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  • Organizing my feed

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    I took some time this weekend to do something I have been thinking about for a while now: organizing my feed. That is, taking stock of all of the places that I participate online, organizing them and making sure that they work (pass information back and forth) together. In the process, I have also come up with a basic approach/philosophy to being an early adopter of online tools.

    Catalog

    Although I below to a ton of online communities, sites and services, I have narrowed down my regular participation to a handful:

    • appliedthinking (this site)
    • Spout - Helping people find movies they’ll love.
    • twitter - Micro-format blogging.
    • del.icio.us - Social bookmarking.
    • LinkedIn - Professional online network.
    • vodpod - Video cataloging and sharing.
    • LibraryThing - Online book catalog for sharing and reviewing.
    • Last.FM - The “social music revolution”
    • flickr - Online photo management and sharing.
    • facebook - A “a social utility that connects people with friends and others…”
    • FriendFeed - A place to share everything you do online.
    • tumblr - The “scrapbook” of blogs.
    • plaxo - An online address book with a “Pulse.”
    • BrightKite - A “locaiton based social network.”

    Be assured that there are others, but this is the list that I keep going back to for one reason or another.

    Organize

    The way I use them, these sites can be broken down into:

    • Primary feeds - Places that I go to post unique bits of content.
    • Secondary/derivative feeds - Places that I use to aggregate content from the primary sources. These are typically the places that I am less focused on a topic and more social.

    Additionally, I have a series of tools for:

    • Input - A mix of online and desktop tools and hardware.
    • Tracking - Primarily used to track my success. That is, am I growing a brand and how strong is it?

    AND…there are typically a set of sites that I am evaluating:

    • New tools - Are they primary feeds? Derivative? Inputs? Trackers?

    To that end, I’ve organized the above sites like this:

    …and mapped their interaction like this:

    My goal in all of this has been to: limit the sites I visit on a regular basis and increase the overall effectiveness of the ones I do…all the while trying not to duplicate too much information which just leads to junking up the web.

    Results

    Although this is still a work in progress, I think I have accomplished a couple of things. First, I’ve realized which sites/services I have committed to and second, I have a way to quickly compare new site/services/tools to the way I think about .

    For example, I have signed-up to the beta of BrightKite. In the past I would have evaluated it in a bit of a vacuum. Now I ask some relevant questions based upon the way I use the other site’s in my daily arsenal:

    • Is this a primary or secondary/derivative feed?
    • Based upon that, is it better or different than the other feeds I produce in that category?
    • Can it be updated through other input devises?
    • How does it add value to my brand?

    Additionally, I now have a clearer way of looking at the growing list of purely social sites. If they allow me to create activity by pulling (RSS) from my primary sites/services, I’ll do it. I mean, why not? Limited work for a high potential of return. Typically all I need to do is maintain my profile (and keep the avatar fresh) and let the primary sites/services keep my presence active.

    This isn’t rocket science, right? But it certainly does help in making a quick evaluation of what site/services I merely sign-up for (which is a lot) and which ones I incorporate into my life.

    Do you do it another way? See any flaws in my method? I’m all ears…

    * BrightKite, by the way, isn’t looking very good for me. Limited value for the amount of work I need to do to keep up with it. Can’t it be tied to my iPhone’s quasi-GPS?

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    Originally posted on:appliedthinking

 

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