My raucous week of putting my meat in the game.

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Most of the content of Librarians Matter could be distilled to two messages:

To non-librarians:

Librarians know about new web tools as part of our jobs and we are a viable, lively profession- use our skills.

To librarians:

We need to know about new web tools as part of our jobs to stay a viable and lively profession- learn the skills.

Last week, I had a whirl of a week getting this message out – and I feel really vulnerably “out there”.

People I respect, like Stephen Abram, say things like this (about seeing himself in video interviews):

I keep telling people that these are a way to engage with our markets. I have to put my own meat in the game. I have found that it’s not as scary as I felt it could be – great interviewers make the difference. It’s a risk sharing like this but it might personalize our libraries (and me).

He’s right. And I see people like Jill promoting her library by dressing up in a tweed Sherlock Holmes hat and cape and distributing the photo around her organisation to promote her library and I think “Go, girl!”.

While I’m proud that I was able to put the profession out there, this week I felt a bit like that annoying kid in class who always puts up her hand and never shuts up. (So, of course, I feel compelled to tell you about it, instead of modestly sitting with my hands folded in my lap – I’m getting it all out of my system now and promise not to mention it again.)

On Saturday I gave the Blog Fodder session at Podcamp Perth, and was tickled to hear this said of our profession:

I’m all for nerd power, but librarians? They’re beyond nerd, aren’t they? So what’s with the domination of librarians amongst the bloggers at Podcamp? How come they talk so much? And so raucously? Where’s that pale, timid mole stereotype gone?

And how come I’d never heard of terms like “meme”, never heard of Sitemeter, never used Google Analytics in assessing my blog traffic? What the screaming fuck is Twitter? Photobucket?

Wanna find out? Have a look at Kathryn Greenhill’s blog, Librarians Matter, where she has just posted notes from her illuminating talk at PodCamp.

PS: How come the ABC is about to launch a new comedy series called…Librarians?! Librarians are suddenly hip? And funny? HUH?

On Wednesday I was interviewed by TechCrunch writer, Duncan Riley for his “On the Pod” series where he interviews “guests that might otherwise not have a high profile yet have something interesting to say”. On the Pod #10: Kathryn Greenhill . I learned that it’s better to breathe than say “um”. It didn’t come off too badly, but my nervousness did make me call a new version of a book a “volume” rather than an edition. Disclaimer: Duncan is a local and a twitterfriend.

Seems like Emerald Dumont, my Second Life Avatar, is even more publicity hungry than I am. She wasn’t content only to host a discussion of “The Librarians” TV series on ABC Island in Second Life on Thursday ( transcript here ). Oh no – she had to startle the bejeezus out of me on Friday by appearing as covergirl on the University community newspaper, Explore – under the headline “A virtual life – Murdoch Libary teleports into the future”. I knew about the interview, but Emerald hadn’t told me she was going to be on the cover too.

Add to the mix the news via HeyJude that this blog is number 31 on the list of Top 50 Australian Women Bloggers. And someone contacted me directly via twitter and told me that my blog’s google pagerank is 5 – while I naively asked back “is that good?”. And I already knew this blog sits around number 23 on Ratified.org Australia which claims to measure the top 100 blogs of the Australian blogosphere – but really measures those who submit their site.

I wonder why I feel kind of uncomfortable blogging about this when I always feel so uplifted when I hear other librarians talk about doing those kinds of things? Hope it encourages you to put yourself out there – I’m going to try to lay low for a bit.

Lego trainset 111 – Happy Halloween

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Ever have a brain fry in the middle of a presentation and start raving on about things you didn’t expect? All the while you are listening to yourself thinking “Girl! WTF are you TALKING about?”. Happened to me at Podcamp during my Blog Fodder presentation where I talked for about 3 minutes about “Lego Trainset 111″ to illustrate Ellysa Kroski’s 18 Different Types of Blog posts.

Here’s the video, Podcamp Perth 2007: The blog session, that the Co-Pilot put up at Viddler. If you push play on my blog, the video magically jumps to the start of “Trainset 111″. If you view it on Viddler, then mover the slider to the white dots marking start and finish.

