Posts Tagged "New York City"

21
May 10

Bloggers We Love: Top 10 Time Management Tips

We’ve been doing our ‘Bloggers We Love‘ series here on the Outside.in blog for a few months now, and one theme that keeps coming up amongst bloggers is that there simply isn’t enough TIME to get everything done. Blogging takes a lot of time, and it can be challenging (though not impossible!) to do it regularly and effectively while simultaneously balancing a personal life, and likely another full-time job as well.

I myself have been meaning to write this blog post for about a month now, but things keep getting in the way – oh, the irony of lacking the time to write a post about time management! Clearly, I need to be employing some of these strategies myself.

So, without further ado, here are some top tips from top bloggers on how to carve out ample time for blogging! If you have more tips, please leave them in the comments or feel free to email them to me any time: esther@outside.in.

THE TOP 10 TIME MANAGEMENT TIPS

(For awesome bloggers, from Bloggers We Love)

10. PLAN AHEAD

“Pre-post your articles and preset the time and date it goes live. WordPress makes this easy. Work several hours and then take the rest of the week off.”

- Video blogging/SEO evangelist Steve Sherron of the Monroe Scoop

9. REDUCE, REUSE, RECYCLE

“I start with a tweet, the ‘Must See, Must Do,’ blurb from my homepage, a review/collection of reviews I have written, and turn it into a longer blog post. I try to get as much mileage and value as I can from the things I have already written about. Why ‘reinvent the wheel,’ so to speak?”

- the go-to gal for family-friendly fun in Vermont, Dana Freeman of Find and Go Seek (the blog and the website!)

8. GUEST BLOGGERS!

“Get others to write content. I have a series called ‘They’re Talking About Lynn,’ where I get memories from other people and then I just put a thin wrapper around it and hit ‘post.”

- The inspiring Corey Jackson of Downtown Lynn

7. GO ORGANIC

“Employ some simple SEO on your site to attract organic search traffic. This brings you a stream of constant traffic, whether you publish or not.”

- Steve Sherron of the Monroe Scoop

6. DON’T SWEAT THE SMALL STUFF

“Don’t edit yourself too much. I try to check for spelling and obvious idiot mistakes, but other than that, I write and hit ‘publish’!”

- Corey Jackson of Downtown Lynn

5. UNPLUG & RECHARGE

“Allow yourself to shut down your laptop at a certain time every night. FULL shut down – so you don’t get into some ‘quick,’ thing.”

- The blogosphere‘s expert on ballpark cuisine and the 30-something bar scene in NYC, Sara Pepitone of Scoreboard Gourmet and 30 to Midnight

4. TAKE THE SHOW ON THE ROAD

“Get and iPad/iPhone and blog during commutes.”

- Corey Jackson of Downtown Lynn (NOTE: we do not endorse blogging while driving!)

3. BLOGGER, PING THYSELF

“Schedule time to write. Set yourself reminders to blog, follow-up on emails, gather multimedia and contact sources. I have Remember The Milk send me text message reminders!”

- The über-experienced blogger Tessa Horehled of Drive a Faster Car

2. LIVE, LOVE, BLOG

“What you write about should be something you’re living out. That way the research just sort of happens, rather than it being a chore.”

- Corey Jackson of Downtown Lynn

1. NO EXCUSES

“There’s never time and always something else going on. You have to make it!”

- Tessa Horehled of Drive a Faster Car

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26
Apr 10

On #140Conf, Outside.in, and Why I’m Glad I’m Not a Rock

Like many of you, I attended the #140Conf last week here in New York City at the 92nd Street Y. I found it interesting and inspiring, primarily because it reminded me of what this whole hyperlocal thing is all about, when you get down to the brass tacks. It’s the same reason I love serving as Outside.in‘s Community Manager, and the same reason I love Twitter, Facebook and the rest of the social media tools many of us use on a daily basis.

So, what did #140Conf remind me of? @JeffJarvis summed it up nicely:

The internet isn’t just any kind of connection machine, though. The internet is a connection machine used by human beings to create real, meaningful human connections. For many of us, the magic of Twitter (or Outside.in, for that matter) is not necessarily in its “pipes” (as our very own @StevenBJohnson will tell you, Twitter is infrastructure), but rather in its humanity:

For many of us, the tools we use on the internet are not about the technology, they’re about the people. At Outside.in, we’re not just surfacing stories using clever algorithms (which are pretty darn clever) — the stories we’re able to point to via our technology are meaningful to people because they’re about what’s going on in the places and communities that they care about.

Moreover, once you find out what’s going on in your neighborhood, whether it be via Outside.in or by chatting with your new-found friends on Twitter, you want to connect. It’s a natural human impulse to reach out in search of genuine, human connection. So maybe you go choose to go to an event you saw written about on a blog you found via Outside.in, or maybe you choose to attend a TweetUp or a MeetUp. After all, as MeetUp co-founder @heif demonstrated at #140Conf:

It’s true, too. Technology is powerful in its ability to create space for real experiences and change. But technology — especially the kinds used in social media– in a vacuum isn’t very powerful at all. It’s the people that create and use the technology that make technology so amazingly powerful. As one speaker put it:

I’ve seen it happen, too, but not only via Twitter. All technology can be life-changing if you’re open to the possibilities it could potentially help create in your life. As we often say here at Outside.in, Outside.in tells you about ‘What’s going on, where you are, right now.’ Twitter does this too, and that’s why so many of us love it. In fact, many of us love it so much that we’re willing to pay several hundred dollars to gather in a central place and talk about real time technology and why we love it so much. To be in community with one another. And there’s nothing virtual about that, it’s very visceral, and very real:

Which is really what it’s all about, right? Hyperlocal doesn’t happen without humanity. And, as @GaryVee so eloquently reminded all of us at the #140Conf:

I know all of us at Outside.in are glad we’re human, and not rocks– because people matter. And that’s why Twitter matters, why blogs matter, and why hyperlocal matters, because there are things happening — right now — in your city, your town and even your neighborhood, that really do matter.

Cheesy, perhaps, but so very true.

Happily, here at Outside.in, we’re able to take all of those online happenings and organize them in ways that make them even more timely and relevant to you. Because you’re not a rock, and you matter. Lucky us.

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