Archive

Archive for the ‘Project Rethink’ Category

Hello, My Name is Shawn Welch

August 16th, 2009 shawnwelch 74 comments

For the past few months I’ve been meaning to update the look-and-feel of projectrethink.org.  As you can see, this new design is much cleaner than the old look-and-feel.  The primary goal of this redesign was to put more emphasis on original content.

Another big goal of the redesign was to bring more attention to the fact that there is a real person behind Project Rethink.  I think it’s important for a blog to have a voice.  My worst fear is that this blog becomes filled with anonymous “fluff” and buzz-words.

So as always, feel free to comment below and share your feedback!  You can also reach me via the contact page or just send me an email to info at projectrethink dot org

Thanks for reading!

-Shawn

Categories: Project Rethink Tags:

Let Viral Be Viral

July 30th, 2009 shawnwelch 87 comments

Imagine this scenario.  You are a major record label and you find that someone just uploaded a video to Youtube featuring a hit song from one of your artists. The knee-jerk reaction from most record labels is to declare copyright violations and have the video removed. Fortunately for Chris Brown and the Record Label: Jive, a different approach was taken.

Using Youtube’s Audio Content ID system the video, “JK Wedding Entrance Dance“ was identified as containing “Forever” by Chris Brown. However, instead of pulling the content Jive Record label capitalized on the viral nature of the video. According to the Official Google Blog, this was the right move:

This traffic is also very engaged — the click-through rate (CTR) on the “JK Wedding Entrance” video is 2x the average of other Click-to-Buy overlays on the site. And this newfound interest in downloading “Forever” goes beyond the viral video itself: “JK Wedding Entrance” also appears to have influenced the official “Forever” music video, which saw its Click-to-Buy CTR increase by 2.5x in the last week.

Source: Official Google Blog

So what’s the lesson here? If someone uses your content, it’s not always a bad thing. We need to fight the knee-jerk reactions to pull everything and ask questions later. According to Google, in the last week, over a year after its release, Chris Brown’s “Forever” has again rocketed up the charts, reaching as high as #4 on the iTunes singles chart and #3 on Amazon’s best selling MP3 list.

Categories: Project Rethink Tags:

Be a Champion?

March 9th, 2009 shawnwelch 132 comments

Currently I live equidistant between the main campuses of Harvard and MIT; needless to say there is a high IQ index and one is easily humbled. But over the last two or three weeks I have become preoccupied with the idea of champions.

A few weeks back I was in one of my favorite coffee shops and I overheard a small group talking. It was obvious this group was meeting for the first time, as they were making introductions and detailing a shopping list of their skills and assets. One of the introductions, however, caught me off gaurd.

“Hi, my name is [fill-in-the-blank], and I am a champion project manager

I immediately began thinking about this phrase, wondering what it meant to be a champion. The blogosphere and twitter are full of titles like professional, expert, guru, ninja, etc. Everyone tries to come up with the catchy, trendy title; but what do they mean? What does it mean to be more than an expert? What does it mean to be a champion?

With all of these question racing in my head a grabbed out a piece of paper and started writing down some of the characteristics of a champion.

The Characteristics of a Champion:

  1. Champions are not defined in a moment. Champions are defined through a history of excellence; champions rise through a journey.
  2. Being a champion does not mean perfection; plenty of champions screw up. A champion comes back from a mistake stronger and more determined. A champion comes out on top.
  3. Champions are not self-proclaimed. A champion is given their title by a group of their peers, colleagues, or even competition.
  4. Champions are not permanent and require self-improvement. A champion is always challenged and never stops learning or growing.

Here is a shortlist of some people I consider champions. I have a learned a lot from every person on this list, and if I haven’t met you, I look forward to thanking you in person some day.

*Sorry, I couldn’t settle on one social media champion. Maybe Laura and Chris will just have to battle it out?

What are your ideas of a champion?

Who are your champions?

(Please comment below)

Categories: Project Rethink Tags:

Digg Community Sings Queen

February 6th, 2009 shawnwelch 396 comments

Here is an interesting bit of remix for you. Recently a video was posted to youtube, David After Dentist, that took the world by storm. But what I found most interesting was what happened when this video was submitted to Digg.

During the video, David asks the question: “Is this real life?”

This question spawned a great comment thread on Digg; this is why I love the Internet.

Having trouble watching this video? Watch it on Youtube.

Categories: Project Rethink Tags:

You’re Doing it Right; Why Isn’t it Working?

January 27th, 2009 shawnwelch 112 comments

The Secret to Twitter

Chris Brogan wrote a great post today entitled “You’re Doing it Wrong”.  This fit so well with a post I had drafted last night I decided to turn it into a follow-up post.

Spend 5 minutes on Twitter and you are bound to find an expert, guru, or maven in just about any field; especially social media, marketing, and SEO.

Look at the list Chris put together and you’ll notice a common theme.  Rapid expansion and aggressive marketing is not the secret behind social media.

Social media is not the place for instant celebrity.

But even if you’re not doing it wrong, sometimes it feels like thinks aren’t working. Why?

There are 2 key principles to social media. Two reasons why people often start out doing things right, but end up doing things wrong:

  1. Patience, slow growth wins over aggressive expansion
  2. Build relationships along the way, interact and engage

We don’t like to wait.  The catch-22 of Twitter is it’s speed.  It’s tempting to join a network like Twitter and follow everyone under the sun because it’s easy and that feels like success.  But even if you pick up 500 or 600 auto-follow’s or a few polite follow-backs, you’ll quickly find you’re not the success you think you are.

Social media works because people talk to each other.  Aggressive expansion only results in one-way communication; and that will get you nowhere. 

There are a lot of really good posts about Twitter.  I’m sure you’ve read them, but if you haven’t this is a good starter list: (please add in the comments below more great posts on Twitter and social media)

Categories: Project Rethink Tags: