My iRiver died…

Up the iRiverMy iRiver T30 gave up the ghost today. It’s done. Kaput. Not working.

I’d welcome advice on a good replacement for it.

I use it primarily to record voice clips at conferences either through the built in mic or via a feed from a sound system. Size is important. I’m looking for the smallest size I can get so that I can slip it into my pocket. So, I think a 1GB flash drive is what I want. Finally, I want to be able to transfer the files easily via USB to my PC.

Do you know of or use a digital audio recorder that sounds like it will fit my needs? If so, I’d appreciate it if you could leave a comment with any info and recommendation you could offer to me.

Thanks for you help with this.

Stephen Taylor – Political blogging in Canada

Stephen Taylor the co-founder of Canada’s Blogging Tories, gave the Third Monday group an insider’s perspective on political blogging.

Taylor began blogging in January 2004 when the Conservative leadership contest was just getting underway. “I’ve always had my opinions and I needed a better forum. … I thought that blogging might be a good way for a kid to get his views out there.”

In December 2004, he registered the Blogging Tories domain name. He found a few other like-minded Conservative bloggers and they all agreed to aggregate their feeds on bloggingtories.

The other parties – the Liberals and New Democrats – have followed blogging Tories. But Taylor and his friends try to stay ahead. At this point, Taylor believes that the Blogging Tories have a six month lead on the other parties in the way that they use social media.

Have the blogging Tories had a tangible impact on the debate? Taylor offered that “many people see us as all sharing a small c conservative libertarian point of view.” You can be accused of being in an echo chamber if you fall behind the party line all the time. “However, there is both the development of new ideas and debate.”

What’s next? We’re thinking of starting a policy Wiki. However, it would have to be limited to only approved people. It couldn’t be open to hijacking.

Taylor recently clashed with the Parliamentary Press Gallery about his right to conduct an interview in the Rotunda of Parliament. After this episode, Taylor went to the Parliamentary Press Gallery to obtain an application for Gallery membership. He found that the application requires that a member of the Gallery not have any outside partisan or other interests. He notes that several members of the Gallery have taken contracts with other organizations – including the government they are supposed to be covering. He believes that there is a debate that needs to be had about membership in the Gallery. Taylor added that the Liberal Party had offered him full credentials as a blogger to cover the Liberal Leadership convention last December.

Stephen also spoke of his calling out of the CBC’s Christina Lawand’s coverage of a press conference by the Prime Minister. Taylor pointed out that editing of the CBC’s report was misleading and biased against the Prime Minister. After much heated debate, the CBC was forced to “express regret” for the coverage. He believes that this is a positive example of the power of articulate and clear-minded political bloggers to exercise some oversight over the Mainstream Media.

How about anonymous comments in response to blog posts? “Anonymity plus audience may creat the most horrible coniditions for a discussion.” Some political bloggers have shut down comments. Taylor has turned on moderation on his comments. “How do you regulate free speech? It is private property after all? I’ve turned on moderation and tried to find balance. If I see a comment that you’d be uncomfortable seeing the person about whom a comment has been written, I filter it out.” Taylor estimates that he needs to refuse about one in fifty comments on this grounds.

This was a great session with a very smart and genuinely nice person. If Stephen’s objective in doing this event was to put a more moderate and reasonable face on conservatism … Mission Accomplished.

UPDATE: Stephen Taylor has posted his thoughts on the Third Monday discussion about blogging and journalism.

Yahoo's Hunter Madsen will speak at Third Tuesday

Hunter MadsenYahoo!‘s services are close to the heart of every blogger. Flickr, del.icio.us, Upcoming. They provide us with means of finding, publishing and sharing information as we connect to and build our online communities.

And we wonder about their future. What plan does Yahoo! have for their social media services? Will they improve and offer new features that we can use to better connect with our communities? And for some of us, how can Yahoo! help us to generate revenue from our blogging efforts?

