bits of what they know at the Rent an Expert event being held at CNET’s offices in San Francisco. That’s who. These lovely people are donating their time and their expertise because they know good things come back around to those who help others succeed.

As of this morning, our ‘experts’ have signed up to cover the following topics:

  • Setting up a Word Press Blog - Chris Heuer, BrainJams
  • Search Engine Optimization - Lawrence Coburn, RateItAll
  • The Basics of Creating a Videoblog - Eddie Codel, GETV
  • Smack’ ‘em (Community Building) - Jonas M Luster, Your Intarweb Going Commando
  • The Secret to Kick-Ass BBQ - Eugene Eric Kim, Blue Oxen Associates
  • Innovate to be great! - Cathryn Hrudicka, Creative Sage
  • Publishing Globally to the Web - Arthur Law, Ion Global
  • MindMapping with MindJet – Tom Blossom, MindJet
  • Celestial videos/pictures for blogs, websites and sharing | A handy personal organizer - Rod Seddigh

Have something else you would like to share? Sign up as an expert.

Now, is there something you are dying to learn? Let us know. We believe it doesn’t matter how many people are in the room - the odds are good someone has the information you need (or at least knows how to get it). Add your request to the list and we will do our best to find an expert for you.

The event starts tonight at 5:30pm and will be at CNET’s headquarters (235 Second Street - between Howard and Folsom). Thanks to our sponsors* - there will be drinks and snacks so even if you already know it all, or prefer to keep your knowledge tucked away inside your own nogin, join us and at least mingle a bit. It will do you good.

Want to know more? General info can be found at http://rentanexpert.pbwiki.com/.

All I ask - is if you ARE coming, we would like you to register at http://rentanexpert.pbwiki.com/RegisterOnWiki to make sure we have a good headcount.
See you tonight!

* Event sponsors: CNET, RateItAll, MindJet, Stormhoek, and BrainJams.  Thank you all for your support!

Sphere: Related Content

Rent an Expert Event Wednesday in San Francisco

July 17, 2006

I am excited and a iittle nervous about the Rent an Expert event this Wednesday July 19th starting at 530pm over at CNet headquarters (235 2nd Street, San Francisco).  It still seems that a lot of people have expressed interest in coming that are not on the Wiki - I don’t know if it is because they don’t have the password “yeswecan” or because they don’t know how to edit a Wiki or because they are not really coming but are being nice to me :) Whatever, the reason, I will be there along with at least a couple dozen other good folks who want to share their expertise with others so it looks like this will be a very interesting experiment.The brief overview of the night is that people like you will be able to set up shop at one of the tables in the room offering your expertise in 15 or 30 minute appointments, helping people learn or do anything that you want to offer.  Sessions can be one on one or perhaps even done in a small group setting if appropriate.  People will pay a minimum of $1 per 15 minute sessions but are encouraged to spend more if the value they received was high.  Throughout the evening, everyone in attendace will vote on which charity will receive the donation of all the money collected.  At the end of the night, all the money and votes will be tallied and we will announce which charity is the big winner.  Also, the person who collected the most money will win a copy of MindManager Pro from Mindjet!

So now we need a few volunteers and could really use one more last minute sponsor since the company we had hoped to donate additional wine fell through (or rather, we never heard back from them after initial interest).  Volunteers will help with signage, managing the appointments, helping people get oriented when they arrive, setting up the room and a little bit of the cleanup.  Those of you who can volunteer, please show up around 5pm.

We will mix and mingle from about 530-6pm.  At 6pm we will do a little kickoff and the first appointments/sessions will begin at 615pm, continuing through till about 8 at which time we will collect all the monies and tally up the winners.  Make sense?  Do you have an idea that will make it better?  Want to sponsor or volunteer?  email Kristie [at] brainjams.org

Much love and thanks to our sponsors, CNet, MindJet, Rate It All, Stormhoek and Social Media Club.  We are hoping to do future events such as this on an ongoing basis as part of Social Media Club - this is just the first trial run of the experiment - we hope to learn a lot and are looking forward to seeing you there!