Disembodied voices who made it all unconferency are Gary Barber, Sue Waters and Frances McClean. Plus Maeve and Trevor and Julia and Con chiming in too.
Other Podcamp videos now at Viddler include:

During my brain fry, I made the comment that a lego blog where someone took a step-by-step photo of the construction process would probably get many, many more readers than my blog ever would. For those uninitiated in this genre…I present…17 photos in a step-by-step guide to How to make a Lego minifig costume for Halloween

UPDATE 12 Nov 2007: Viddler removed the streaming feature last week, so the clip now starts at the beginning.

(And after upgrading this blog to v2.3.1, this post is stuffing up my template, so I had to remove the embedded video – ick)

Blog fodder – what do I put in?

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Notes from my presentation at Podcamp Perth on October 27th 2007, which is here Blog Fodder : what do I put in ?

1. Look at your blog

  • What type of blog is it?
  • Tagline
  • “About” page

2. Look at your audience

  • What audience?
    • Sitemeter
    • Google analytics
    • Google webmaster tools
    • Statistics on your hosting service
  • What are they searching for when they get to you ?
    • Squeaky bras
    • Fear of beetroot
    • What time is the Australian Idol replay ?
    • Geek t-shirts Perth

    Where are they coming from? Domain? Location?

  • Who do you want in your audience?

3. Who are you?

  • What do you want to write about?
  • Would you read your own blog?
  • Is the voice of your blog human?
  • How much of yourself do you want to show ?
  • Your privacy. Others’ privacy.
  • Findability – forever
  • What other online conversations are you part of?

4. Some types of blog posts – from ilibrarian 18 Different kinds of blog posts

5. If you have bloggers’ block

  • Leave it
  • Get a Life
  • Really…leave it
  • Prewrite posts
  • Read other blogs
  • Tell a story
  • Make a list
  • Find a meme
  • Set a public challenge
  • Set a posting schedule
  • Go off topic…and bring it back
  • Write a post for the searchbots
  • Ask questions andsummarize (twitter and Facebook)
  • Invite a guest blogger
  • Work in another medium and embed it in your blog:
    • Take a photo
    • Draw a picture
    • Do a slidecast
    • Create an audio file
    • Make a video

SO … If you want stuff for your blog…Find your VOICE…Know the TYPES OF BLOG POSTS….Know how to deal with BLOGGERS BLOCK….PLAY

Podcamp for women, library workers…and kids too?

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Podcamp Perth is on this weekend. It’s a free community unconference about New Media – podcasting, videocasting, Citizen Journalism, blogging, virtual worlds, social networking, mobile applications, web standards – yummy! You should come too.

WHO’S GOING?

125 people are on the registration page of the wiki. Fifty one are women – just under half. And….wait for it….eleven work in libraries – that’s almost ten percent.

The Co-Pilot and I both want to go on Saturday- I’ve prepared a presentation and he’d like to help out by videoing the sessions. We don’t have babysitting, so we’ll experiment with taking the kids. And the wii. Kate is bringing along a projector and some additional controllers. And Lloyd is bringing another console…so the adults don’t push the kids off. If anyone else has a spare large monitor, that would be cool.

We hope it will keep them occupied, otherwise one of us can take them on the train to the museum. They are rather immersed in all this stuff – I helped out at kindy today and Mr5 had to draw things you’d find around a pond. Frogs, rocks, fountain, game of hangman on a table…..wha’? ….then I remembered…that’s what I put next to the pond on the library plot of land in Second Life. Oh dear.

hangpond.jpg

WHAT ARE PEOPLE DOING?

There are 16 sessions so far listed on the wiki. I like the way they are rated according to how complex they are – 101 for basic sessions up to “V” for Veteran sessions that are for experienced users.

Nick Hodge from Microsoft is flying over to present about how the company is using social media. Stilgherrian will be here to talk about how social media is being used in the lead up to the federal election. Duncan Riley is talking about branding and the new media. There are 3 sessions on podcasting with an education flavour, two about Second Life and even a feel good talk about doing what we love.

I’m offering a presentation called “Blog Fodder”- all about how to find things to write on your blog. It’s aimed at the 101 level – no need to even have a blog to get something out of it… (not mentioning any names….). I thought it would be good to add to the mix something n00b friendly.

Sunday is for “birds of a feather” sessions. I’ll be behind the ref desk at work, so I won’t be going to the twitter meetup or the Geeks in the Grass picnic in Kings Park.

The Co-Pilot? He’s being dragged off to yet another five year old’s birthday party. I don’t think they’ll be providing a wii to keep the adults entertained.

The tag for items about podcamp is: podcampperth07