On April 24th., we’ll have a chance at Third Tuesday to talk about these and other issues with Hunter Madsen, Yahoo! Canada’s Head of Marketing.

Third TuesdayThis promises to be a good event. So, if you want the latest scoop on what’s happening at Yahoo! and their plans for social media, jump over to the Third Tuesday Meetup site and register to attend the event with Hunter Madsen.

Blogging Tory Stephen Taylor is speaking at Third Monday on April 16

The two StephensWill Prime Minister Stephen Harper call a spring election? Everybody in Ottawa wants the answer to this question. And I’m hoping that the other Stephen – Stephen Taylor – will provide us with the answer when he speaks at Third Monday on April 16.

Stephen is appearing at Third Monday thanks to an invitation from Brendan Hodgson. In his post about this, Brendan said:

through their diligence, dedication, spirited writing, willingness to question, and no-holds-barred discourse, a few bloggers have risen to the fore as powerful players in their own right. In Canada, Stephen Taylor is one of those.

As co-founder of the Blogging Tories, Stephen is arguably one of the more influential voices in Canadian politics, and a welcome guest for our next Third Monday, on April 16, 2007.

Third MondayWe’ve been having great conversations at Third Monday this year. So if you are planning to be in the National Capital Region on Monday, come join us on April 16 to hear from leading political blogger Stephen Taylor and to discuss the impact of social media on politics in Canada.

Get the full details and register to attend at the Third Monday meetup site.

If you only read 12 blogs…

As I was reading through my copy of the April 16 issue of Marketing Magazine this morning, I was surpised (and more than a little delighted) to see that ProPR on the magazine’s “If you only read 12 blogs…” recommended list.

The full list includes: Joe Jaffe’s JaffeJuice, Seth Godin‘s blog, Jackie Huba’s and Ben O’Connell’s Church of the Customer, AdRANTS and fellow Canadians Mitch Joel’s Twist Image, OneDegree.ca, Sean Moffitt’s Buzz Canuck, Kate Trgovac’s mynameiskate, Michael Seaton’s The Client Side, and the CMA’s Canadian Marketing Blog .

I’m really honoured to be in such great company.

Marketing says about ProPR:

“Joseph Thornley (www.propr.ca) – The Thornley Fallis CEO provides conference coverage so good you never have to sit through another chicken dinner.”

That’s a compliment very much appreciated. But given how much my waist has expanded since I started liveblogging conferences for ProPR, I may well have eaten enough chicken dinners for all of us!

For goodness sake, people. Airport lounges are public places!

These walls aren't sound proofI’m sitting in the cubicle farm in the Air Canada lounge at Pearson waiting for my flight. All around me, people are conducting business on the telephone. Beside me a woman is talking about a BtoB customer and problems with the account. Three feet across the screen, a lawyer is talking to a client about a potential deal. And at the cubicle behind me, an executive is talking about terminating an employee.

They are all talking loudly enough for me to hear every word (even though I’d prefer not to). And they are all USING NAMES. I kid you not.

What is it about looking at a four foot high screen in front of you that makes someone think that you are in a private place?

Use discretion, people. Use some judgment please!

Do you know your citizen marketers?

Blogger and author Jackie Huba was the keynote speaker at the CMA Word of Mouth Marketing Conference in Toronto this morning.

According to Huba, we live in an “amateur culture” in which consumers can, for little or no cost, produce content that shapes our brand image. These amateurs are pre-empting the traditional business model. Huba and her co-author, Ben McConnell, call these people Citizen Marketers.

This amateur culture has been empowered by ubiquitous technology like camera phones married with social media. Everyone can be a broadcaster. Anyone with a microphone and computer can produce and post their own podcasts. Anyone can upload pictures to flickr and video to Youtube.

And as people produce more and more of this content, it has gained influence.

