Twitterville

June 01, 2009

Twitter and that Business Model Thingee

I had a really good time at TWTRCON yesterday. While some were critical that it was the Twitterville community's testimonial to itself, I found it inspiring to see the rapid emergence of a business community that shares a passion for Twitter. The conference was sold out and the room was about as filled as it could be--unless the round top tables had been removed.

My old friend Gina Smith, for ABC tech correspondent and iWoz co-author, did a good job of co-hosting, but she seemed to inject a common theme regarding Twitter and the alleged lack of business model. I found myself disagreeing with her observations and the fact that every time she took a mild snipe at Twitter's alleged lack of model many heads in the room would nod in agreement.

I was not among them. First, I believe the company has been pretty clear that it will charge businesses for services. The founders have stated this and expanded upon it many times. Second, Twitter should do so well as other Silicon Valley start ups that were knocked for not having a business model such as Google and Facebook.

But more than that, the room was filled with companies that show the viability of Twitter's approach. All day we heard from people like Frank Eliason who heads the Comcast Twitter support team, Beth Mansfield the voice behind the curtain of the Carl's Jr, Twitter account, Dell Computer who sold over $1 million in refurbished computers via Twitter in its first year and so on. Each of thee company representatives made clear that their companies are making money because of their Twitter involvement. They were feeding ideas and encouragement to an audience of people who want to use Twitter to profit while getting closer to their customers. Here were these successful companies telling a business audience how Twitter was making them money, positioning them closer with customers efficiently and giving multiple examples of how other companies could do the same.

Then there was the observation by Comcast's Eliason: His company had come to Twitterville because that's where they could find their customers. So what company would not come to Twitter to get closer to customers and make money?

Now, here's the obvious leap that Gina and others, in my opinion are missing. Twitter will eventually charge for such services and as long as charges are reasonable, companies like Comcast, Dell and Carl's Jr will be happy to pay for these services. And the longer Twitter can wait before they charge, the bigger Twitter gets during that period, the more companies will see the value and be willing to pay.

Gina asked the question whether Twitter made a mistake by turning down a $500 million stock offer to be acquired by Facebook.
Some thought they had. I do not. I think the amount is chicken feed.



May 15, 2009

Send me your favorite tweets

My editor came up with a great idea for Twitterville. he wants to sprinkle a few chapters with a few sample tweets.  The idea is to give readers a sense of the diversity, depth, humor, passion and surprise you find there every day.

I'd like you to send me your favorite tweets. The catch is that it should be someone else's--not your own. If we use it, I'll add you to the Acknowledgments. If there is space please use the tag #TVL. I know some entries won't have space, so I'll be pretty vigilant looking.

Of course it will score points--but is not mandatory if you send a tweet if it touches on the subjects and companies I cover in the book. So below is my final Table of Contents, with a brief summary of the content.


Table of Contents
Forward
Introduction
Talks about James Buck being arrested in Egypt and it discusses why the incident inspired me to write Twitterville

PART 1.         How It Started

Chapter 1      A Pinot Kills Odeo
The story of how Twitter got started and looks at @Ev @Biz & @Jack'a backgrounds before joining.

Chapter 2      Showtime
Talks about SXSW 07 and how Twitter stole the show with an investment in nothing more than two flat panel screens.

Chapter 3      Dell’s Parallel Avenues
Traces how Lionel Menchaca and l and Richard Binhammer developed down one Twitterville avenue to engage customers while Riccardo Guerrero explored down another avenue and figured out how to sell computers via Twitterville.

Chapter 4      Why Comcast Cares

Profiles Frank Eliason  and how it has turned around an historically negative customer service image. looks also at how airlines have used Twitter and how U-Haul hurt itself by ignoring David Alston's conversation. Explains why Twitter is so superior and efficient as a support tool


Chapter 5      Customers Take Control


Looks at the Motrin and Pepsi Suicide ads and explains why companies  need to be vigilant. Profiles Scott Monty at Ford Motors. Looks at big  picture implications of Twitter's customer-generated conversations, particularly when customers are angry.


