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I met Janet Salmons many years ago while I working on various arts and technology projects in New York State for the New York Foundation for the Arts. Ever since, our paths have crossed several times in nonprofit technology circles online, most recently via the Digital Divide Network listserv and the online forums at TechSoup.
I'm thinking a lot lately about tagging communities (NpTech Tag), information coping skills, and distributed and disperse nature of networked/connected knowledge sharing. I think I'm a digital curator. Steve Rubel has an excellent definition , although it isn't new. Perhaps editors are those who also still work in print form too?
Murphy says they initiated training for employees, that offered the 101 and 201 of using Twitter. Murphy served as the point of contact, answering staff questions on the fine art of tweeting. He also identified staff who were enthusiastic and proficient in using Twitter to lead training.
And my mission is really to educate and empower nonprofit leaders and their teams with the knowledge and tools to scale their revenue and amplify their impact. I’ve managed campaigns ranging from about $5 million to over a billion dollars in health care, education, arts and culture, and advocacy sectors. Steven: I love it.
And I think another important component is knowledge. I’ve seen that quite a bit. And so do you have that sort of squared away on the roles and responsibilities and the processes? . A lot of team and people though I’m seeing here, seems to be the majority.
trusted body of knowledge and the 'why' has to do with providing a service to a busy and information-inundated nonprofit sector. composed of audio clips, video, slideshows, infographics, graphic art, etc." tried turning email discussions on listservs into blog posts and opting to record conference call presentations.
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