Huba and McConnell have classified citizen marketers into the “4Fs”:

Firecrackers: People like George Masters and Brian Finkelstein. They create an explosive impact, a great deal of noise. They can have tremendous impact on brands – either positive in the case of Masters and the iPod or negative in the case of Finkelstein and Comcast.

Filters: These people are brand journalists. They have an overriding passon for a brand and they follow it incessantly. Mike Kaltschnee demonstrated the lasting impact on the Netflix brand that a group like this can have. Companies concerned about their brands should pay attention to and work with this group.

Fanatics: These people take the Filters one step further in their zeal for something. For example, Eric Karkovack had a passion for Surge. When Coca Cola eliminated the brand, he campaigned through savesurge.org for the return of the drink. He didn’t succeed. But when Coke began to test a new drink, Vault, Karkovack and others noted that its taste was very similar to Surge’s. He launched vaultkicks.org, a fan site for the new drink. Coke cooperated with him. And vaultkicks.org is the first Google search result for Surge soda. The fanatic has taken control of the brand online.

Facilitators: This is the most complex group in what they do. Paul Mullett with his mini2.com site is a good example of this type of person. BMW gave Mullett an advance peek at the second generation new mini prior to its launch in mid 2006. Mullett subseqently published photos, reviews and information about the second generation mini. And he reached a targeted audience interested in the mini with his message. On his own. At no cost to BMW. A marketers dream!

So, how are marketers starting to embrace these citizen marketers?

By working with these marketers to co-create content around a product or brand. For example, the Shakira fan video contest in cooperation between Youtube and Shaikira’s label helped reinvigorate the marketing around Shakira’s new album, which had until that point, failed to meet sales expectations.

By building community. Discovery, through its Discover Education subdivision and its United Streaming product, helps teachers to obtain valuable teaching content. Discovery created the Discovery Education Network to provide a focal point for teacher evangelists who wanted to use the product.

By Participation – The fifth P: Social media allows marketers to connect directly with customers.

The big question that all marketers should be asking themselves is how they can bring customers into their creative and brand process. If they can find ways to do this, they will inspire greater identification and loyalty for products. And that’s worth working for.

Has Inkless Wells been censored?

Macleans political columnist Paul Wells never hesitates to weigh in with a trenchant comment or a jab at those who he feels need to be called out. And this makes him one of the more entertaining political bloggers. And he seems to be given free rein by the good folks at Macleans to take runs at just about anyone.

But has Paul met his match – in the IT Department at Rogers?

My feedreader picked up the following post:

Welcome, friends!

by Paul Wells

The good news is that, as part of the new bigger Rogers family, all A- Channel employees will be permitted to write blogs with atrocious software on un-navigable websites that will never, ever improve. Because that’s what working for Rogers offers us all. No, don’t thank us!

Well, interesting, I thought. Paul’s really biting the hand this time.

So, I wandered over to Inkless Wells to look at the original post … and guess what? It’s not there!

Yes, the headling, “Welcome, friends” appears. But when you click on the headline for the post, the following message appears where the text of the post would appear:

There are no entries at this time. Check back soon.

CensoredWells?
Only for this post. Click on the headline of any other post and you’ll see the full text of the post associated with that headline.

Has the IT Department at Rogers managed to do something that Prime Ministers, Deputy Ministers and politicians of every stripe have long wished they could do – muzzle Paul?

Now we know where real power resides.

Buzz Canuck is 52-faced

Sean Moffitt is set to start a series of 52 interviews with Canadian word of mouth leaders on his Buzz Canuck blog. Sean says that he will call on

52 faces“the headline stealers, rainmakers, buzzstarters, gurus and mavericks from the 8 corners of Canada’s word of mouth world:

– buzz/experiential marketers
– cause marketers
– consumer generated marketing/media players
– community builders
– grassroots influencers/product seeders/evangelists
– social media/network activists
– viral/new media advertisers
– word of mouth researchers/trackers/academics”

Sounds like it should be interesting. If you haven’t already, subscribe to Buzz Canuck and meeting the Canadians.