PART 2          What They’re Doing.
   

Chapter 6     The Twitterville Marketplace
Brief Chapter explains why Twitterville is a marketplace and how markets have become what they used to be before the 60-year intrusion of the Broadcast Era.  

Chapter 7      Global Companies. Local Touch
Looks at how big companies like Zappos, Molson, Rubbermaid, Henry Ford Medical Center and Sutter Health give a close human touch to customers via Twitter.

            


Chapter 8        Seeing the Wizard
Looks at logo tweet accounts such as Starbucks, Whole Foods, and CarlsJr. Interviews the real people behind the corporate logo and other proponents of branded tweeting. Tells why I disagree.


Chapter 9       B2Bs Are People Too
 Looks at several business-to-business Twitter strategies including IBM, United Linen, Pitny Bowes and little CrowdSPRING.

Chapter 10     Small Business.  Big Footprint
Looks at startups and small companies who are using Twitter to their advantage. Includes Seesmic, Stocktwits and CoffeeGroundz and others.


Chapter 11     Personal Branding

 Looks at how Twitter has favorably impacted personal brand. Intervews with Chris Brogan, Veronica Belmont, New Media Jim, Jeremiah Owyang and Cheeky_Geeky




Chapter 12    Braided Journalism

 Examines the convergence of citizen and traditional journalism in Twitterville. Looks at Szechwan Earthquake, USAir on Hudson, Mumbai and Gaza.

Chapter 13    Conversations with Constituents

 Looks at how politicians and government employees are turning to Twitter to get closer with Constituents. looks at Obama, UK prime minister, local transit services and snow school warning in Newcastle England.

Chapter 14    Goodwill Funding

 Looks at grassroots fundraising including charity:water, Tweetsgiving, The Frozen Pea Fund and more. Talks with Connie Reece, Stacey Monk and Beth Kanter.

Chapter 15    Dark Streets
 Reports on the spammers, phishers, stalkers trolls and other assorted slimewear. Gives tips on dealing with it.

PART 3        How & Why to Do It

Chapter 16    Tips, Metrics & Finer Points
Provides advice on getting started as well as dealing with complexities of                       measurement, following/followers and retweets. Interview with KD Paine.


PART 4        The Big Picture

Chapter 17    Global Neighborhoods
A personal note on why I believe the ability to form a geographically agnostic community of people who share interests can lead to World Peace.  Seriously.


Please forgive the poor formatting and lack of links. I am am really stretched. I look forward to your comments. I also look forward to completing the details of this project and seeing it come to life on Sept. 3.

April 25, 2009

Twitterville Acknowledgements. Did I miss you?

I am absolutely blown away by the number of people who have contributed story leads to me while I was writing Twitterville. The following people will be acknowledged for their contributions in the book when it is published on Sep. 3.

I know I missed a lot of people and I apologize. If you feel you are one of them please contact me on twitter, in a comment or by email. If you could refresh my memory by telling me the lead you sent, I would appreciate it. If I write about you in the book itself, I have not included you in the acknowledgements.

Also, these are a lot of links. If you find one that is broken or a Twitter handle that is mispelled, please let me know.

@KDPaine
@kevinokeefe
@kyeung808
@ledrewb
@lifeofjenn
@lovince
@Lparsons
@Marc_Meyer
@marilink
@martinxo
@mattblock
@MelWebster
@merubin
@mexiwi
@Michael_hoffman
@michaeljbarber
@Mikescott8
@netzoo
@Newcastlecc
@Nitchblog

@paulmorriss
@pambaggett
@Poneal
@rahafharfoush
@roblagatta
@ryankuder
@sconsult
@scottszur
@sdeclomesnil
@shonali
@Simon_Baptist
@SoloPcono
@SteveAmes

