+ All Categories
Home > Technology > John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Date post: 01-Nov-2014
Category:
Upload: john-blue
View: 239 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Build Your Information Radar, John Blue - From the 2014 National eXtension Conference, March 24 - 27, 2014, Sacramento, CA, USA. See resource page https://radar.hackpad.com/Welcome-veRHFhkp1ha
Popular Tags:
94
Building Your Information Radar 1 Tuesday, March 25, 14 Good afternoon, Welcome to the session Building an Information Radar
Transcript
Page 1: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Building Your Information Radar

1Tuesday, March 25, 14

Good afternoon,Welcome to the session Building an Information Radar

Page 2: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Truffle Media

Ned Arthur, Director of Sales and Content Development

John Blue, Chief of Community Creation

2Tuesday, March 25, 14

Hi, My name is John Blue and I work at Truffle Media Networks, an agriculture media company focused on agriculture animal health issues.

Page 3: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Thanks to the Extension team running the National eXtension Conference/

National Extension Directors and Administrators Joint Meeting for the

opportunity to provide you information

3Tuesday, March 25, 14

Thanks to the Extension team running the National eXtension Conference/National Extension Directors and Administrators Joint Meeting for the opportunity to provide you information you can use.

Page 4: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

FYI

Resource page: https://radar.hackpad.com/

This session is being recorded and will be published when done.

4Tuesday, March 25, 14

This session is being recorded and will be published when done.There is a support page on Hackpad (https://radar.hackpad.com/ )

Page 5: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Activity: Taken For Granted

5Tuesday, March 25, 14

Things taken for granted about restaurants.

Page 6: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Landscape

6Tuesday, March 25, 14

Media use over the last 20 years has changed. People have moved from utilizing media based on time and location to discovering and finding information in real time through multiple channels and various sources of authority. Information media has become time free, virtual, digital, and very participatory. (next)

Page 7: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Landscape

7Tuesday, March 25, 14

Today the way people receive information is far greater than 20 years ago; And there is more noise.

Page 8: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Why an Information

Radar?

8Tuesday, March 25, 14

Why an information radar important? Finding out information on a topic or person or business is needed many times throughout the day to make decisions. Having a process in place to help identify and highlight trends or events is needed to help get through the swell of data.

Page 9: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

9Tuesday, March 25, 14

Again, there is so much information and data every minute; you have no control over the amount.What you do have control over is the way in which you approach the waves of information and data.

Page 10: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Activity: What are you looking for?

10Tuesday, March 25, 14

Participants write down one key thing you are seeking? What is it you want to see coming down the road?

Page 11: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

11Tuesday, March 25, 14

Again, there is so much information and data every minute; you have no control over the amount.What you do have control over is the way in which you approach the waves of information and data.

Page 12: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

12Tuesday, March 25, 14

Putting in place a set of tools and approaches can help deal with the Internet Minute.

Page 13: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

What is an Information Radar?

13Tuesday, March 25, 14

What is an information radar? Here are some examples.

Page 14: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Radar review

14Tuesday, March 25, 14

The idea of information radar is already in use today: weather, flight, stock, traffic. Each of these apps collect, organize, and display data to help people make decisions.

Page 15: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

15Tuesday, March 25, 14

What does this show you? What questions does it make you ask?

Thermometers show basic information about the temperature right now. It can also provide a sense of the temperature coming up (rising / falling temp).

Page 16: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

16Tuesday, March 25, 14

What do you think about when you see a weather map? What questions immediately come to mind?

A weather map extends the idea of a thermometer, showing geographic details on weather at specific times.

Weather maps also provide an expanded view of what the weather will be in the near future. Weather maps are a summary of data points plus they are presented with some analysis (prediction/interpretation ) by the weather person.

Page 17: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Activity: This next image, What is your immediate

thought?

17Tuesday, March 25, 14

What do you think of when you see this next image?

Page 18: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

18Tuesday, March 25, 14

What is on your mind as you see this map? What questions go through your mind?

