I’m loving paper.li

A while back I put together a Twitter list of the women in web education. Right now there are 45 women on the list. Here’s my original post explaining the list: Where are the Women in Web Education? When I started the list, I wasn’t thinking about paper.li, I was thinking about finding a group of women who could speak about web education at conferences.

Once I had the list, I quickly realized that I could aggregate the tweets from the list using paper.li. I created the Women in Web Education Daily, described in this post.

Now, paper.li publishes a daily compilation of stories, blog posts, event announcements, coding news, videos, photos, and technology information from the tweeters on the list. Take a look.

Here’s what I’m loving about paper.li.

  • The quality of information that the women on the list post to Twitter is reliably interesting and worthy of my attention in terms of my main interests. Great list = great daily paper.
  • There’s a menu of topics so you can jump to the full day’s news on specific areas. You can also subscribe.
    the menu
  • There’s an archive of past issues.
  • There’s a constantly refreshing Twitter feed.
  • I don’t have to watch Twitter all day to see what’s going on in my area of interest. I can catch up once a day.
  • It’s intelligently and attractively laid out so it’s easy to read and navigate. There are ads, but they aren’t annoying.

I’m impressed with paper.li because I have a great list that produces great content for the daily read. I think it’s a brilliant idea. It takes something as unmanageable and unfiltered as Twitter and concentrates it into something both manageable and filtered. It’s the most useful thing I’ve discovered in a long time. I’m loving it.

Klout – what’s it to ya?

Klout.com, a service that has measured a person’s influence and reach on Twitter, just added Facebook to its Klout calculations.

The alliance with Facebook was announced in Do You Have Facebook Klout? Here’s a bit of their explanation about how it will work.

On Facebook, like Twitter, we assess how conversations and content generate interest and engagement. Facebook allows users to post many different types of content, view multiple streams and interact with their friends in more complex ways than we’ve previously seen. We’ve made sure each action and reaction is individually assessed to ensure we give you the most accurate picture of your Klout.

At Pureconent, Catherine explained

To determine level of influence, Klout uses various data points which they then compile into what they call a ‘Klout Score’, which is intended to represent the user’s online influence and ability to compel others to action. On Twitter, Klout uses things such as retweets, number of followers, list memberships, and unique mentions to calculate a user’s ‘true reach’. Now it is applying the same methodology to Facebook.

Apparently, it is more complex to add in a consideration of Facebook influence than simply scoring for Twitter influence – it takes 72 hours to get a score with your Facebook klout. Twitter scores are returned instantly. Connecting your Facebook account to your Klout account will not lower your Klout score, according to the announcement.

Who Needs Klout?

While it’s clean ego-tickling fun to look at your own Klout, the service is not really meant for individuals who simply want to know how they’re doing. Its core reason for being is to help businesses find influencers who can drive action. In other words, you can see other peoples Klout without their permission. (The better to look for those influencers you’re seeking, my dear.) According to Klout Adds Facebook Data to Its Influence Graph

Measuring influence isn’t just something that Klout wants to do in order to make users feel good about themselves, or so it can give them badges for passing certain milestones (although it does that as well). The reality is that as social media and social networks have become a larger and larger phenomenon, marketing agencies and companies have become increasingly interested in using these networks and services to target specific demographics, and to target “influencers” within specific topic areas who can help spread their message.

Not just business, but other seeking to influence events (such as nonprofits or social justice groups) can also make use of Klout.

Nonprofit maven Beth Kanter has written about social influence several times. In Can Social Network Analysis Improve Your Social Media Strategy? she mentions a number of tools other than Klout that can be used to map and measure influence. Beth does include Klout in her post about finding and cultivating the movers and shakers in your area of interest, Twitter Tip for Networked Nonprofits: Follow the Few To Get To the Many. Beth said on The Huffington Post that its about more than just the numbers.

It also helps to understand how networks work and apply that understanding to analyzing the relationships in your network, using social network analysis tools. Then you know who the influencers are and you can formulate and executive an effective strategy based on finding and cultivating them.

Numbers don’t matter as much building relationships one person at a time. The bottom line is to focus on the results of your social media strategy, don’t get distracted by meaningless metrics like the number of followers.

My Klout Before Facebook

I’ll use myself as an example, although I’m not an influencer with much Klout.
However, I’m willing to reveal my data as your guinea pig. I signed up with Klout and looked at my score from my Twitter account. My score was 21. That’s on a scale of 1-100. Along with that raw number, I was given all sorts of charts, like the following one, that explain various aspects of what that number means. This chart shows something called “true reach.”

klout-trueReach

Like several other charts at Klout, the true reach chart is a dynamic chart. Different results are displayed for True Reach depending on what I click from the bar across the bottom where it says TrueReach, Followers, Friends, Mentions %, and Retweet %.

I also see a list of who I’m influenced by.

klout-InfluencedBy

Knowing who I’m influenced by isn’t so important to me as an individual – I already know who I’m influenced by. But – and this is a big but – you can look at other people’s Klout scores. All you need is their Twitter username. if you were looking at someone else’s klout results for potential influencers to add to your social network or community, this list of influencers could be very valuable to you.

