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College students and social networking

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Some new numbers related to use of social networking sites among college students:

  • 85 percent participate in social networking sites
  • 95 percent of 18-19 years olds participate
  • Facebook is most popular (89%); My Space is next (48%)
  • 59 percent use SNSs daily
  • 97 percent use SNSs primarily to keep in touch with friends
  • 50 percent use SNSs to communicate with classmates about course-related topics
  • 5 percent communicate with instructors via SNSs

Source: The ECAR Study of Undergraduate Students and Information Technology, 2008; Educause Center for Applied Research; October 2008.

KISS me, please

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

My Little League baseball coach was a good communicator. On the first day of practice, he told us we were going to use the “KISS principle” for our signs. He meant we were going to “Keep It Simple, Stupid.”

“If I touch my skin,” coach Redpath told us, “that means steal. Get it? Skin. Steal. If I touch my belt, that means bunt. Get it? Belt. Bunt.”

That was it.

Coach would go through all kinds of crazy gyrations from the third-base box. Nearly all of it was to distract the other team. All we had to do was watch for him to touch his skin or touch his belt.

We remembered the signs throughout the season (and into midlife) because they were indeed simple and memorable. And perhaps because using words like “kiss” and “stupid” with 12-year-old boys makes them giggle. And listen.

As I struggle to develop effective communication about technology on campus, I’ve concluded that we make almost everything too complicated. Case in point: I could not articulately explain campus email to you. We made it too complex.

IT professionals obfuscate when we should elucidate. We need to change that. If you read Wikipedia’s entry for the KISS principle, you’ll see a reference to Albert Einstein’s maxim that “everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler.”

If Albert Einstein could make his world simple, imagine what we could do with ours.

There’s a better way

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

I occassionally hear from people on campus that they are reading the IT Community blog. That’s encouraging. But when we started this endeavor, I had hoped there would be more dialogue and sharing of ideas that would help us do a better job of fulfilling the University’s mission.

So, today I’m giving readers of the IT Community blog an opportunity to get the ball rolling. Here’s the assignment:

In the discussion area below, complete this sentence:

We could improve [fill in the blank] by [fill in the blank].

An example to get things started:

We could improve IT communications by following the lead of HR director Betsy Hawkins in engaging stakeholders in conversations about policy changes and new initiatives, and then creating and executing detailed communication plans.

Feel free to submit more than one idea. It can be about anything the University does. If you have ideas but don’t want to post publicly, send me an email and I’ll share your ideas anonymously.

The ol’ ballgame

Monday, July 14th, 2008

You might think that few people in Grizzlyville would support a team that has lost 21 of 26 games. But losses don’t keep fans away from Osprey baseball games. I attended my sixth game of the season Saturday before witnessing a win. More than 2,000 others shared in cheering the end of a 10-game losing streak that night.

More than 14,000 attended the last six home games (five of them losses). If not for a winning team, why do people go?

A few reasons:

  • You’re outside
  • It’s cheaper than a movie
  • You’re close to the action
  • The ballpark is beautiful
  • The scenery beyond the ballpark is more beautiful
  • While the Osprey with uniforms drop an occasional fly ball, the osprey with feathers living outside the centerfield fence occasionally makes an incredible catch in the Clark Fork River
  • Comforatable seats
  • Pretty good food
  • Really good beverages
  • Lots of chances to win everything from peanuts to $10,000
  • Three hours of bonding with family, friends, colleagues and fellow Missoulians

July 24th is UM Alumni & Friends night at the ballpark. What a great opportunity for those of us in the UM IT community to share in the camaraderie. Did I mention you could win $10,000?

If you’re not there it’s a shame.

Lateral thinking

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

A man and his son are in a car crash. The man is killed and the son is taken to hospital gravely injured. When he gets there, the surgeon says “I can’t operate on this boy- he is my son!” How is this possible?

(Answer somewhere below. I’m not telling you where)

I’ve talked to lots of colleagues lately about using blogs for campus communication and community building.

The reception to my idea has been tepid.

It took me awhile to understand why, but I think I finally get it.

Exhibit A:

(From an actual conversation – names changed to protect the guilty)

Sally (to a co-worker): “Joe, you blog, don’t you?”

Joe: “Hah, I used to five years ago when it was the cool thing to do.”