Am I going to get home on time? Will I miss a connection. Ug, will I spend another hour on the Tapenzee Bridge/Lincoln Tunnel?

Page 19: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

19Tuesday, March 25, 14

Traffic maps are another form of information radar that is offering a summarized view, analysis, and prediction.

Page 20: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Activity: This next image, What is your immediate

thought?

20Tuesday, March 25, 14

This next image shares an expanded notion of the radar idea.

Page 21: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

21Tuesday, March 25, 14

Newspapers are a form of radar because they offer a point of view from trusted experts on a set of items pulled from a far larger pool of news. The information is a summary of many data points, with a dash of analysis, and a touch of prediction. Some newspapers may offer direct advice, other a bit of opinion.

Page 22: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

22Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 23: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Goal: to walk out with your radar

23Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 24: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Goal: Learn what other in session are

also doing.24Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 25: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Activity: What are the 5 things you do when you get

up?

25Tuesday, March 25, 14

List the 5 things you do when you get up (after bathroom needs).

Page 26: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Activity: What are the 5 things you do when you get

get to work?

26Tuesday, March 25, 14

List the 5 things you do when you get get to work.

Page 27: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

27Tuesday, March 25, 14

An information radar extends the idea of the single purpose apps of weather, flight, or traffic to an approach whose goal is to questions of a specific nature. (next)

Page 28: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

28Tuesday, March 25, 14

An information radar is driven by the initial questions/word that are being asked.

Page 29: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Twitter Review

29Tuesday, March 25, 14

Since this webinar that uses Twitter, I want to do a short review on Twitter.

Page 30: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

30Tuesday, March 25, 14

Twitter is very simple at the surface: people share things 140 characters at a time.

Page 31: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

screen namename

tweet

avatar

date/timeimmediate actions

gear box of actions

31Tuesday, March 25, 14

But there is more than just that 140 character post. This single tweet has more than 30 data points as a part of the 140 characters: location, time, mentions, favorites, links in the tweet are just a few.

Page 32: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

General infoLocation

Metrics

Relatedconnections

Recommendations

Index to additional information

Trends

Tweet

32Tuesday, March 25, 14

In addition to the tweet itself, there are a series of other players on Twitter, each with their own set of data (name, info, location, avatar, time zone, etc.). There is over 30 different elements for each Twitter user. (next)

Page 33: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

General infoLocation

Metrics

Relatedconnections

Recommendations

Index to additional information

Trends

Tweet

33Tuesday, March 25, 14

Additionally, there are other Twitter things: trends, recommendations, and lists that play a part in the Twitter interactions people initiate.

Page 34: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

If you want to learn more about the data Twitter collects along the way, see the Information Radar resource page on Hackpad: Twitter Field Guide

34Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 35: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Any questions?

35Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 36: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

36Tuesday, March 25, 14

An information radar is driven by the initial questions/word that are being asked.

Page 37: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Questions and Words That Drive Action

37Tuesday, March 25, 14

Questions and words/terms of interest drive action.

Page 38: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Example

38Tuesday, March 25, 14

This is an example I am going to use to help get started. Truffle worked with Smart Animal Training Systems over the last year to help put in place tools and approaches to understanding the lay of the land in pet training technology on the social web. (next)

Page 39: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Example

39Tuesday, March 25, 14

Explain what Smart Animal is about

Page 40: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Examples

•What are some events that are happening in the pet world?

•Who are some of the leading voices in pets/pet technology?

•What are some trends that are in the same space as Smart Animal Training Systems?

•What are some of the media outlets in the pet/pet technology space?

•Are there are any webpages with additional information I should pay attention too?

40Tuesday, March 25, 14

These are some questions that were being asked.

Page 41: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Activity: What is of interest to you?

41Tuesday, March 25, 14

List on board key terms that point to your interests: work, personal, etc. Aim for ten. Note to self: have these word listed individually then put them publicly on the wall.

Page 42: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

42Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 43: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

43Tuesday, March 25, 14

Once the questions were created, scanning was started. This process was a bit ad hoc as we did not yet know anything.