Klout also wants to help you find influential people. It shows me where it thinks I’m missing a bet with some followers I should follow back.

klout-influenceNetwork

My Klout After Facebook

I linked my Klout account to my Facebook account and sat back to wait for 72 hours for some results. Facebook isn’t my big thing – I use it because I have to for work. I’m not very connected on Facebook and don’t friend people unless I actually know them, so I was counting on Klout’s promise that my score would not suffer an embarrassing drop after adding in the Facebook data.

It didn’t drop, but it didn’t go up either.

klout achievements

New badges appeared that seem to reflect action on Facebook. The badges for Total Likes, Total Comments, and Unique Commenters were the only thing I could find that was different in my results after the addition of Facebook.

Are you helped by Klout?

Knowing my Klout score isn’t much use to me or anyone else, but I’m not trying to start a movement, raise awareness about an issue, collect money for natural distaster relief or find the people who might convince someone that my product is the best thing to buy. If I was doing any of those things, it would be smart to go looking for influencers on Klout so I could build a relationship with them.

Do you use Klout? Does the addition of Facebook to the scoring process make it even more valuable to you?

Cross posted at BlogHer.

Where are the women in web education?

I’m starting a list of women in web education. This means women who are actively teaching web design and development classes in high schools, colleges or other educational institutions. Women who might be a resource for someone looking for a web educator for a conference, a case study, or whatever else may come up. A good example of this type of woman would be Leslie Jensen-Inman, an assistant professor at The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. I’d like to follow other women like Leslie on this list.

I’m not 100% sure where I’ll keep the list, but I’m hoping it can be a Twitter list. That would be the easiest to maintain for me. If you are a woman in web education or know of a woman in web education, please give me her name and her Twitter handle (if possible). I’ll follow her and add her to the list.

The list can stretch a bit to hold women who are not actively working in classrooms in high schools or colleges, but whose daily work involves teaching others how to do web work. This might mean women who write, offer workshops and seminars on web education topics or run organizations dedicated to teaching people how to do web development. A good example of this type of woman would be Sharron Rush, the head of Knowbility.org. Her daily work is to organize and create training and conference events to help people learn to create accessible web sites. She’s not promoting herself – she’s promoting a cause related to web education. I’d like to follow other women like Sharron on this list.

I’ve started a Twitter list called WomeninWebEducation. You can follow the list. Here are the names I have so far. Lots more are needed. Please offer suggestions and names.

New Twitter

On BlogHer today, The New Twitter: Is It Better? It’s a quick look at reactions to the new Twitter home page from the blogosphere. Here’s an excerpt:

In my scan of reactions to the new Twitter, I didn’t see much immediate attention and response to the money-making possibilities of the new look for Twitter. Business pundits will tackle this issue very soon, I’m sure. Look at the points I did mention:

  • embedded video
  • realtime search
  • links
  • breaking news
  • plain old social networking

That looks like a list of everything you want in one place. Add on some revenue for Twitter and you’ve got a pretty hot property. Was it only two or three years ago that we first heard about Twitter and thought, “Who gives a damn what some guy in Hackensack is doing right now?”

Get the full story at BlogHer.

A funny geek tweet

First Jeffrey couldn’t get into his room at the conference hotel.

I didn’t think much about it. Normal travel woes.

They apologized & swore my room would be ready in 2 hours. I came back 2.5 hrs later. Now they promise it will be ready in an hour.Tue Sep 14 18:38:24 via Twitterrific

But . . . Matt took notice and figured out the problem.

@zeldman You must have booked the HTML5 suite. They say it’s ready now, but it won’t be completed until 2022.Tue Sep 14 19:48:06 via TweetDeck

Bwaahahaha, Matt. Good one.

Useful links: PR, elections, #FF

Because some things are worth more than a box of cereal is a rant from The Bloggess. It points out a lot of what bloggers have to put up with these days. The other day I wrote a review of a web app called xtranormal. It seemed obvious enough that I was writing the review out of personal curiosity and not because I was asked to by anyone. But I do get asked to review many, many web apps. If I do review anything because of a PR campaign, I’ll tell you the story of why I’m writing about it.

Republicans in Congress Are More Active and More Popular on Twitter.  Twitter may make a difference in the upcoming U.S. midterm elections. That shouldn’t be news to anyone. Social media influenced the 2008 elections. But the Republicans are running with it right now.

Speaking of Twitter, you can follow @CSS3, @HTML5, @HTML5Watch, and @HTML5gallery.

Tweet Button: a new toy

I wrote Twitter Lays Claim to the Tweet Button today for BlogHer. A new Tweet Button is just a new toy. It must be tried out. I’m trying it here on Web Teacher.

On this blog, it seems best to continue to use the Topsy Retweet Button plug in for WordPress on the home page. The Twitter Tweet Button works well at the bottom of a post when looking at a post’s permalink. Interestingly, sometimes the number of tweets registered with the two tools don’t match up. That will be something to watch.

Happy tweeting.