Exhibit B:

(A totally hypothetical situation)

A campus administrator bans all blogging by his employees because he fears a loose cannon will expose campus fraud, corruption and mediocrity.

What’s going on?

Joe perceives blogging as an online personal journal filled with schlock.

The campus administrator perceives blogging as the tool of 21st century muckraking journalists.

You may have perceived the surgeon in the story above as a man, and thus failed to recognize that the surgeon was the boy’s mother (note: there are other possible explanations, so keep thinking).

Yes, surgeons are most often men, but they don’t have to be. Blogs have most often been used as personal online journals and platforms for Woodward and Bernstein wannabes. But they don’t have to be.

There are many challenges in IT these days: funding, security, identity management, content management, personnel management, data ownership, web portals, web 2.0, digital media production, training, support, just trying to keep up with the ridiculous speed of change.

Are we stuck in the ways we perceive these challenges? How might a little lateral thinking help us?

Pick a challenge and talk among yourselves. Feel free to use this blog’s nifty commenting feature to share your creative lateral ideas and let’s work together to find solutions.

Paying attention to parents

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

As we welcome our first group of students and parents to orientation today, a conversation is taking place in the Educause portal forum about providing parent access to student data through campus portals.

Gettysburg College, Iowa State, the University of Arizona and the Pennsylvania College of Technology all shared how they allow parents to access academic and financial records-FERPA-protected information-specific to their son or daughter.

These campuses handle parent (or guest) account creation in different ways. Some allow the parent to request an account and connect that account to a registered student. Others require the student to create and manage their own guest accounts.

While account creation mechanisms differ, all of these campuses deal with FERPA -protected information the same way. The student has control through a web interface to choose what data the parent account can access.

Gettysburg College built its web portal 10 years ago and has been a thought leader in portal develoment. You can visit their parent portal information page at http://public.gettysburg.edu/it/cnav/parents.htm.

Technology is the “new” butane

Monday, May 12th, 2008

No, this is not another post about technology saving fuels; this is a look at how technology is becoming common place in our society to the point of replacing butane lighters…

…in the glory days of rock ‘n roll musicians would gaze upon the warm glow of happy faces softly silhouetted by the light from a butane lighter. Crowds swayed to heart-felt ballads, displaying joy by igniting a flame, held at arm’s length above their head. Sure it sounds dangerous, but the prefect mood was set by millions of concert goes during the 70s, 80s, and 90s. Enter into the mid-2000s, the dawning of the mobile technology epoch. No longer do we scorch our fingers on HOT lighters, but we illuminate and capture with cell phones.

Last week I attended the Swell Season concert at the Wilma Theater in downtown Missoula. Not a lighter in sight, probably due to the fire code, but the glow of LCD displays lit the night as pictures and videos were recorded on a multitude of mobile devices. No longer do the words “cameras or recording devices not allowed” mean a thing! Most of the audience has this device attached to their belt, in their purse, or held to their ear. And they are not afraid to use it!

While I have yet to find video from the Missoula concert on YouTube, I did spend a portion of last evening watching clips from other Swell Season concerts. Quickly I was transported back to the magic of the evening while watching Glen and Marketa sing the songs they performed here.

Butane sales may be down, I have no data to verify this, but I can assure you the usage of mobile devices extends beyond the realm of placing phone calls. Rockers unite! Light the night! Pixel by pixel!

The right way to save the day

Monday, April 21st, 2008

I recently read an article detailing the savings of right turns. UPS estimates saving three million gallons of fuel last year by providing their drivers with right-turn routes.

The article got me thinking. At first I remembered a news article from my youth in NW Ohio about a man stopped by our local sheriff deputy who claimed to be driving around the United States by only making right turns on orders from the Lord. While this does not seem like a way to save gas, it was also 30+ years ago when the price of gasoline was not an obstacle to seeing the USA in the auto of your choosing.

Upon returning to present-day Missoula after a detour to my childhood, my thoughts turned to ways of examining everyday practices to make a difference. I believe by taking small steps to chance our routine we can make major changes. I first started this process by turning of my computer at the end of the workday. Then I began turning off my office light while attending meetings, and taking the bus to work several days a week. Small changes to my routine which over the course of a year will add up to real savings in electricity and fuel.