@SwaggerDesigns

@Tamera

@thornley

Can't find Twitter handles:
Phil Dane

April 15, 2009

'Tweaching' tomorrow at UMass Dartmouth

Tomorrow morning, I'll be taking part in what I think is a very engaging experiment and perhaps breaking some new ground. At 8 am Pacific time I will live "tweach" a class led by Dr. Nora Barnes at UMass Dartmouth. There's a few special twists for me. The school is located less than 15 miles from where I was raised in New Bedford, Ma. The opening of the university was among my first bylined storis as a reporter in nearby Fall River, Ma. Dr. Barbes and I have come to kow each other through our mutual involvement with SNCR,

But all that is pretty much aside. What I love is this is that I get to talk with students. Through their questions I get to earn what is on their mind regarding Twitter and social media. Like many people, I would love to spend more time as a guest instructor, but school have little budget for people like me where travel costs are involved.

I'm sure what we do tomorrow will hav a few glitches and bumps, because as far as I know, no one has tried to guest instruct a class via Twitter before. My hope though is that others watch what we do then try smething like this themselves. Take what I do with 35 students at UMass Dartmouth and refine it. This may be a new way to remotely talk with people who want to learn.

The set up is pretty simple. Dr. Barnes will introduce me at approximately 8 am. Students will tweet questions to me and tag them with #UMD.  I will answer all that I can in the course of an hour. The students will watch primarily via search, at the #UMD hashtag site, so they can see wha their classmates have asked.

If I do not have time to answer all questions asked, as is likely, then I will answer them in small batches over the course of the next few days. Students will see them either by following me or by checking the #UMD hashtag page.

If this interests you, please observe it tomorrow. If I get stuck on a question I may ask observers if they can help, but for the most part, I want to give the hour to these students.

To make certain we get off to a good start, I asked the students to send me a few advance questions and I am impressed with the quality of the ones that have come in so far. Here are a few examples:

  • Stacey Boyd wants to know how Twitter can help students find a job after they graduate. That will take 3 tweets to dent the surface & then a follow up email.
  • Rachel Whaley-Grant would like to hear how Twitter is different from Facebook, a question that is not as easy to answer as it used to be.
  • Kerry Gallagher asked how to find stuff on Twitter that is relevent to her as an individual.
  • Sade Cabral went beyond Twitter to ask th differences between an online only company and one that is both online and real world.

If this is an example of the questions I hear tomorrow, then it is going to be a very valuable hour. I'll begin by answering these as best I can, then opening it up to the rest of the class. Think I'd better do some homework before school starts.

April 11, 2009

Twitterville Notebook: Major Milestones Reached

Yesterday, at 2:37 pm, I typed five asterisks across the page of Twitterville's Chapter 17: Global Neighbourhoods, indicating the conclusion of the book's final chapter. I called my wife and told her. I then posted it on Twitter, followed a few minutes later by the question: "What do I do now?"

Actually, there's a great deal to do now. In fact, following this post, I will proof, edit and revise the chapter, then send it over to Paula, for the crucial "wife test." Paula reads closely and tells me what makes sense. She also makes sure that people who are not social media obsessed will understand all my references. Then I revise again and send it to my agent Danielle Svetcov who reviews and comments, then sends to my editor at Portfolio, David Muldawer.

This is the process that has been repeated 19 times since early December, for each chapter, plus my introduction, plus Charlene Li's foreword. That is not the end of it. Muldawer will not edit the entire book, some 77,500 words and send back to me for yet another round. There will be countless proofing and editing changes plus questions for me to address. I also have two major inserts: an profile on Chris Brogan for the Personal Brands story, and a report on the first live-tweeted surgery at Henry Ford Medical Center in Detroit.

Plus, stories and anecdotes keep changing. For example Howard Rheingold tweeted that Biz Stone had told Rheingold's UC Berkeley class that the company we know as Twitter, was almost called "Jitter." Considering the shakiness of the technology in earlier phases, that's a sidebar I cannot leave out. There's probably 15-20 such inserts, and an equal number of factual updates.

