free

Elizabeth Engel photo

What I’m Reading

  • Salon.com on how blogs “changed everything.” The main problems I see with Diller et. al.’s theory that talent is a limited resource are the roles of access and practice. You know that old saying it’s not what you know, it’s who you know? Much as we’d like to pretend otherwise, we don’t operate in a pure meritocracy. Talent is one thing, but I don’t think anyone would argue that Usain Bolt, Alex Ovechkin, or Venus Williams would have achieved all they had without diligent practice. You have to work to develop any talent, including writing. So if I don’t, for instance, have the right background or the know the right people to be able to write a football column for The Philadelphia Inquirer, but I still want to write about the Iggles and improve what I write by practice, my football blog provides an outlet. Additionally, the web allows writers to be serve particular niches – you don’t have to appeal to everyone, which allows more diverse and specialized voices to be heard.
  • Dave Fleet asks some thought-provoking questions about self-promotion, community building, creating a following, and engaging in a conversation.
  • Mark Cuban (Dallas Mavericks owner) on Succeed By Free – Die By Free. Well, OK, but who says you should even aspire to be “king of the mountain” FOREVER?
  • Jared Goralnick on filing, search, and efficiency. I’m generally a top-down person, but he may have convinced me to switch. If only MS’s desktop search was, you know, good.
  • New study from the super-smart folks at Pew: Trends in Political Values and Core Attitudes: 1987-2009. Among all sorts of interesting findings is this:

Moreover, over the past decade there has been erosion in the percentage of Americans holding conservative views on family, homosexuality and gender roles. The decline in social conservatism is a result of generational change. Younger age cohorts are less conservative than older ones: Both of the younger age cohorts, Generation Y and Generation X, are less conservative than the Baby Boomers. The Silent Generation is the most conservative of all.

Equal rights for ALL? We haz them (soon – I hope).
addthis_pub = ‘ewengel’;

July 8th, 2009 | Elizabeth Engel | Comments | Continued
Jeff Cobb photo

What are you giving away?

I plan to attend a free Webinar with Joe Pulizzi and Newt Barrett tomorrow afternoon (Wednesday, February 11). If you aren’t familiar with Pulizzi and Barrett, they wrote Get Content. Get Customers, a book I highly recommend it. Here’s a nice overview passage from the book blog:

In the last few years,…

February 10th, 2009 | Jeff Cobb | Comments | Continued
Maddie Grant photo

2008’s most popular posts

What a year this has turned out to be, huh!

I hope to find time to post a personal note about it all in a couple of days (the holidays are a good time to step back and take stock, aren’t they!) but in the meantime I started making a…

December 24th, 2008 | Maddie Grant | Comments | Continued
Jeff Cobb photo

Radiohead Free Association, Part II

I noticed last week on Mashable that the “final numbers” are in for Radiohead’s 2007 experiment, in which the band let people decide for themselves how much to pay for a digital download of it latest album, In Rainbows. In general, the view seems to be that the experiment was a…

October 23rd, 2008 | Jeff Cobb | Comments | Continued
Jeff Cobb photo

Open Content Business Models – 3 Case Studies

Can business models based on giving away content and allowing it to be re-mixed and/or re-used really work? Anyone who has been watching the Web closely over the past few years knows they can, but their are still plenty of doubters out there. It’s good to have some case studies…

September 24th, 2008 | Jeff Cobb | Comments | Continued
Elizabeth Engel photo

The Six Kinds of Free

Maddie post brilliant idea. You read. And comment!
addthis_pub = ‘ewengel’;

September 8th, 2008 | Elizabeth Engel | Comments | Continued
Maddie Grant photo

More on Free is the Future – the six kinds of “free”

According to this post by Chris Carfi (which references others), these are the six kinds of free:

Freemium - Offer a limited-functionality free version of a product to encourage trial, and have a purchasable premium version available for power users

Advertising – Offer a free service to end users, and sell advertising to advertisers

Cross subsidies -…

September 7th, 2008 | Maddie Grant | Comments | Continued

Categories

Archives

  • 300x250 banner
  • Recent Comments

  • A-List flickr

  • A-List Twitter

  • Viagra online
  • Order cheap cialis
  • Buy viagra no prescription
  • Cialis online
  • Buy generic cialis
  • Order propecia no prescription
  • Cheap propecia online
  • Propecia online pharmacy
  • Order levitra online
  • Cheap price cialis
  • Online pharmacy levitra
  • Buy viagra online
  • Buy discount levitra
  • Cheap cialis online
  • Propecia hair loss