Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Future Camp with Humber PR

January seems like a very, very long time ago ... to think I sat down in my first Humber PR social media class with no real grasp on what social media even was. I had no idea how to even blog or use Twitter for something other than reading what my favourite celebs had to say or tell people what I was doing. Feeling overwhelmed does not even begin to describe it.

Those were the days. Now ... four months later, I am blogging, tweeting and signing up for social media applications all the time. You can follow me on Twitter @Jady06 or read my personal blog to see what I am up to.

But where do we go from here?

What does the future have in store?

Who knows ... the online world is our oyster and it must use it to engage ourselves and promote our personal brands. To those future Humber PR students, you will feel overwhelmed and confused for about two months before you begin to get a handle on what social media really is but trust me, it gets easier!!

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Vancouver 2010 - The "Social Media" Olympics


Can social media be the unofficial sport of the 2010 Vancouver Olympics? Everyone from athletes, newscasters, bloggers and fans are furiously typing away. This makes the Olympics the hub of social media, with thousands of tweets being blasted out every hour.


The social media network, Twitter, has released a Verified Tweeting Olympians page where you can see what athletes are tweeting about on one page. They are following 104 athletes including American Johnny Weir to Canadian Joannie Rochette.






The Vancouver Organizing Committee, VANOC, has branched out to YouTube, Twitter and Facebook, recognizing the increasing role of social media.


In Alexandra Samuel describes it as “a living social media experiment”:

Social media was around for the Summer Games in Beijing, but this is the first time it will be deployed in a free and democratic regime. There’s good reason to expect that the Olympic experience will be transformed by the social media presence: it’s already changed the Olympic planning process for both the Games organizers and the media that’s now descending on the city.


Even sponsors like Molson are using social media for their Olympic campaigns. Their personalized Team Canada jerseys are part of their “Gear Up For Gold” campaign. Fans can pick up their personalized jersey on the brewer’s Facebook Fan Page, customize the gear, and make it your personal profile on Facebook and Twitter. In the spirit of the Games, and the need to show my Canadian pride, my current Facebook profile picture is my own personalized jersey.


...

UPDATE

Now that the games are over ... and we obviously had an impact on the games (I know many people who had the same profile pic as I did), Hockey Canada sent out a thank you to all their supporters.

I think I just liked that it was personalized ... well electronically but that's ok!

Many people have also reviewed the overall success of the 2010 Vancouver Olympics in terms of their social media usage. Take a look at this article for a review of what they did well and what went wrong!