When that's done I have to deal with the dreaded fact checker. Fact checkers are very often very smart people in their fist jobs. It is their job to challenge every fact, to ascertain that there is attribution, to what I say. For Naked Conversations, I tangled with a fact checker when he wanted to know my source for claiming Robert Scoble was Microsoft's most prominent blogger.

After that phase, there's a Galley Phase when I see the words as they will appear in the hard cover. Once again, you look for proofing and facts to change.

Along with all that, there are "blurb requests", when Portfolio and I request influential people take a look at Galley Copies, then say nice things in a paragraph that will be used in the front of the book or on the back cover.

The book is scheduled to be available in the US on Sept. 3. [Update] As I was posting this blog, Amazon.com  started taking pre-orders . Yes, it helps the author if you pre-order the book. It helps even more if you post  on Amazon, after you read the book, as well.

Along with that, is my own promotional effort. I have been pretty much sequestered for the past several months. I'll now start speaking in public more often, talking with traditional and social media more frequently as well. I am also talking with the Social Media Club where I serve as an advisor. The thought is that they will host sponsored book-signing events in several US Cities between Labor Day and Thanksgiving to help get book sales going. I have talks with a couple of other associates in that direction as well. If you have some ideas that will help promotion, I am now focusing heavily on the Twitterville launch.

I've also been asked a couple of times recently what I plan to do next. The answer is quite simple. I plan to keep writing books and speaking at events for a living. I am already in serious talks with a friend on writing a book called Conversational Healthcare and as I start wrapping up Twitterville's creation phase, my attention will be turning in that direction.


April 06, 2009

Twitterville Book Cover

Twitterville 150dpi

This will be the book cover to Twitterville. What do you think?

March 27, 2009

Twitterville Cover Photo by Brian Solis

3390225814_123a384e85

My friend Brian Solis is one Hell of a photographer. He came over to my house a few days ago and shot over 100 photos of me. This one will be used as my photo on the Twitterville book jacket. If you ever need to make an iffy subject look good, you should consider using Brian. Look what he did for me. The other guy in the photo's name is Brewster. Brian gets no credit there. Brewster always looks good.

If you want to see a few more samples of Brian's shots of me, just click here.

March 25, 2009

Twitterville Notebook: Stacey Monk, Epic Change


Mamalucy

                                 [Mama Lucy Kampton. Photo by Tim Llewellyn]

In several Twitterville chapters, I discuss that much of twitter is built on a culture of generosity. For Chapter 13, Goodwill Fundraising, my cup overfloweth with good and remarkable stories. Stacey Monk,

StaceyMonk_EpicChange2who you may have heard about when she launched TweetsGiving is one of those people who make Twitterville fundraising stories so incredible. She tells he story quite well in this Q&A I conducted with her.

1.  What did you do prior to starting Epic Change?
Immediately before founding Epic Change, I ran my own small consulting firm that focused on leading organizational change.  Prior to that, I worked in management consulting and project management for Deloitte, Genentech and a social services agency in the Silicon Valley.  My graduate degree is in performing arts management from the Heinz School of Public Policy at Carnegie Mellon, and prior to that I worked in arts administration at a theater in Texas.

2.  I understand you were in Africa when you decided to start Epic Change. What happened to inspire starting a nonprofit organization? Why a school in Tanazania?

During a 2007 trip from Cape Town to Cairo, I volunteered at a school run by Mama Lucy Kampton, a local woman who used to sell chickens and used her income to build a school on land she rented next door to her home.  To say I was impressed with what she'd created would be a vast understatement.  At the time, there were over 100 children at the school, and most paid tuition; the income covered the costs of other children who could not afford to pay.  Teachers were paid, meals were served daily and, most importantly, the children were getting a much better education than other local alternatives offered.  Lucy & I kept in touch after I returned home and a few months after my initial visit, she informed me that a developer had purchased the land she was renting.  At that point, Epic Change and our unique approach to creating social change was born. 

Epic Change was born as a way to ensure that effective changemakers like Mama Lucy could get access to the capital they needed to expand their successful community improvement programs.

