May 17, 2012

Understanding and Using Audacity

Speaker : Alan Chaess

Date : Sunday October 2, 2011 — 11am & 1pm

Room : Tuttleman 105

Track : Podcasting

Level : Newbie : NO experience required, Beginner: Basic knowledge and limited practical experience, Intermediate: Significant knowledge, Advanced: Technical and practical proficiency


Audacity is a great (and free) audio editing application (available for Windows, Mac and Linux) popular among podcasters. Come learn how to use it from the basics to the advance use.

Digital Media & Multicultural Marketing: 10 Lessons in a Diverse, Digital World

Speaker : Ben Grossman

Date : Saturday October 1, 2011 — 1pm

Room : Tuttleman 407 A/B

Track : Internet Marketing (SEO, SMO, affiliate, etc.)

Level : Newbie : NO experience required, Beginner: Basic knowledge and limited practical experience, Intermediate: Significant knowledge


With the proliferation of digital media came the rise of the digital divide: the gap between those who access technology frequently and intensely and those who don’t or can’t. But what role, if any, does the digital divide play when it comes to multicultural marketing? Would you be surprised if socio-economically challenged groups led smartphone adoption? How should marketers navigate the increasingly diverse, digital world where minorities might make up the majority of users of new technologies? This session will be a crash course in understanding the multicultural market and how to leverage digital media to reach it.

The State of Music in the Social Internet

Speaker : Rob Usdin

Date : Saturday October 1, 2011 — 11am

Room : Tuttleman 407 A/B

Track : General Interest

Level : Newbie : NO experience required


What is the state of digital music and how it relates to the social media world? With new sites like Turntable.FM and Rolling.FM popping up, along with Spotify and Apple’s iCloud – where is music going? Are independent bands going to have trouble, or are they benefitting from new ways to share music? How do these new services affect podcasting? Are podcasters going to venture into these new areas?

The Impact of KLOUT on Businesses and Brands

Speaker : Shadeed Eleaser

Date : Saturday October 1, 2011 — 10am

Room : Tuttleman 407 A/B

Track : Social (Blogging, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, etc.)

Level : Newbie : NO experience required, Beginner: Basic knowledge and limited practical experience, Intermediate: Significant knowledge


KLOUT.com has positioned itself to be the standard that all businesses, brands, and tastemakers will be judged by in terms of factoring online relevance. In this Podcamp Philly session the following will be discussed:

  • Explain what Klout is, its importance today and foreshadow its future growth
  • Discuss recent events that illustrate Klout’s rapidly growing impact
  • Describe some ways that tastemakers are leveraging Klout’s Perks Program.
  • Describe Klout Topics Pages and its future usage
  • Deliver a few bold predictions on Klout’s future influence
  • Provide best practices for setting up and maintaining a healthy Klout score

Social Media Imagination

Speaker : Annie Heckenberger

Date : Sunday October 2, 2011 — 11am

Room : Tuttleman 403 A/B

Track : Social (Blogging, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, etc.)

Level : Beginner: Basic knowledge and limited practical experience, Intermediate: Significant knowledge


So much of what we hear about in the social media space is about the tools. What about imagination? What are some creative ways to rethink social media and integrate them into creative? In this session we’ll look at some examples of that and do some mind flexing to bend our imagination around social media.

Social Media for Authors and Publishers

Speaker : Don Lafferty (NOT CONFIRMED)

Date : Saturday October 1, 2011 — 1pm

Room : Tuttleman 403 A/B

Track : Social (Blogging, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, etc.)

Level : Beginner: Basic knowledge and limited practical experience


Whether you’re an aspiring author or a New York Times bestseller, having a social Internet presence comes with the territory.

Join me for a blistering 45 minute session where I’ll tell you:

  • Where you need to be.
  • How to find your readers.
  • How to engage appropriately.
  • How to sell more books.

The Overlooked Overlaps: Lessons Shared Between Bloggers and Marketers

Speaker : Christopher Stemborowski (NOT CONFIRMED)

Date : Saturday October 1, 2011 — 10am

Room : Tuttleman 403 A/B

Track : Social (Blogging, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, etc.)

Level : Newbie : NO experience required, Beginner: Basic knowledge and limited practical experience, Intermediate: Significant knowledge, Advanced: Technical and practical proficiency


This session will be a chance to explore what best practices and tips from the blogger community can impact brands and how they market themselves through social media. We will also examine tactics and strategies from the marketing community that bloggers can benefit from. While these two communities have many shared lessons already, some key opportunities to learn from each other are going unrealized. This session will highlight these areas. Perspectives and case studies from the blogging and marketing communities will feature in this session, which serve as an opportunity to chronicle and share important overlaps that may be going overlooked.

The Social Web – Making Your Site Work For You

Speaker : Jessica Kupferman

Date : Saturday October 1, 2011 — 10am

Room : Tuttleman 401 A/B

Track : Social (Blogging, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, etc.)

Level : Newbie : NO experience required


You’ve got Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIN, Google +, a blog and a website. But are they all speaking the same language? Are they all branded with the same look? Are they all working FOR you instead of against you? Learn why your website should be your “home base” where all of your digital marketing should lead – and how to grow your fans, your mailing list, and therefore, your bank account!

A new way to use money online?

Speaker :  John S. James

Date : Saturday October 1, 2011 — 1pm

Room : Tuttleman 400 A/B

Track : General Interest

Level : Newbie : NO experience required, Beginner: Basic knowledge and limited practical experience, Intermediate: Significant knowledge, Advanced: Technical and practical proficiency


This accidental innovation lets financial account to replicate (reproduce — creating “child” accounts, grandchildren, ancestors and descendents), when their owner wants. All sorts of goodies flow from this design, with its great ease of creating any number of new, related accounts, each with any amount of customized services already set up. Accounts can inherit unlimited settings instantly, at “birth.” Therefore owners can create all sorts of special-purpose accounts (which would be difficult and unfeasible with ordinary, non-reproducing accounts).

