Thursday, March 31, 2011

“What's Your Personal Social Media Strategy?”

According to the author of, “What's Your Personal Social Media Strategy?”, The Social media(s) are changing the way we do business and how leaders are perceived, from the shop floor to the CEO suite. However, whereas the best businesses are creating comprehensive strategies in this area, research suggests that few corporate leaders have a social media presence- that is to say, a Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn page-and that those who do, do not use it strategically. Today's leaders must embrace social media for three reasons. First, they provide a low-cost, highly accessible platform on which to build your personal brand, communicating who you are both within and outside your company. Second, they allow you to engage rapidly and simultaneously with peers, employees, customers, and the broader public-in order to leverage relationships, show commitment to a cause, and demonstrate a capacity for reflection. Third, they give you an opportunity to learn from instant information and unvarnished feedback. To formulate your personal social media strategy, it helps to clarify your goals (personal, professional, or both), desired audience (private or public), and resources (can you justify using your company's?). You must also consider the risks of maintaining a large number of connections and of sharing content online. Active participation in social media can be a powerful tool- the difference between leading effectively and ineffectively, and between advancing and faltering in the pursuit of your goals. 1
 
1.         Dutta, Soumitra /soumitra.dutta@insead.edu What's Your Personal Social Media Strategy?” Harvard Business Review; Nov2010, Vol. 88 Issue 11, p127-130, 4p, 1 Illustration. Retrieved 3/26/2011.
 
 

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Thursday, March 10, 2011

"What is Information Design"


According to Luigi Canali De Rossi's article, “What is Information Design” 

The article states that Information Design is the detailed planning of specific information that provides a particular audience to meet specific objectives.
It’s designed to optimize the layout of information which facilitates navigation, readability and immediate understanding of what the information communicates. The purpose of Information Design is to Simplify, Integrate, Filter and Selectively Emphasize Information, and how users access, learn, and remember information.


INFORMATION DESIGN USUALLY ENCOMPASSES MANY DIFFERENT RESPONSIBILITIES AND TASKS, INCLUDING:


a) Analysis of users' needs and learning styles
b) Selection of the most effective layouts, colors, fonts, and graphics
c) Identification of most effective navigational infrastructures
d) Application of principles of simplification, synthesis and integration
e) Testing of readability, contrast and legibility in adverse situations and for handicapped users

 IT ALSO RAISES QUESTIONS ABOUT HOW TO DESIGN INFORMATION FOR DIFFERENT CULTURAL AND VARIOUS OTHER CONTEXTUAL DIFFERENCES IN THE AUDIENCE.

Information is now frequently delivered utilizing electronic media such as Web sites and CD-ROMs (with new possibilities for user interaction). A new discipline has emerged which deals with these aspects of information design from a user-centered point of view: Interaction Design.


Works cited:


  1. Information Design, Module 1:  Content Guide
November 15, 2001
What is Information Design?
Learn what Information Design really is and why it is useful when creating charts and diagrams
by Luigi Canali De Rossi



       2.  Google image, www.google.com/image