3. How did Twitter get baked into your strategy? How important is Twitter to Epic Change?

Twitter was originally suggested to me by a former IT colleague as a way to cultivate a community of support for Epic Change.  At first, though, I must admit I had no idea how to use it effectively. Then, in May of last year, I saw Sam Lawrence, outgoing CMO at Jive Software, tweet that he didn't feel like writing his blog post for the following day. Because his blog Go Big Always, aligned with my personal philosophy and had a few thousand viewers, I thought it might be an opportunity to expose Epic Change to a wider audience. When I tweeted that I'd write it for him, he playfully responded "go for it!" I stayed up all night writing a guest post and, after polling twitter, he posted it to his blog, resulting in many new followers for me, some new donors, a few YouTube video submissions, new blog subscribers, and blog coverage in places like ZDNet, TriplePundit and What Gives.  At that point, I realized that Twitter offered countless opportunities for the creation of serendipity and mutual benefit.  It's been part of our strategy since then.


4. Tell me about Tweetsgiving. How did it get started?  Why did you cut the start so close to the American Thanksgiving?  How much did you raise? What role did Twitter play in the effort? Could you have done Tweetsgiving without Twitter?

TweetsGiving was imagined 6 days before it was launched in response to a very kind thank you post by Avi Kaplan, a volunteer I'd met on Twitter as a result of my post on Go Big AlwaysWhen I read his blog post, I was moved by his kindness, and wondered what it might be like if, for 2 days, the entire Twitterverse unanimously celebrated gratitude.  We started so close to Thanksgiving because of its timeliness during the holiday, because we thought we could sustain momentum for 48 hours, and because we needed the full 6 days from idea to launch to prepare the site and strategy. 

TweetsGiving raised over $11,000 in 48 hours, almost entirely from the Twitterverse; I did not publicize the effort to previous donors, and only 6 out of 372 contributors had previously donated to Epic Change. TweetsGiving simply wouldn't have been possible without Twitter.


5. What other fundraising projects are you involved in?  What role does Twitter have in them?

To minimize overhead expenses often associated with event-based fundraising, Epic Change has been built primarily through online peer-to-peer fundraising campaigns. To date, we have raised over $70K using email, my blog, Facebook, Twitter, etc.  Since I started using Twitter, it's been some part of all of our campaigns, whether using it to reach out for volunteers, advice or donors.  That said, most of our donors/supporters do not use Twitter at all, so it's only one aspect of our overall approach.

As a member of the Twitter community, I also support other people's fundraising efforts when I have the opportunity, especially those by my peer social innovators like Lend4Health and Social Actions.


6. How does Twitter change the business of fundraising for causes?

Twitter gives us a new tool for cultivating and sustaining support for social causes.  Especially for social innovators, for whom early-stage and seed funding and support is limited, the Twitter community can be an invaluable source of funds, ideas, advice and volunteers. In addition, Twitter lowers the cost of fundraising; the TweetsGiving campaign was entirely volunteer-supported and cost zero.  Finally, as we saw with Twestival, Twitter can put fundraising in the hands of supporters, without causes even getting involved. While this involves some loss of control for nonprofit brands, the end result is that a great many more people can organize to invest themselves in causes they support.


7. What advice do you have for others who want to use Twitter for cause fundraising/awareness-building?

Cultivate a community before starting to raise funds. Create a community of support for an idea or cause.  Actually, even before that, the first step is simply connecting as an individual, with other like-minded people. After that, you can attempt to build a brand presence or cultivate support for a cause. For additional insights into what made TweetsGiving successful, check out my summary of critical success factors.


8. What percentage of the money you raise actually goes to the people and the causes?


About 95% of the funds we've raised to date have gone directly to programs, as Epic Change currently has no salaried employees. The vast majority of overhead is spent on PayPal transaction fees and other technology tools that improve our ability to fundraise online.


9.  How can people on Twitter be sure they are being approached by an authentic cause?

Twitter is a community in which trust is earned through reputation, so the first thing to do may be to check with followers of a cause to learn more about it. Tools like Guidestar make it possible to find background information on any nonprofit too.

