Different thoughts about thinking differently
More of what other people are saying on the Web

Some recent posts that have caught my attention:

Steve Errey’s guest post at Copyblogger.com, Want to Know the Real Reason Why You Write?, features this great line:  finding your voice is not optional if you want to live a rich, confident life and if you want to be a great writer.

At Lateral Action, Mark McGuinness asks Is Lateral Thinking Necessary For Creativity? The post looks at Edward DeBono’s lateral thinking concept and looks at some counterarguments which suggest that it might not be essential for creative thinking.

Kyle Lacy asks the question Get 30,000 Followers on Twitter. What is it Worth?  There is an excellent point to be considered here:  how valuable is it to have a huge following?  Kyle is looking at this from a business/marketing point of view and it’s worth checking out.

The incomparable Steven Hodson makes it pretty clear in this post:  I may be a lot of things but I am not a brand.

Hutch Carpenter provides another look at the concept of when ideas ignite and the role of intuition: Strategic Intuition: The Innovation of Flickr and Twitter

Louis Gray looks at transparency on the Web with Being Transparent is Fine, But Please Use Smart Filtering.

And, finally, Rob Diana hits the nail on the head with:  Sorry Twitter, Facebook Is the Data Gold MineRobert Scoble agrees.

Check these out, won’t you?

EDIT:  and, apparently, UK kids will be taught to blog, Tweet and use social media in school…  lucky little…

Bookmark and Share

Other posts that you might enjoy reading:

Tags: , , |

4 Responses to “More of what other people are saying on the Web”

  1. Kyle Lacy says:

    Thanks for the link. I am def. going to check out the rest!

  2. Mark Dykeman says:

    No problem Kyle, they are definitely worth checking out.

  3. [...] More of what other people are saying on the Web (broadcasting-brain.com) [...]

  4. [...] More of what other people are saying on the Web (broadcasting-brain.com) [...]

Leave a Reply

Broadcasting Brain is proudly powered by WordPress. Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS). Copyright (c) 2010 by Mark Dykeman. All rights reserved. Theme by Omakase Design.