You are the average of the five people you spend the most time with. – Jim Rohn
Quality vs. Quantity in Social Media
Despite all the advice of quality over quantity, people craving attention in the social media world are obsessed with those with large numbers of followers. The problem is that there is a lot of “faux influence”. I have seen a lot of smart people hoodwinked in social media.
“For the first time in history, we know now how to store virtually all humanity’s most important information and make it available, almost instantly, in almost any form, to almost anyone on earth. We also know how to do that in great new ways so that people can interact with it, and learn from it.” – Dryden and Vos, The Learning Revolution
The Age of Collective Learning
As Rotana Ty writes, we are in an “Age of Collective Learning“. He quotes Marcia Conner:
“Every day, I connect and learn from people across the world through social technologies. Some of these people I’ve met in person, increasingly they are people I didn’t know before social media. From them, I glean new insights about topics I set out to learn as well as get introduced to new topics and related information I didn’t realize would help round out what’s important to my life and in my work.”
The biggest benefit, as Marcia points out, is that you will connect over “weak ties” to find new topics and people you did not realize were valuable – and that lead you to serendipitous results.
GOAL: Find five people around each of your interests to share deeply with.How to Curate People for your Interests
1. Who else shared an article you are interested in?
2. Use Topsy for Twitter Research
The most interesting people don’t just share the title of the article, they typically find the most interesting idea or quote from the article to tweet or post.
3. How to Find Articles Shared in Google+
You can also search a URL or link in the Google+ search box to see who shared it. The results in Google+ will only show publicly shared URLs. (You can also see the URL shared by people who are connected with you, and shared the URL with you.)
TO-DO: Create a circle of people to follow on Google+ around this topic.Engage deeply, not superficially, with people in these circles.
4. Additional Tips
- Learn the social language around your interest. Study the hashtags used by the people sharing the article. Search Twitter and Google+ for more content and people sharing around these hashtags. Read Part 1 of “Why You Should Curate Interests, Not Just Specialties” to see how you can track hashtags and set up alerts to curate information around your topics.
- Create a Permamarks account, and start a lifelong learning project curating and archiving around your interests. You can build lists and collections that are private or public, and never lose information due to dead links or 404 pages. The idea is to preserve and grow knowledge for your personal and professional development.
“All the world is my school and all humanity is my teacher.” – George Whitman
Latest posts by Angela Dunn (see all)
- Why You Should Curate Interests Not Just Specialties Part 2 - March 13, 2014
- Why You Should Curate Interests not Just Specialties Part I - December 28, 2013
- The Future of Curation is Evergreen - November 9, 2013