On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 6:12 AM, Allan Day <[email protected]> wrote:

> I fully agree. We don't have the capacity to produce original content.
> Linking to existing material is a good way to go for the time being [1].
>

Producing original content is pretty difficult, look at the ups and downs of
the GNOME Journal.  To do it you have to be constantly aware of what the
project is doing and be able to think 'oh, that might be interesting to
write about'.  Sometimes it's not apparent. I've been bullying people to
write articles for awhile.  Getting them to do it is an interesting
problem.  Some people react well to just being told to write one without
given a choice, others require a little finesse.  I've employed both with
some measure of success.


>
> One way we can do this is through our microblogging channels. I've been
> doing a bit of work to develop these in recent times... if we want to
> take this further, there are a couple of things we can do:
>
> First, get more people involved. Right now, our bus-factor [2] is
> extremely high. If microblogging is going to be a proper part of our
> communications strategy, it needs to be stable and reliable. Any
> volunteers?!
>

Well students are a pretty good target.  You could recruit people on
facebook and twitter possibly.  People love being asked to join something
because that person asked them to especially younger people.  A mild
stroking of the ego if you will.  Target the people who have it running and
are enthusiastic about it.


>
> Second, we could tie our microblogging feeds into other channels, both
> as a way to get more people following them and as a means to get that
> content to people who don't use a microblogging service. Displaying our
> feeds on our web-sites is one obvious possibility here. I'm sure there
> are others though.
>

 I'm two minds of that as I like the current page, but it also has no
attraction since the news is not always updated.  Having a p.g.o feed and
twitter feed would be neat.  Also the ability to highlight p.g.o posts on
twitter and facebook would also encourage greater readership.

[1] The difficulty with this is that much of the content that we
> currently generate is written for people who already know GNOME. The
> reason for a channel of the kind that I described in my previous mail is
> to explain how GNOME works to external audiences.
>
>
Well, you could talk to lwn folks as one part of your media strategy.
Secondly, if you want to write articles outside of people who know GNOME
then I suggest we try to break into areas where our concept of work flow
design would be advantageous for that industries like manufacturing,
medical, help desk, industrial design and so forth.  For instance, I would
have a GNOME Journal issue talking about GNOME 3, and then we send those to
various conferences outside of the usual FOSS conferences we attend.  Send
the Journal or maybe some marketing stuff to those organizers and ask them
to put it some place visible.  Even a looping slide show on a computer would
be awesome.  Everyone thing we send out there should focus on one thing, get
them to join the GNOME facebook or twitter.  I generally prefer twitter
since it takes effort to go to the facebook page.. I never get any alerts
when someone posts something on there.  But twitter.. you put a post on
facebook page and use twitter to highlight it.

Some ideas off the top of my head.

sri
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