Page 44: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

44Tuesday, March 25, 14

Knowing nothing about the pet world on social media, I used the Twitter search bar to start scanning. Terms like pet, dog, and cat were initially used.

Page 45: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

45Tuesday, March 25, 14

Quickly I was able to see a few tweets that looked promising. What is #globalpetexpo?

Page 46: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

46Tuesday, March 25, 14

The #globalpetexpo hashtag led me to a long set of tweets of a pet products event that was being held in Orlando (2013).

Page 47: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Activity: Who are your go to sources of information, advice, or prediction?

47Tuesday, March 25, 14

List your key sources of information: be specific (name names!). Note to self: have these word listed individually then put them publicly on the wall.

Page 48: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

48Tuesday, March 25, 14

Detection

Page 49: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

49Tuesday, March 25, 14

And one of those tweets had something even more interesting: #BlogPaws hashtag... What is that?

Page 50: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

50Tuesday, March 25, 14

There is a whole community! and another event; social media and pets.

Page 51: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Any questions?

51Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 52: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

52Tuesday, March 25, 14

Ok, so now I have found some events and a bunch of tweets. What can help long term? Let’s organize some of the info.

Page 53: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Index to additional information

Twitter Lists

53Tuesday, March 25, 14

Twitter lists are one way to organize people on Twitter and see what just those people are talking about. Utilizing the initial search of #globalpetexpo I went through about 1,000 tweets and added people that looked interesting.

Page 54: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

54Tuesday, March 25, 14

To get started, a set of bucket names were created to organize pet people on twitter: media, product, training, health, organization, community, etc. Then the #globalpetexpo search was used as a starting point (demo)

Page 55: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Demo list additions

http://www.trufflemedia.com/twitter/globalpetexpo2013-02-26.html

https://twitter.com/TruffleMedia/lists/radar-example

55Tuesday, March 25, 14

Show globalpetexpoAdd a person to demo radar list

Page 56: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Why a List?

56Tuesday, March 25, 14

With a list I can now go to the list and see what is happening in that general collection of people.

Page 57: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

57Tuesday, March 25, 14

Example.

Page 58: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

58Tuesday, March 25, 14

Now that we have some organization, we need to see if some of our questions are getting answered.

Page 59: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Examples

•What are some events that are happening in the pet world?

•Who are some of the leading voices in pets/pet technology?

•What are some trends that are in the same space as Smart Animal Training Systems?

•What are some of the media outlets in the pet/pet technology space?

•Are there are any webpages with additional information I should pay attention too?

59Tuesday, March 25, 14

These are some questions that were being asked. Several of these have been answered, some have partial info (webpages for example). Trends question has not yet been answered specifically but there are lists of Twitter people to follow that might offer info. (next)

Page 60: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Any questions?

60Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 61: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Review

61Tuesday, March 25, 14

Review: Questions must lead the process. Scan the web (Twitter in this case). Detect interesting things. Summarize for sanity. Analyze where possible. Aim to answer questions. This is a process, not the end. The questions will change as business needs change.

Page 62: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Some tools to help

62Tuesday, March 25, 14

The above steps relied on just using Twitter’s standard interface. That can get a bit cumbersome. The following are some tools that can be used to help refine.

Page 63: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

63Tuesday, March 25, 14

Scanning tools.

Page 64: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

64Tuesday, March 25, 14

Additional scanning tools, for real time review: TweetDeck

Page 65: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

65Tuesday, March 25, 14

Additional scanning tools, for real time review: HootSuite

Page 66: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Why TweetDeck or HootSuite?

66Tuesday, March 25, 14

Multiple columns can be setup to scan real time when needed. Tweets can be scheduled. Multiple accounts can be managed.

Page 67: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Activity: Tools, What Do You Have?

67Tuesday, March 25, 14

List on board tools you use to scan for data, organize bits of things, share back out. Note to self: have these word listed individually then put them publicly on the wall.

Next ask what apps people use on phone, tablet, or laptop/desktop. List those on wall.

