Post by account_disabled on Mar 6, 2024 2:01:29 GMT -8
What’s important to me, may not be important to him, and I get that. There’s a couple of potential solutions: 1) Do what I want, and tweet about what’s important to me during work, and what’s important to me after work. Battlestar Galactica and @goodboyrumba and all. 2) Just make my Twitter account for business and create a separate one for personal (more and more of my family is joining Twitter) 3) Wait for Twitter to offer permission based tweets around our different facets of our persona (work vs personal vs public). It’s quite the conundrum. How much personal should I share, it was pretty even split. Some want to know more about the man behind web strategy, some just want all web strategy signal.
To show a bit of their human side to the Indonesia Telegram Number Data market –but no one cares about what you ate for lunch. , the readers, and do be honest. do you care to hear from folks you’ve come to rely on for business information? Perhaps the bigger question is, how much of our personal lives should we share with our work? Is there a difference? Update: Rex has a new blog post, All work makes Jack a dull boy, he’s read many of the comments on my post and his, for the most part we’re in agreement: mixture is needed, but better tools could help those filter content. , it’s helpful to examine the next generation workforce. Right about now it’s spring.
Twitter is getting a tremendous amount of buzz from brands, celebrities, media, politicians, and athletes. Despite the hype, it’s still a very small social networking site (likely under 10mm), compared to the social giants like Google, Microsoft, Facebook and MySpace (150-300mm), see my stats page to learn more. I assert that mainstream attention is different than mainstream usage. Even respected analyst firm Gartner suggests that the backlash may start as this microblogging tool gets mainstream attention, although I’ll suggest we haven’t even begun to see the upcoming revolt.
To show a bit of their human side to the Indonesia Telegram Number Data market –but no one cares about what you ate for lunch. , the readers, and do be honest. do you care to hear from folks you’ve come to rely on for business information? Perhaps the bigger question is, how much of our personal lives should we share with our work? Is there a difference? Update: Rex has a new blog post, All work makes Jack a dull boy, he’s read many of the comments on my post and his, for the most part we’re in agreement: mixture is needed, but better tools could help those filter content. , it’s helpful to examine the next generation workforce. Right about now it’s spring.
Twitter is getting a tremendous amount of buzz from brands, celebrities, media, politicians, and athletes. Despite the hype, it’s still a very small social networking site (likely under 10mm), compared to the social giants like Google, Microsoft, Facebook and MySpace (150-300mm), see my stats page to learn more. I assert that mainstream attention is different than mainstream usage. Even respected analyst firm Gartner suggests that the backlash may start as this microblogging tool gets mainstream attention, although I’ll suggest we haven’t even begun to see the upcoming revolt.