Reporting Our Way to a Happier World: The Pollyanna Effect

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"Transforming the News Media into Honest and Balanced News" is the tagline of the online Swedish newspaper www.Tillit.info that exists for the purpose of disseminating positive news. (I posted a an update about this on my Facebook page and someone asked "How do you know" since the site in in Swedish. I wish I could claim to have fabulous multi-lingual skills, but there is a link about three lines down in the center that says "Translate the website into your language.") I had a lovely email from Tillit's producer Jack Johansson and their CEO and publisher Mikael Engström describing their mission. I learned from them that Tillit means "trust" or "faith" in Swedish. Tillit has been working as a non-profit for for several years and has distributed more than 370 000 copies of positive news through volunteers. They have received an enormous positive response from their readers in Scandinavia. They are now working on a business plan in order to get investors,making Tillit an … [Read more...]

Why LinkedIn Works: The Strength of Weak Ties

From Advertising Age: LinkedIn Skyrockets as Job Losses Mounts. The impressive rise in LinkedIn participation shows the power of social media and the cognitive shift from hunting for "jobs" to connecting with people. Good time to reread Granovetter's "The Strength of Weak Ties" or Barabasi's Linked: How Everything Is Connected to Everything Else and What It Means.  These should be required reading for anyone working with or interested in social media applications. (BTW, Linked is available in audio for commuters and aural learners.) The strength of weak ties was one of the seminal papers in the development of network theory to social processes. Both Granovetter's paper, and Barabasi's book, which takes a broader look at the development of network theory, explain why social media networks have such tremendous reach and power, and why LinkedIn is such an effective resource for career change and employment opportunities. Granovetter's original paper was published in 1973. A 1983 … [Read more...]

Politicans Have a Vested Interest in Traditional Media

It's hard (for me anyway) to not continually reflect on technology and emerging behaviors--and how that cycle manifests in the next technological development. I was reading Citizen Marketers today and the authors mentioned McLuhan’s remarks about the political changes resulting from the widespread introduction of television. This got me to the larger implications of the subtle changes in our culture from these amazing news tools and systems of connecting. In particular, I was thinking about how the incredible democratization of social media is threatening to seriously change the political arena. We saw how Obama effectively used social media to reach a new voting population. We also see him intensively using television communication—more frequently than any administration before him.  (That is not a value judgment, just an observation.) It struck me that politicians of both affiliations should prefer traditional media, not just because they are 'digital immigrants' … [Read more...]