Page 68: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Tools to monitor and review

68Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 69: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Tools to organize

69Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 70: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

70Tuesday, March 25, 14

These are services that allow you to set up to collect social data over time and get back a file for analysis. Why important? Example: collecting Tweets from an event. Example: #SXSW is coming up shortly.

Page 71: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

71Tuesday, March 25, 14

DataSift & GNIP offer acces to the full Twitter data firehose (average 6,000 tweets/second)DataSift offers low cost ($, $20 for 70,000 tweets range) entry up to large dollar ($$$$) datastreams for big ideas/projects.GNIP offers large dollar ($$$$) datastreams for big ideas/projects.ScraperWiki offers low cost ($) entry point to a small set of Twitter data (not the fire hose)

Page 72: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

72Tuesday, March 25, 14

Summarize tools

Page 73: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

73Tuesday, March 25, 14

These tools can help summarize data from Twitter in to usable chunks and/or help organize some of the data items for better use.

Page 74: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

74Tuesday, March 25, 14

SocialBro allows you to clean up your Twitter lists; people stop using Twitter, their focus can change, or they just are not helping answer questions. Example: Filter list to drop out anyone who has not tweeted in more than 6 months. Or show me “experts” defined as those people tweeting 4 or more times a day.

Page 75: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

75Tuesday, March 25, 14

Summarize tools

Page 76: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

76Tuesday, March 25, 14

TweetReach offers a fee service to spot report on event info ($20). It is am inexpensive service to help gage engagement, see who top contributors are, and to see impression reach.

Page 77: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

77Tuesday, March 25, 14

These tools offer a variety of ways to organize larger amounts of data into usable information chunks. They have various functionality and associated costs.Google Fusion tables offers ability to extract information from data inexpensively (free) and maintain the data privately. Tableau Public and Many Eyes offer great tools, but the caveat is that data uploaded to their services will be made public.

Page 78: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

78Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 79: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

79Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 80: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

80Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 81: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

81Tuesday, March 25, 14

analyze and summarize

Page 82: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

82Tuesday, March 25, 14

Example: Scanned for #SxSw using DataSift for a ~20 hour period. 70,000 tweets later, where are these tweets occurring? Cleaning up the table (pull out tweets that have geo location info, ~10,000) and use Google Fusion Tables provides a view on where.

Page 83: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

83Tuesday, March 25, 14

Of course Austin, TX has the bulk of the tweets. Google Fusion Tables allows for zooming in; it’s Google maps overlaid with your data.

Page 84: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Observations

• Spend time refining your questions, terms, directional issues.

• Find the tools that can help save you time.

• This is a process and it will need adjusting over time.

• Many of the techniques can be applied to other social channels or digital sites.

• Pick up new sources and learn about other tools.

84Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 85: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Questions?

85Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 86: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

marketing

big ideas

news

technology

issues

86Tuesday, March 25, 14

Draw out your grid and place terms / questions you are looking for. Add in tools you might use to learn more. List your go to people/sources.

Page 87: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Build your radar87Tuesday, March 25, 14

Using the activities we have just done, let's outline some of your radar.

Page 88: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

marketing

big ideas

news

technology

issues

88Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 89: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Example Information Radars

89Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 90: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Example Information Radars

NECSI plots tweets by sentiment, positive or negative. A cluster of negative tweets in Queens, New York, for example,

led to the discovery of a leaky sewer pipe.

90Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 91: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

The ThoughtWorks Technology Radarsets out what they think is interesting in software

development today. Things that you should pay attention to and consider using in your projects.

91Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 92: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

92Tuesday, March 25, 14

Page 93: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

FYI

Resource page: https://radar.hackpad.com/

This webinar is being recorded and will be published when done.

93Tuesday, March 25, 14

This session is being recorded and will be published when done.There is a support page on Hackpad (https://radar.hackpad.com/ )

Page 94: John Blue - Build Your Information Radar

Contact Information

[email protected]@TruffleMediaTruffleMedia.com/Facebook

(877) 558-7833TruffleMedia.com

94Tuesday, March 25, 14


Recommended