Kermit the Frog argues it is not easy being green, but I would have to disagree. As we celebrate Earth Day let us think of the ‘right turns’ we can take to make a better world for all.

Twitter twaddle

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

I recently started paying attention to what my friends are up to (at least what they say they are up to) in Facebook. It’s easy for me to do now with the new “Facebook Friends Status” channel in OneStop.

To my friends (and friends of friends in social networks everywhere), I hereby challenge you to raise the level of your twittering to new heights.

Here’s what I want my friends to share with me:

  • A new skill you’re acquiring
  • A hard lesson you just learned
  • An interesting person just met
  • An innovative idea you’ve been kicking around
  • Something you created and how you did it
  • A project you’re working on that will make the world a better place
  • Something that motivates me to act
  • Something that expands my awareness of the world
  • Something that makes me smile

I will try to do the same.

Six alternatives to spam

Monday, April 7th, 2008

Wikipedia defines spamming as “the abuse of electronic messaging to indiscriminately send unsolicited bulk messages.” The practice, the entry notes, “is widely reviled.”

Other definitions of spam use the words unwelcome, inappropriate and junk.

I recently wrote about the daily barrage of spam hitting campus from the outside. But what about spam from within? Can email from a campus colleague be perceived as indiscriminate, unsolicited, unwelcome, inappropriate, reviled junk?

I presume your answer is yes.

Which begs two questions: 1) Why would a campus department engage in a practice that invites scorn? And, 2) if not bulk electronic messaging, how does a campus department effectively and inexpensively communicate its offerings and events?

Why do we do it?

One reason we spam each other is obvious:  sending thousands of identical electronic messages is easy, and it doesn’t cost the sender a dime. Other reasons: The sender sincerely believes that every single recipient wants and needs to hear his or her message. The productivity output looks great (”I got our message out to 15,000 people in 5 minutes!” you tell your boss). And, I suspect, most of us simply a lack the time, skill and motivation to identify an appropriate target audience, consider their needs, produce quality messages and imagine creative delivery channels.

The tragedy of spam

Spamming may be free to the sender, but the cost is steep for the University. It goes far beyond the real monetary costs of bandwidth usage and data storage. I’m talking about the abuse of people’s time, attention and trust, and the lost opportunities for future constructive communication.

When messages we receive from “the University” are consistently impersonal, irrelevant and overwhelming in numbers, we stop paying attention. All future communication is compromised. Regaining the trust and attention of our audience grows increasingly difficult.

Internal spam is a classic “tragedy of the commons” scenario. The individual department benefits in the short run by using a community resource to successfully reach 1 out of 1,000 customers, while the University suffers the long-term consequences of 999 disenchanted (and increasingly disengaged) customers out of every 1,000.

 New rules

An anti-spam policy might curb negative behavior, but such a policy would not address the bigger issue:  how do we communicate effectively with our stakeholders? We need a new awareness and appreciation for what it means to communicate effectively in the Web 2.0 world. And we need to adopt more sophisticated strategies and technical solutions.

Here are six rules that would move us in the right direction:

  1. Provide a remarkable product or service. You will cultivate a passionate audience who will do much of your communication work for you. Mundane and mediocre doesn’t compete well for attention and doesn’t travel far in social and professional networks.
  2. Communicate well. I mean really well. Only communicate the very most important things. Stay focused. Keep it simple. Tell compelling stories. Make people laugh or cry and they will pay attention and remember.
  3. Invest money. Recognize that communication is the most important thing you do. Hire talented writers, designers, speakers and communication strategists. Be willing to pay for ad placements, quality website design, media development and professional publications. Don’t hire your nephew at minimum wage to design your website. You will get what you pay for.
  4. Make your information easy to find. Make your online content is available through RSS subscription. Optimize your online search results. Participate in online social and professional networks.
  5. Communicate at appropriate times and in relevant context. Amazon does this well (you just bought book “A” and they immediately (timing) let you know that you might also be interested in book “B” (relevant)). Learn to recognize when someone has taken an action that invites related communication.
  6. Seek permission to communicate with people, and never abuse the privilege they have given you to interrupt them with your message. Even opt-in mailing lists can become spam if you get greedy. Provide opportunities for your audience to tell you whether your communication is effective. And listen to them.