10.  Additional comments?

The TweetsGiving classroom, built from sheer gratitude, is now complete and pictures are available  of donors' Twitter handles painted on the walls.


March 21, 2009

How James Buck inspired Twitterville

James.buck

On April 10, 2008, James Buck was being wheeled off to jail by Egyptian authorities in the Nile region. He pulled out his Blackberry and tweeted a single word: "Arrested. That was at about 9:30 am my time. Within the next hour the same message was retweeted by people I followed six times, even though I had never heard of the UC Berkeley student photo-journalist.Within 24 hours, people he connected to on Twitter had contacted th US State Department, who in turn got James freed. As he was being driven off to the airport and a free ride home, he tweeted: "Freed."

This incident was a light-bulb-over-the-head incident for me. It was the moment when Twitter transcended from a neat social media tool to something that would eventually be as transformative to the world as had been email or the telephone.

It was also the moment when I decided what I would write about in my next book. I had been an author in search of a topic, and knowing me, it would have to be a topic that covered social media and stirred my passion. I am a story teller and a business writer. I talk to people and try to convey to you how a piece of technology changes their lives, and their businesses.

Twitter was perfect for me. But the times were not. I was busy with other projects. Like most other industries, publishers were becoming gun shy. So it wasn't until the day after Thanksgiving 2008 that I started to write Twitterville.

Like Naked Conversations before it, I started slowly. For me it is a daunting place to stand with your toes to a mountain, realizing that you have a limited amount of time to get to the top. On the day after Thanksgiving, my mountain consisted of 80,000 words and what will probably be 17 chapters, each reporting  a different aspect of Twitter.

Four months later I find myself at Base Camp. I have 62,000 words behind me and about 15,000 more to go. Then there are revisions and revisions, details, rechecking facts. Posing for pictures, figuring out what to do at launch--beside tweet about it.

But the heavy lifting is now behind me. Most of the interviews are over. I have two more chapters left to Twitterville Part One: What's happening. Chapter 13, Goodwill Funding covers humanity and generosity and Chapter 14 covers the Dark Streets of Twitterville, the spammers, stalkers and Phishermen.

By the end of Ch. 14, I will have talked with more than 200 people. I will have written about more than 50 people and businesses that I learned about directly on Twitter over these past four months. I believe Twitterville will be the most crowd-sourced book ever written. I do not think the book could ever have been written without the help I received from more the hundreds of people who tweeted suggestions to me. Without Twitter, it would have taken at east two years to get this far, rather than four months.

I cannot say thank you to the tweeters who have helped me enough times or in enough ways. I am pretty happy with the way the book is coming out and I just hope it does the generous and diverse community it's about the justice and honor I hope to contribute.

Oh yeah. I almost forgot. Special thanks to James Buck for tweeting his way out of jail.


March 13, 2009

Twitterville Notebook: Janis Krums




USAirways

        [US Airways Flight 1549. Emergency Landing on the Hudson. TwitPic by Janis Krums]

Recognize this photo? Chances are you have already seen this amazing shot of a US Airway commercial flight that was supposed to deliver 150 passengers and crew members to Charlotte, NC from La Guardia Airport, near New York City. Instead, it collided with a flock of Canadian Geese somewhere above Battery Park. Six minutes into the flight and eight miles after taking off it skidded to a landing on the Hudson River. While there were some injuries, it was the first time a commercial flight ever made a water landing without the loss of human life.

Janis Krums, a Latvian-born entrepreneur, living in Sarasota, Fla. was on a ferry, about two football fields away from where Flight 1549 skidded to a halt. He whipped out his iPhone and took the above photo. His story is, I think, the strongest in my chapter on Braided Journalism. It was the point when traditional media understood that there was greater value in using Twitter as a news source, rather than a distribution channel or a place to divert eyeballs to their own websites.

