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Mastering the Art of Listening: A Blogger’s Guide to Success

ProBlogger

My own monitoring of my niches generally happens in two ways: Subscribing to Feeds of Key Sources of Information – these days most sites have some way of subscribing to them, usually via an RSS feed. Both of these sites have RSS feeds you can subscribe to to monitor what’s hot.

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13 Signs That You're At a Tech Conference | Almost Savvy

Almost Savvy

On their computers, I see Gmail, Facebook, Tweetdeck, Skype, Flickr and a host of other apps and widgets. If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed ! Few in the audience appear to be paying attention to the speakers, though I imagine some are. (On I only spot two people actually sleeping. What have I missed?

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Twitter Webinar Basics Etiquette | Almost Savvy

Almost Savvy

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed ! I learned today about TweetDeck & find it easier to understand what’s going on. If you have a few hundred followers or a large number of updates, you may want to consider the follow-up session. What’s a tweetwall? Where do we find it.

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Hoping You'll Ask Me to Dance | Almost Savvy

Almost Savvy

Image courtesy of Wasaby If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed ! I have not tried tweetdeck, but I am now interested in giving it a try. LeaRae Reply Irene Koehler says: February 2, 2009 at 11:25 pm Have fun with Tweetdeck, LeaRae. Thank you for the ideas in this blog.

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Turn the Tables on Social Media with NutshellMail | Email.

Convince & Convert

Sure, you can centralize some of your social media chores (great post by Chris Brogan), by using Tweetdeck or Seesmic. You can even include Twitter searches in your feed, enabling you to use NutshellMail the same way you’d use TweetBeep, or an RSS feed of Twitter search results. And it’s free.

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Convince and Convert Blog: Social Media Strategy and Social Media.

Convince & Convert

Twitter Tweetdeck I use Tweetdeck for serious twitter sessions. It doesn’t have the advanced functionality of Tweetdeck (such as cross-posting to Facebook), but it’s so easy-to-use that it’s my favorite Twitter app. Note that nearly 40% of all subscribers to this blog are via email, not RSS.

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Convince and Convert Blog: Social Media Strategy and Social Media.

Convince & Convert

Updating Facebook from third parties like Tweetdeck? I think twitter is more of a heavily curated rss reader/feeder rather than a portal, and I suspect that presenting twitter to new users as more of a friendly way to use rss that as a way to push conversation with strangers would help quite a bit.