Archive for May, 2009

What The Heck’s Next?- How We Use Basecamp

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Like thousands of other folks, we use 37signals Basecamp (aff link) for online collaboration and project management. It’s a great system, if you’ve not seen it.  Easy to use, intuitive, and covers all the bases for us.

We’ve had pretty good success getting the people we work with involved in Basecamp, which we’ve internally named “Projectpath”.

It’s pretty simple to use.  But we wanted to write up a personal introduction from us to our clients, many of whom have not worked within a project management system.

And if they need start-up help, the Basecamp FAQs are pretty much focused on admin support, which is not really what we’re looking for.  They do have a very good video how-to section, but that’s not quite what we need either.

What we need is…

  • A document that would help our clients buy-in to using the system.
  • Something that would assure them that this was easy to use.
  • A personal introduction that could be used as a reference, if needed.

So here it is.  Feel free to use it if you think something like this would be helpful for you…

-What The Heck’s Next?-
Getting Around In Matterhorn Projectpath

A Quick Guide To How We’ll Manage Things Together

There are a million ways to communicate.  We call.  We email. We send DMs to an @ on Twitter.  It can get a bit… overwhelming.  With more people contributing more information about more ideas everyday, it’s very easy for communication to get buried, sidetracked, or lost.

Projectpath is a website that’s designed to keep everything -everything- in one place.  Using this system will…

•    Keep all of our communication together over the length of the project
•    Organize each step of our process by topic
•    Archive all of our progress by date
•    Make our project accessible all the time, from any computer

Think of Projectpath as our project’s office.  We use a system called Basecamp to run things, and it’s easy to use.  Go ahead and be intimidated if you want, but the simple fact is this:  If you know how to go to a website, send email, or use a mouse, you can use Projectpath.

Projectpath has 6 different sections…

•    Overview
•    Messages
•    To-Do
•    Milestones
•    Writeboards
•    Files

You can move between sections easily by using the tabs near the top of the page. Each section has a different function, and together they cover all of the things we’ll have to communicate during our project.

Here’s a quick rundown of each section…

Overview-  The Overview shows everything that’s happening in our project.  Here’s what you can see:

•    The name of the project
•    Shortcuts to the other 5 sections
•    A timeline for the project, if one applies
•    All recent activity in every section, arranged with the most recent at the top
•    An RSS feed for the project, so you’ll know each time something is added
•    The names of everyone involved in our project

Messages-  This is email for our project.  It works because everyone can share communication in one place (that way, we don’t have to go digging around in your personal inbox ?).  To post a message…

•    Click “Post a new message”
•    Write something
•    Click “Post this message”
•    That was easy, wasn’t it?

To Do-  The to-do list might be the easiest way to keep track of our project’s progress.  Projectpath lets you add, cross off, and move around items in a way that, frankly, makes you want to get more done just to use the to-do features.  It’s easy to make lists in Projectpath.

Milestones-  This section is for keeping track of things that need to be done by a certain date.  It’s divided into 3 parts:  Past due, Upcoming, and Completed.  There’s a calendar in the margin of the Milestones section that’s color coded to reflect each list.

Writeboards
-  If there’s ever a need to create a document collaboratively, we’ll use a writeboard.  It’s an easy way to keep track of all the versions of a document that we might need.  Because we create content using different software, we don’t use writeboards for most projects.

Files-  Here’s where we keep any and all files pertinent to our project.  Again, the big draw is that they can be accessed and updated by anyone in the project.  We keep all content for projects in the files section.

That’s all.  The way we’ll use Projectpath is very intuitive.  It won’t take long for you to see how collaboration is simplified with this one tool.

We’re looking forward to getting started- thanks for going through this doc.

Connecting People and Generations

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Social media is about connecting and sharing, right? People to People. People to Brands. People to Ideas. People to Content.

We are inundated with messages and info about using social media for marketing.  5 Ways to Tweet.  How To Build More FaceFriends.  Why You Should Use A Cartoon Avatar.

Sometimes we fail to really dig into the core.

I’d like to share a few ways in which social media has shaped the way in which my family stays connected and shares.

Social Networks

First, let me introduce (or re-introduce, as the case may be) my 99 year old Grandmother, Mary. Our Matriarch. Mother of 8, Grandmother, Great-Grandmother and Great, Great-Grandmother to many.  She rode a horse to her fist job- teaching in a one-room school house.