To our knowledge, this innovation has never before existed in the history of money. It could not have worked without e-commerce. We are developing it as an open-source project, so anyone can use these ideas.

How could replicating accounts be useful in practice?

Example: spam control (and fundraising, also)

An owner might create an account with only $1 in it — and restrict the account so that it cannot pay anything except to one particular recipient, a premium email-forwarding service in this case. This account could be pasted into an unencrypted email, since it isn’t worth stealing (due to the small amount, the restriction to one payee, and the ability of the account to report unauthorized use). Then anyone, even celebrities, can get a forwarding address that charges the sender some amount (like 5 cents) and pays the recipient (minus one or two percent to the forwarding service). Five cents will stop almost all untargeted spam — and allow the $1 account to deliver 20 emails to 5-cent-premium addresses.

Email senders will not need any advance setup with the forwarding service — they will only need to have any RepliCounts-type or other payment service that the forwarding company accepts. Without payment, email to a premium address bounces, with no “attention cost” to the intended recipient. So anyone can publish a special email address to receive emails from anybody (even strangers) willing to pay 5 cents to to reach them — or 50 cents per email, or $50. Occasionally someone in the public eye could make a living and pay bills just by receiving email — perhaps an indigent victim of injustice.

Fundraising uses for organizations are obvious. Less obvious: organized, worldwide fundraising contests and other games, played in many languages, could be set up in an afternoon — since each game can start with an account that inherits much of the setup and know-how from previously successful campaigns.

Example: artists selling their work online, free to end users, through mass sponsorship.

Replicating accounts will also support a new and different way for artists to get paid for their music, video, reporting, or other digitally delivered work. I call this system mass sponsorship (meaning that anyone who can pay online, anywhere, any time, can easily purchase a sponsorship for any amount they wish, of a particular artwork marketed this way). How does this work?

There will be many different kinds of replicating accounts (which will evolve through natural selection for human usefulness). Almost all of them will have an owner’s dashboard — but some will also have a (minimal) public dashboard, for public interaction with the account.

To reach the public dashboard, just click the account’s name. The dashboard will let anybody download a free copy( or streaming), if a sponsored copy is currently available. It will also let anyone buy prepaid downloads in bulk — and attach their own sponsor’s message, to go out with each download they paid for. (This differs from ordinary advertising, in that the music or whatever stops when all sponsorships have run out — creating social pressures to find new sponsors for the content.)

We guesstimate that about 98% of all end users will receive the art totally free — paid for by the 2% who sponsor bulk copies — to support the artist, get their own message out, and do good in the world. 98% free distribution translates to an average bulk sponsorship of 50 copies. This seems doable since very large sponsorships will have disproportionate weight.

Using the public dashboard, a sponsor can either create a new account to deliver their sponsorship (to reserve access for his, her, or its friends and networks exclusively), or buy into an existing account and its circulation (reaching new people within desired communities, who may be outside the sponsor’s existing social networks). Sponsorship accounts will never expire (even when empty), since anyone, anywhere, any time can buy into the account anew — instantly refreshing all copies of that account, anywhere in the world. (The various different copies of the same account can transact business in different languages, which end users can change any time.)

To monetize this system, just charge perhaps 1% or 2% of all sponsorship money coming in.

Demo software soon at www.RepliCounts.org/demo/

It will be easier to understand this project with a demo version that will let anyone create and use their own RepliCounts. The PodCampPhilly presentation of RepliCounts will be the first to have any demo (version 0.0, now being written in Python). The early versions cannot be trusted to handle money, so they will have no shopping cart. But they can still have practical uses — for example, mass sponsorship could work, even if artists must activate each sponsorship after receiving payment from the sponsor by PayPal, check, cash, or whatever. The only drawback is that sponsorship will not instant, nor as convenient as with a shopping cart.

These accounts can be maintained permanently at very low cost (in fact, negative cost). So while we will not guarantee permanence of the demo accounts, it is likely that they could still be around in 20 years, still paying the artists if there is any public interest in their work.

As this demo advances it will be available at http://www.RepliCounts.org/demo/.

Bootstrapping 101 – Using Social Media To Innovatively Optimize Your Bottom Line

Speaker : Dasanj Aberdeen

Date : Saturday October 1, 2011 — 11am

Room : Tuttleman 400 A/B

Track : Social (Blogging, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, etc.)

Level : Newbie : NO experience required


Whether you’re just launching or looking to reinvent your approach, by the end of this course you will understand what bootstrapping is and how it can be used with social media to innovatively optimize your venture’s bottom line. You’ll learn how bootstrapping maximizes available resources by helping you generate cash flow, save and eliminate unnecessary expenses. You’ll also learn about the various social media tools and resources that compliment a bootstrapping approach along with processes and proven action steps to implement a bootstrapping strategy. In achieving this objective, you will be able to:

  • Understand Bootstrapping and creative approaches to minimizing costs
  • Evaluate your venture from a big picture perspective and the need for bootstrapping
  • Identify and leverage low-cost social media tools for bootstrapping
  • Develop a plan and strategy for your bootstrapping approach
  • Reference a list of tips and action steps to successfully bootstrap with social media

This course is taught my Dasanj Aberdeen, founder of TheAfter5Edge blog, who uses left-brain logic and right-brain imagination as a businesswoman and artist to synthesize business, accounting, art and creativity into innovation. She founded TheAfter5Edge blog as a platform for encouraging others to leverage their entrepreneurial spirit to achieve competitive edge in business and life. She is a graduate of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. You can learn more about Dasanj and TheAfter5Edge at www.TheAfter5Edge.com