Paranormal activity in social media [repost]

In the spirit of the Halloween season, I’m reposting something from a year ago. Enjoy.

ZombieWalkWith Halloween approaching, we’ll soon see kids (and more than a few adults) dressed up as their favorite scary creatures. All manner of make-believe zombies, vampires and ghosts will come knocking on our doors.

Fortunately, Halloween happens just one night a year. And it’s all in fun. Those ghouls and monsters aren’t real.

What IS real, unfortunately, are the social media manifestations of these nightmarish archetypes. As this Steamfeed Media post points out, for some social media users, every day is Fright Night.

Steamfeed’s Carrie Keenan describes the three most common types of social media spooks:

  • The zombie. Known by their mindless auto-tweets and RSS feeds, these mindless creatures are easy to spot. “Hold onto your brains when you see them coming and run!”
  • The ghost. “A ghost user is one who creates a business account because they ‘should’ be involved in social media,” Keenan writes. “They soon disappear into the internet ether never to be seen again.”
  • The vampire. These blood-sucking creatures “take your hard work and give themselves credit,” scraping content from your blog or website and passing it off as their own.

There may be more fiends out there, but these are three common ones in social media.

It’s okay to pretend to be one of these on Halloween. Just remember to be a real human the rest of the year. The same goes for your social media identity.

Photo of ComicCon 2013 Zombie Walk by Hooman.

Upcoming: #GGRGT (Aggregate Conference 2014)

#GGRGTThe 2014 Aggregate Conference is coming to downtown Louisville, Kentucky, later this month. I’m looking forward to being there.

I’m looking forward to some great sessions and great conversations about the future of all things digital. I’m also looking forward to presenting on a favorite topic of mine: change management. But mostly I’m looking forward to meeting in person, for the first time, some of my favorite online friends. Aggregate is where we will congregate.

Chief on that list of virtual pals is Ron Bronson (@ronbronson). I’ve known Ron via social media circles for so long now that, even though we’ve never met, I consider him to be a fine friend. Ron is curating the conference (he explains why here) and was gracious enough to invite me to present.

I’m also looking forward to meeting fellow presenters, web travelers and music aficionados Alaina Wiens (@alainawiens), Joel Goodman (@joelgoodman), Ma’ayan Plaut (@plautmaayan) and probably some others I’ve forgotten to mention.

Even though the conference is focused on the digital side of higher ed, and I don’t fit neatly into that niche, I take advantage of an opportunity to rub elbows with and learn from creative minds from all walks of life. One beautiful thing about the digital side of higher ed is that, in its current, evolving form, it has drawn together folks from a variety of fields: from IT and web communications to PR, marketing and more. The Aggregate Conference should provide some stimulating ideas and conversation.

Are you planning to attend Aggregate? If so, let me know. I’d love to meet you.

Otherwise, follow the conference hashtag at #GGRGT and follow @aggregateconf on Twittter.