I received an email from her just this morning.

And grandma’s not the only one who’s connected- we all are.  Let’s just say we have a large family. We are a close-knit, yet scattered. My generation grew up together at family outings and get-togethers. Climbing trees, whiffle ball, sharing a giant hammock and even getting the chance to catch crawdads from time to time.  It’s a great family.

Growing up, we shared laughs and spent a great deal of time together. Now, we’re many miles apart, like a lot of families. We have been using the family social network myfamily.com for a number of years to keep in touch and share: photos of first-birthday caked faces, stories of life events, videos and more.

Micro-Blogging
It’s easy to become tired of micro-blogging when we become innundated with the mundane. However, for every “Going to buy milk” update, there are people sharing something interesting.  Stories.  Ideas.

A key point of micro-blogging (one that I think some who write it off too early fail to recognize) is that people choose to subscribe (or unscubscribe) to information. If you find it boring, narcissistic, or irrelevant, the un-subscribe button is calling.

Want a great example of micro-blogging (and SMS) connects people? I followed my parents fall-tour of Europe via Twitter.

My father, at Normandy…

Just spent time at the American cemetery where more than 9000 Americans are buried

A number of texts, Tweets, and DM’s ensued during their trip. It was quick, it was easy.  A helluva lot easier (and cheaper) than calling.

It connected a number of us together.  We were interested in the adventures they were having.  In turn, they kept up with us and our kids (and WVU scores!).

The important part is that we stayed connected, though thousands of miles apart, in 140 characters or less.

Video Sharing

Folks like my Grandmother have incredible stories to tell. The Greatest Generation. The Great Depression. War(s) and the peace that followed. Civil Rights.

And she’s staying connected with me.  And others.  Historical and personal living histories can be shared amongst generations, digitally.

So, is digital storytelling the new oral history?  I don’t know, but here’s an instance that might point to the answer:

Recently, my parents picked up one of the HD hand-held cameras that we use with a number of our partners, a Kodak zi6. They had the idea of having my Grandmother share some of her stories so they could post on the family website. I’d like to post them for all the world to enjoy as well. Generational gaps get bridged via a $150 HD camera and an Internet connection.  Amazing.

If we’re talking across generations with this stuff, these tools, we should be able to have meaningful conversations about business, right?

How are you bridging gaps, connecting people, and sharing your story?

Why Family Matters Most

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

This post isn’t going to be about marketing. (But just so I don’t leave you hanging, there are some interesting posts on digital marketing today here, here, and here.)

Pat and I were chatting last night a bit about what family means to this business.

The short answer is that it means pretty much everything.  We work around family, we make time for family… family shapes things here at Matterhorn.

A couple of weeks ago, we headed to Harpers Ferry to make a presentation on social media.  We could have left the day before the presentation and gotten there in time for a dinner with the conference attendees- it was a networking opportunity, for sure.

But Pat needed to see his daughter’s first T-ball game.  Couldn’t miss it.  We left late in the evening, got there around 1 a.m., worked a little, and got up early to set up.

Yesterday, we had a presentation to make in the afternoon.  I had to leave early to coach my son’s soccer practice. It was an obligation I had made months before.

No problem.  We changed things around a little, I presented first, and made it to the field just in time to set up cones.

We make those allowances here because, for us, that’s what really matters.  What’s cool is that it shows up in our work.  Family isn’t an excuse to duck responsibility here at work; it’s the reason to take on big projects here at work.  Better work makes us better at home.

We’re Saturdays-at-the-field, helping-with-the-homework, never-miss-a-birthday guys.  And that makes the way we do things not for everybody.  That’s fine- there are plenty of other digital marketing companies out there.

But for us, family is first.  What about you?  How does family fit into your business?

How to Write While Going Over a 14 Foot Waterfall

Monday, May 18th, 2009

As we approached the lip of the falls, one of the people in the front of the raft asked me if we should turn the boat to the left or to the right.

“I don’t know!” I shouted.

“What do you mean, you don’t know?  Aren’t you steering?!”

“Yes, but I close my eyes during the scary parts.”

. . . . .

Before I started creating content for digital marketing, I was a raft guide. I worked on whitewater rivers 140 days a year, and I met a lot of great, great people.

Now, I know that, for some, my former vocation put me somewhere below carnival worker on the social respectability scale.  But that never mattered to me.  I loved being a guide.

