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Danny Brown

Danny Brown

podcaster - author - creator

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Why 2009 Is Going To Be YOUR Year

The Little Queen of my Wild River!!! / La peti...
Image by Denis Collette…!!! via Flickr

You offer me hope.

You continue to amaze me (in the best way possible) with your ability to negate all the naysayers that doubt there’s still kindness in the human race.

You prove the positive nature of mankind is alive and well. And you do this on a daily basis. You are the heart of the future.

Why? Simple.

On Twitter last night, I mentioned that I wanted the community I share space with to write this blog post. I made a simple request: “In one line, how will YOU encourage greatness in 2009?” And you didn’t let me down – not by responding itself, but with the content of the responses.

These are the responses.

  • @haverhill01835 – “Don’t just listen to people, hear what they say.”
  • @3keyscoach – “Encouraging entrepreneurs to take their vision and put it into action on daily basis.”
  • @cognac – “Goodness follows Greatness. Be good, do good in 2009.”
  • @tmonhollon – “Help make work and writing fun through creativity and play.”
  • @sbradley3 – “Good is the enemy of greatness. Never settle for good. Never be afraid to start over when a good idea is not enough.”
  • @marinabroker – “I will always sell the best spot!”
  • @juliebonnheath – “My motto for greatness is what my drama teacher taught: Professionalism is attention to detail.”
  • @LaughingCrow – “I will spend more time with my children, help and inspire others, and spread ripples of compassion.”
  • @isCool – “I will be the change I seek. No one else can be that change.”
  • @russell_cook – “Greatness will be achieved when we give all we have to a purpose greater than ourselves.”
  • @abarcelos – “Using our talents (we all have them) to influence and help others in positive ways personally & professionally.”
  • @KatieKrafka – “I will encourage greatness by REPORTING greatness!”
  • @ShayRockhold – “I will encourage greatness in others by being their constant cheerleader and (when applicable) coach.”
  • @ScottHepburn – “Elevate your less ‘connected’ followers instead of fawning over A-listers… you’ll be amazed at what happens.”
  • @greytblackdog – “Act on the inspiration that I find everyday. The results will show up everywhere in my life, including my writing.”
  • @SternalPR – I will light a fire under people who lost a job and encourage them to find the entrepreneur spirit in a way that changes the world for the better.”

My own motto? Be interested in others. Genuinely interested. Encourage growth and assay fear. Be the rope for others to climb on.

I look forward to continuing to learn from you all in 2009 and thank you, and everyone I’ve connected with, for making this year the one where I really grew. If it’s true that we’re all in this together, I can’t think of any other people I’d rather be in it with.

Now it’s your turn – how will you encourage greatness in 2009? I’d love to hear your plans.

The Growing Elitism of Social Media

Recently I questioned whether we were turning into social media snobs. This wasn’t an attack on social media per se – more a valid look at whether certain people in the social media arena were beginning to try and wield a little too much (and possibly unwanted) influence over the medium.

However, perhaps even more disappointing than snobbery is the elitism that seems to be creeping into social media as well. While they may share certain characteristics, they are two different beasts.

Instead of the “do as I do” approach I discussed in my snobbery post, there’s a growing trend of “I want to feel more important than you” elitism that’s becoming more apparent.

A good example is the Twitter phenomenon. At its heart, it’s an excellent tool to not only make new friends and potential business contacts – it’s also a great way to see a microscopic snapshot of someone’s life in nibble-sized chunks. The fact that Twitter only allows you 140 characters to say your piece means you have to use that space wisely. This can lead to some very inventive and humorous comments.

Yet lately Twitter has become nothing more than a virtual brothel for people to either whore themselves out or to come across as a “look at me, I’m great” type of person. As a fan of social media and all it can offer, I find that sad and a little disappointing.

I’ll be the first to admit that I’ll notify my fellow Twitter users/followers of a new blog post – but then, that’s fairly standard for pretty much everyone on Twitter.

Where the application is losing its appeal (for me) is the amount of people that shout out about how many followers they have, or how many more they need to reach 500, or 1,000, or something similar. When did Twitter become a popularity contest? Isn’t that what MySpace is for (and one of the reasons Facebook is starting to take over from the Fox-backed networking site as the most popular)?

Maybe it’s just me, but I can see from your Twitter profile how many followers you have, or how many people you are following. That doesn’t interest me – and judging by the reaction of some of my friends who have stopped following certain Twitter accounts, it doesn’t impress them either.

Instead, tell people about excellent sites or blogs they should be checking out. Tell them about tools they can use to make them more effective in either their online brand building or improving their social media awareness.

Constantly mentioning you have so many followers often emits an air of superiority that no-one really enjoys and can lead to them unsubscribing from your updates. Which kind of goes against all that social media stands for, no?

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