Related Links:  Original Blog Post | Wiki | Offer your ExpertiseRequest some Expertise | Help us Organize | RSVP on the Wiki

Sphere: Related Content

Building the Social Media Clubhouse

July 12, 2006

Now that we are ready to blow the roof off this joint and actually start promoting what we are doing to the world (instead of talking to a small audience of friends and colleagues), it is time to talk about our vision for how we will build Social Media Club from a discussion into a loosely joined association of passionate people. As I explained in the first post on this blog, “we wish to build a community that is truly of, by, and for the people it serves - people from all walks of life who care about, benefit from and create Social Media.” The question is how do we make this well intentioned idealism real?

The answer is first we need to turn the lights on. Then we start talking about our vision. We see who shows up. We listen. We embrace the ideas that are aligned with our values. We adapt our plans according to the needs and wishes of the community. We build a truly democratic process that encourages participation by respecting the value and contributions of every individual. We believe that smart, passionate leaders will emerge and step up to the challenge. They will be the ones who make Social Media Club a reality - all we have done is gather the firewood and and hand over the match.

The conversations about the future of Social Media Club will happen online though Social Media like Blogs, via our email discussion list on Yahoo Groups, within other ad-hoc group discussions, and most importantly through a series of BrainJams styled events we are organizing around the country over the next several months. These conversations will hopefully culminate with the formal Social Media Club launch at our Web 2point2 BrainJam in November 2006. So the next few months will be spent figuring out what we all collectively want from a group like Social Media Club, identifying who will be leading the organization, refining the values we want to encourage as a community, and working together on projects we want to support - whether our own or other’s that exist such as Creative Commons, Internet Archive and MicroFormats.

Over the next few weeks we will schedule a series of Social Media Club “Founder’s Circle” events around the country, and hopefully around the world, to discuss the future of social media in society. These half day and full day unconferences will bring together communications professionals, bloggers, podcasters, journalists, tool makers, service providers, teachers, artists, and others who are passionate about social media for the purpose of making connections and reinforcing local communities around our shared interests. The events will be slightly more structured than a typical Open Space, but will fully embody shared leadership and encourage active participation - with some sessions being very short monologues or demonstrations (no powerpoint), more sessions embracing Dave Winer’s principles for Discussion Leaders and others using the World Cafe format.

While the exact format of the Founder’s Circle events are still being determined, we have four outcomes we will seek from each event, with the final outcome being the formal launch of the organization.

1. Bringing people together in the local community to discover each other and share your understanding of Social Media. In essence, we hope to draw out the people who ‘get it’ to share what they know with others, so that more and more people eventually understand why Social Media is so powerful.

2. To discuss the operational plans for Social Media Club, improving upon them by brainstorming ideas for projects while engaging people more fully in the projects we are already undertaking, such as the New Media Release (hRelease) and local Social Media Club unconferences.

3. To identify local chapter leaders who are interested in making the vision for Social Media Club a reality where it really matters - within each community.

4. Finally, and most importantly, we will take this opportunity to collaborate with each other like paramedia around important areas of interest, organizing educational resources so that people who are trying to learn about Social Media can easily get involved and start creating.

In case it is not clear at this point, the primary focus we have for the organization is to help more people and organizations understand and fully utilize the potential of Social Media such as blogs, wikis, podcasts, vlogs, tagging, and peer to peer unconferences. The technology is important, and will play a big part in our work, but only as a tool that makes the world a better place for the people that use them. This principle is first and foremost in our thinking about the Social Media Club organization and applies equally to independents, small businesses, large corporations, artists, government entities, not for profits, for profits, educational institutions, communications firms - whether professional or amateur, from all walks of life.

Over the past several months with BrainJams, we have explored the world of ad-hoc collaboration, social learning, leadership, large group dialogue and what many people still refer to as Web 2.0. Through this process we have learned much about what works and what does not. Admittedly, I personally still have a lot to learn in this regards, but we have all come far in a short period of time. One area of particular concern is the delicate balance between too little structure and too much, and how the nature of the tools shapes the nature of participation. We hope to achieve this balance for the majority of everyday people and professionals who care about Social Media, but I expect we will make some mistakes along the way, so I am asking for some forgiveness for some of the screw ups I will make along the way.

This is where you can really help a great deal - besides joining the discussion on our Yahoo Group, volunteering to help, sponsoring one of our many Social Media Club Founder’s Circle Unconferences, or financially supporting us through a Membership, what we really need from you is your ideas, your feedback, your leadership and your complete honesty.

As Howard Rheingold says (and I often quote) “What it is –> is up to you.”

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Sphere: Related Content