There are a lot of reasons guiding was great- beautiful places, exciting work, and on and on.  But the #1 reason I loved it was the stories I collected over the years.

I have enough to fill a book (and will be doing just that, sometime in the future).

But it’s not the stories themselves that are important.   It’s the experiences that those stories came from.  They shape the way I think, and feel, and write.

I can and have done some promotional writing on the technical side of things.  It’s not my strong suit.  I’m much better at thinking up creative ways to tell stories.  That’s my training.

What about you?  Is who you are shaping the way you write?

Is Travel Growing, Or Is It Just Talk?

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

I found a link a couple days ago in the Travel 2.0 blog (good reading, always) to Ginny McGrath on some things she had learned at the Traveloution Summit.  Here’s one that caught my eye:

Tripadvisor is growing fast: 20 new travel hotel or destination reviews are added to Tripadvisor every minute.

Wow.  That is a pretty amazing idea- that there’s a ratings site that could one day get big enough to dominate the results of a search engine query on travel to, say, a specific place.  Or more interesting, a certain type of travel.  But…

Statistics are like bikinis.  What they reveal is suggestive, but what they conceal is vital.  ~Aaron Levenstein

The Tripadvisor statistic is important.  It’s a reflection of what we now consider a source- ourselves.  People are going beyond trusting travel agents, travel guides, and travel magazines, and that’s a sea change in the industry.  It’s more important than ever to cultivate evangelists.

What the statistic hides is- are your customers using Tripadvisor?  Or are they using something else?  Because they’re using (or will be using) something to find out about and talk about you.

There are thousands of forums to share this kind of information.  You have the greatest tools imaginable for listening to those conversations.  Seems like a great match.

What are you using to listen?  How are you participating in the conversation once you’re aware of it?

Creating The Right Tone

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

I’ve been working on some new copy for the Matterhorn site recently.  Pat’s been tweaking the information architecture, appearances, and functionality.  I get the copy, which I’m really excited about.

That’s led me to think a lot about tone.  For a small business like ours, we want to be friendly but not flip, confident but not cocky, this but not that.  Our customers (you reading this?  love you guys) run the gamut as far as experience with digital marketing; we’ve got to acknowledge a lot of different types of users.

That’s a pretty good challenge.  And it’s one that almost everyone faces in some way.  Here are some thoughts on creating the right tone for a wide ranging audience:

  • Be Honest

Your site, and especially the words on your site, are a reflection of you.  No escaping it.  Make sure that the writing says that.

That doesn’t mean that you should use lots of slang or swear (necessarily).  It does mean that you shouldn’t throw business speak around, or try to talk over peoples’ heads to impress them.  Another way to say it is to be yourself.

  • Be Brief

Short sentences rule.  Especially on the web.  Don’t bury your best ideas inside big paragraphs.  60 words -tops- is a good rule of thumb.  Break out the bullets.  Use subheadings.  Little pieces of text go down best. (That’s why haiku is so popular on the internet.  Twitter, too, for that matter.)

This relates to tone because people aren’t this way- we’re usually more long winded (except in the movies).  You have to find some balance between being personal and being brief.  The answer is usually found in word choice.

  • Be Clear

People need to find what they’re looking for in seconds.  Make the information as easy to understand as possible, because people are coming to the website to…

  1. Answer a question
  2. Perform a task

The easier you make those two functions, the better.  Tone shouldn’t get in the way.  It should help.

Good blogs draw people in with tone.  Good sites do the same thing.  Paying attention to the tone, the voice, of your writing is a fantastic way to grow your web presence.  So, I’m going to take my own advice and get back to working on ours (I’m shooting for knowledgeable, friendly, not-overly handsome).

Got thoughts on good tone?  Feel free to share them in the comments.

Can You Afford To Be Different?

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009

I recently got to do some writing for a client that was a huge departure for them.  It was a big departure for me, too- because many people want very plain, straightforward, matter-of-fact copy. This was not that.

Here’s the thing: I loved writing it.  I had such a good time creating the words, I can’t properly explain it.  It was exhilarating.  It was challenging.  It was… awesome.  My wife said it gave her chills when she read it (high praise- she’s a tough critic).

That’s really cool.  Is it possible to do on every project?  I don’t know.  Is there a place for the best-of-standard style of writing?  What do you think?