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Steve says...

The images above should strike fear in any one who seeks attention - be it a brand, a politician or an individual. They come from Nielsen. The first (87) is the number of domains the average American visits in a month. The second (2600) is the number of web pages the average American visits in a month. 

This funnel is small when you think about the infinite choices we have today - an era of information abundance. And given that human attention doesn't scale, I anticipate these stats will remain stable. So how do you break through? Here are three steps I am considering in my work as a communicator ...

1) Limiting all writing to 400 words or less - that's what Leo Baubata is doing and I think he's on to something. (You can do the same with email.)

2) Doing more with visuals - most of my PowerPoint decks don't have bullet points and I am doing more with mindmapping. (According to the book Brain Rules, if information is presented just verbally orally, people only remember about 10 percent. This jumps to 65 percent if you add a picture.)

3) Embracing a hub and spoke approach - it's difficult to expect anyone to come to you. This is why I like Posterous. I can start something here and engage with it everywhere via their auto-posting feature

Is your message being heard? And if so, how are you coping

Filed under: attention, attention crash, marketing, simplicity, trends

Tony says...

We've seen an age of corporations and organizations that have perfected the skill of building their own Empires. The vertical alignment of vision, culture and mission has been refine and perfected to amazing results.

But now we are in an age where the small can act big, and the big small through learning to work horizontally. Doing that requires being aware of one's weaknesses, strengths and purpose to know where you best fit in the picture, instead of trying to be the whole picture. Now is a time in the church when we need to ask ourselves if we are willing to sacrifice our empire to help strengthen the kingdom, what we call the global church - the body of Jesus.

Is our vision grand enough to find the humility to partner with others?

Are we confident enough in who God is calling us to be, to just be that in well positioned platforms?

Are we willing to move from getting credit to being a part of a larger contribution to the world?

If our generation can find our confidence in God, and the humility of awareness I believe we can see an age of unity and renewal in the world unlike anything we've seen. I also believe that if our generation stumbles into finding confidence in the building of our own platforms and the hubris of thinking we could grow one thing large enough to make global impact on its own, we will see division and disillusionment in our faith at a staggering measure.


Tony says...

I was writing an email to a friend who is trying to get ramped up to using Twitter effectively on a large scale, here is what I gave him to begin with:
 
Starter Articles: (this is more really helpful practical usage advice - Chris is the best I've found for this)
 
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/how-i-use-twitter-at-volume/
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/do-you-have-to-touch-every-conversation/
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/a-simple-presence-framework/
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/define-a-social-media-system-for-yourself/
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/19-presence-management-chores-you-could-do-every-day/
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/laying-out-your-online-experience/
http://www.chrisbrogan.com/you-are-always-on/
 
Tools:
 
Seesmic Desktop (like Tweetdeck but I like it better) http://seesmic.com
Hootsuite (Allows multiple people to use a single account, is web based so groups, etc setup are on any computer it is used on.) http://hootsuite.com
Tweepular (This is a tool that makes it easy to mass follow the people that are already following you, etc. Twitter does limit users to only 1000 follows a day) http://tweepular.com/
Socialtoo This site helps you setup auto follow and auto unfollowing preferences for the account. http://socialtoo.com
Radian6 (It is fantastic for workflow, listening and responding to the social web) http://radian6.com
 
What would you add or adjust?


Human3rror says...


Human3rror says...


         
Click here to download:
I_feel_small_now....zip (99 KB)


Steve says...

MakeUseOf has two great sets of tips for staying on top of your online social life, without letting it run you. (Part I and Part II). This one is my particular favorite  - a mind map of your online social life.



(On a side note I am making heavy use of mindmapping these days. It's not mainstream yet and people dig it because, well, it's different)

Filed under: attention, lifehacks, tips

Teens between ages 13 and 17 listened to more online music in 2008 than they did in 2007, but acquired 19% less, according to research from the The NPD Group, which reported that this decline includes a combined 26% decrease in CD purchases and a 13% dip in paid digital downloads.

In the case of paid digital downloads, 32% of teens purchasing less digital music expressed discontent with the music that was available for purchase, while 23% say they already have a suitable collection of digital music, according to NPD’s music tracking surveys. Nearly one-quarter (24%) of teens also cited cutbacks in overall entertainment spending as a reason for buying fewer downloads.