4 Missions, 4 Projects: Social Media Club Gets to Work
August 5, 2008 by Chris Heuer
With the creation of the interim advisory board/group, it was my hope to gain some new momentum and secure a real commitment from industry leaders to collaborate for our collective benefit. From the coverage and feedback we received, it seems that we did that part well.
Now we need to turn that energy and attention into some collaborative action. So a few people in the interim advisory group have agreed to step up and help lead some initial projects. In looking at what is most important to us, it would seem most appropriate to focus our efforts on the four areas of our core mission:
- Expand Media Literacy
- Share Lessons Learned Among Practitioners
- Encourage Adoption of Industry Standards
- Promote Ethical Practices through Discussion and Actions
From here, it is important to note that anyone in the advisory group (and any member of the community) may propose projects for the club to support. Over the next few weeks we will need to formalize the governance on how we choose which projects get our formal support, but for now we are going to keep it simple and ask for your help in making these first 4 projects, that support our 4 missions a success. You can stay up to date on them here on the blog or over on the Social Media Club Special Projects page on the wiki.
Media Literacy
Michael Brito is leading an effort to find and organize all the best Introduction to Social Media presentations, classes, discussions, cartoons, videos, blog posts etc… There are a lot of ‘here is what you need to know about social media‘ lists out there as well – where are they, which ones are the best. If you have some materials to submit, or if you run across some good material, can you please join this project by submitting your introduction to Social Media materials on the Social Media Club wiki.
Sharing Lessons Learned
This one is a bit self serving as well, but important, and open. As part of The Social Media Playbook, we are building a section on Social Media Champions – the people inside of organizations who fought for engaging customers, employees and the broader market through Social Media. We are looking for champions to fill out an online interview form and will be publishing the findings on the Social Media Club blog and some of them in the book. In short, we want to discover how you overcame the objections of management, what worked for you and what didn’t. Or more simply, how did you go from weird outsider to welcomed champion? Go to the Champions project page on the wiki for more information.
Encourage Adoption of Industry Standards
John Gatrell is leading our efforts to leverage our collective expertise to further promote key industry standards such as Creative Commons, Open ID, Data Portability, the Open Web Foundation and others. He will be posting more on this project in the weeks ahead. In principle it would be great if we could do work along the lines of what Chris Messina et al did with Spread Firefox – find ways to expand awareness and explain these key standards to more everyday folks, business decision makers and others.
The first project will be in support of Creative Commons. We would like to propose a Creative Commons Awareness Day, where everyone participating writes a quick blog post about what CC means to them, how to explain it to others, what are some examples of things they have been able to do more easily because of having access to creative commons content and the challenges they have faced by people not honoring their requests for attribution etc… (there is some bad with the good, lets be honest). We have also put together a fundraising widget to help raise money for their efforts from Social Media Club Members – if you want to help us spread the campaign and start other efforts, please go to the wiki page for this project to stay up to date and contribute.
Promote Ethical Behaviour
This is tougher to get a project going in this area since it is more of a matter of discussion, but from that principle, comes the idea for our first project. We are starting a discussion about how membership in Social Media Club can serve as a ‘trusted mark’ for people to know that someone is ethical, understands social media and is committed to the advancement of the industry. There are more and more people claiming to be ’social media experts’ while more and more of us are shunning such titles, realizing we are merely practitioners who are learning more each day.
Everyone I know is concerned with what we do about the schemers and con-artists who are getting into social media with a ‘get rich quick’ mentality. How do we help people avoid those who are selling the snake oil and find those businesses, service providers and people who are really doing good work? Go to the Project Page on our Wiki and join the discussion. You should also check out this recent blog post by Kristie Wells aggregating some of the biggest ethical issues in Social Media today.
Other Projects
We are open to supporting other projects, collaborating with other groups and taking ideas for new projects related to our mission. If you are a member, we especially want to hear from you. What can we do to better serve your needs. But even if you are only an occasional reader of this blog, we want to hear from you too so we can address your needs and serve the community of social media professionals and enthusiasts.
Besides visiting the special projects pages on the wiki to get more involved, please help us get more people involved by sharing your perspective on these first projects on your own blog and helping get others involved. What it is, is up to us…




I would like to see better uses of Microformats, some of the bigger social networks shove them down the end user’s throat. My big pet peeve right now is twitter and rel=”no follow me” This is the HTML way of saying I don’t trust myself. If twitter was playing nice and fair it should just be rel=”me”
Very excited about the work that you and Kristie are doing, Chris.
Looking forward to working with both of you to help run the San Diego chapter.
Regards,
Samir.
[...] 4 Missions, 4 Projects: Social Media Club Gets to Work | Social Media Club Media Literacy [...]
[...] After a short burst of behind-the-scenes tossing around of ideas on priorities for our attention, Social Media Club Co-Founder Chris Heuer has posted a work program structured as 4 Missions, 4 Projects. [...]
Great roundup, Chris. I’m excited to be a part of all this and help further SMC’s mission.
I’m currently writing my MA dissertation on how suitable user-centered design processes are for online social media services. This seems relevant to the Club’s aim of sharing ‘Lessons Learned Among Practitioners’ and I’d love to be able to discuss the issue with Club members. However am I right in concluding that there is currently no forum for discussion provided by Social Media Club?
Which leads me to tentatively suggest two ideas for projects:
1) Create a space for discussion (assuming I haven’t missed the existing one). I would have thought wetpaint.com’s concept of a wiki+forum would serve the club’s needs very well.
2) Develop a best practice design process for social media (a project which I would hopefully be able to contribute to through my dissertation research).
Hi,
Great Job! and Great Group!
I’m interested in joining either the A or NY chapter. Would like to add to the board as well:)
Please contact me!
Thanks,
ehannan@pragmaticmarketing.com
@TheDudeDean: Couldn’t agree more and Jon Gatrell (and crew) are working on that issue now. If you would like to help them, you can contact him via http://socialmediaclub.pbwiki.com/Project%3A-Industry-Standards-
Sam and David, thank you. Appreciate all your support.
@Nicolas: The pbwiki wiki for SMC Projects is the vehicle we have available right now for discussions. Not perfect and we are working on a replacement. To kick things off, that is where I would start (right now).
@Elizabeth: Will get you connected with the NYC chapter and welcome your contributions to the SMC.
[...] stated in Chris’ post on the Social Media Club’s 4 projects, increasing awareness and adoption for industry standards is central to the mission of the group. [...]
I would like to see some aspect of the “Expand media literacy” mission to address social change. Is there any such thing as Social Media Action Day? Can being social also mean being mindful of others and developing media literacy where it may not otherwise be readily available?
[...] Social Media Club has four missions, which are: [...]