A major point of the chapter is that the best citizen journalism is accidental. Twitterville people are all over the world when news breaks. We have the tools in our pockets and backpacks to record and report what we see. Traditional media's financial problems have reduced their ability to have feet on the street when news breaks. In Twitter there is a convergence between citizen and traditional journalism.

Janis Krums did not intend to become a citizen journalist. He only intended to get to New Jersey. HereJanis Krums is the Q&A from my talk with him.

1. Why were you in Manhattan? How did you end up on the Hudson River Ferry at that particular moment?

I was in Manhattan on business concerning my new start-up company Elementz Nutrition [site under construction]. We are developing all natural performance based supplements for elite athletes. I ended up on the ferry because my car was parked on the NJ side and was crossing the Hudson to go get it.

2. How, when and why did you start using Twitter. What was the most interesting thing that had happened to you there before the US Airway incident?

I signed up about nine months ago, but started to really use it about four months ago. This was because I was exploring what social media sites I could use for business reasons. Twitter was something that seamed to have a lot of potential and I started to post links, mainly entrepreneurial, technology, health, and personal interest based links.

Prior to US Air incident, the most interesting thing was actually interacting with users around the world. My network was slowly growing and I was trying to find users with similar interests. As I was getting more involved, I saw more value in twitter. Because of the incident, twitter has become indispensable to me and how I use social media.

3.  When and why did you start using TwitPic? What had you used it for prior to the US Airway 1549 incident?

I used TwitPic because it was associated in the applications that I used on my phone, Tweetie and Twittelator. The posts before and after the US Air photo were mainly random things that I think are interesting.

4. Where was the ferry headed? How soon did it arrive at the scene after the plane's water landing?

The route was Midtown (NYC) to Port Imperial (NJ). We were there within minutes, the passengers said that once they got out of the plane they saw the ferry approaching. It all happened very quickly and within ten minutes various rescue vessels surrounded the plane.

5. What role--if any--did you play in the rescue operation?

I was behind the ferry crew and helped orient the survivors of the crash. Another person and I carried the stewardess who broke her legs to one of the benches. Mainly we tried to get everyone warm and give our jackets and whatever we had that was warm to the survivors.

6. You were talking on the phone talking on MSNBC about 20 minutes after the plane skidded onto the river. How was that contact made?

They called me once I got my phone back from the passenger who had borrowed it. I don’t really know how they got my number, but once they had it, my phone kept ringing until late that night and started again next morning.

7. How many traditional media folk have contacted you roughly? Can you name some of them?

I’ve had contact with most of the traditional media, from all the major television networks, many newspapers both in the USA and internationally, especially Germany and England. I was on Good Morning American, Rachel Maddow, Rick Sanchez, 20/20 and two segments on BBC. All in all, the experience lasted about 48 hours. Since then, I’ve had couple of requests or so each week.

8. Your photo appeared in a great number of places, sometimes with no credit, sometimes with your credit and at least once with attribution to Associated Press. Did many traditional media organizations ask your permission? Did AP?  Did anyone offer you compensation?

Initially I spoke with AP but I did not like the terms that they tried to get me to sign and I decided to retain the rights to the photo. I’ve received compensation from some newspapers and television productions that have used the photo post the event. Most newspapers did not ask my permission; I’m sorting that issue out and we’ll see what happens.

9. How has this incident changed your life?

Well, I’ve become the Twitter guy or the TwitPic guy… .

Besides those distinguished titles, this incident has opened my eyes on the power of social media and especially Twitter. It is incredible that someone in my position is able to inform the world in real time and beat traditional media to an incident.

Also, I’ve started to evangelize the power of social media for various people who might have ignored it before. There is real interest in the potential and people are intrigued by it.

10. What thoughts do you have related to citizen journalism intersecting with traditional journalism?

Citizen journalism has the potential to be a great supplement to traditional journalism. Citizen journalists report an incident and they might be the first on the scene, but they are not investigating tips and doing background research. There will need to be a mix of both, and I think traditional journalists are seeing this shift. It will be some time until both are used to its potential, but I think we are going in the right direction.

Conclusion

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