27
Oct

Ups and Downs of working in the social media / community world

:) The ups and downs of working with social media my experiences with Spiceworks :(

Social MediaFirst off… This isn’t really all Spiceworks related but just had the idea for a post along these lines and Spiceworks-News is about the only place I could put it. It is however all based on my experience with Spiceworks.

So everyone knows what social media is now days? And that big buzz word of “web 2.0” and companies like Spiceworks are starting to exploit it to market there products and IT conferences like Spiceworld. Places like Skype, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Flickr, Digg and Ustream are regularly used.

So what do I think are the advantages and disadvantages of Social media and networking…

The ups (Advantages)

There are many pro’s to social media and well they do outweigh the downs.

Spiceworld A great example of this was at Spiceworld 2009 Austin, I (akp982) was about to receive a Spicies award when Justin Dorfman (from Frugal IT) had the idea of using Skype to allow me to give my acceptance speech. I ran around and got a microphone ready and he ran off to the Spiceworks Staff to hand him his laptop which got pushed onto stage. This was great, I was watching the live stream though Ustream and also talking live to the presenters. It was a very weird feeling I was in the UK and talking and watching people in the US. Without the Ustream chat to get me on skype with Justin and without skype for allowing us to make a “call” it would not have been possible. It was organised so quick the presenters were shocked to hear that I was ready to talk to them.

Social media mainly things like twitter can really help promote your products very quickly by telling lots of people instantly. When Spiceworks 4.1 was released it was mentioned by over 100 people on twitter and Spiceworks are expecting more people to spread 4.5 when it comes out. From this people will quickly write reviews to jump on the back off this and give their blog or website a boost in traffic and hope for some regular readers. Frugal IT is and example of a site that did well at this with there Spiceworld 2009 coverage (http://fr.ugal.it/spiceworld-2009) they were able to get multiple people to tweet, blog and just share their link. With this link spread all over the world, people would then visit the site pickup on the ads and information around the Spiceworld page and may then come back in the future. I know we (Spiceworks-News) jump on even the oddest of things. We often pickup on blog posts about or mentioning Spiceworks and re post the first paragraph in hope for a ping back. Posts like (Getting IT spicey at your church) got a ping backs out there and we may have got another 1/2 visitors (they all add up over time to now around 300 people looking at Spiceworks-News on a daily basis according to Google analytics… if only some of them posted comments).

Spiceworld2009 poster contestIf you get a good social media and build up your presence with something like the Spiceworks community forums you will find people will want to help you out. The Spiceworks community brings all sorts of people together from all over the world. A lot of these people are willing to help Spiceworks out in there spare time, things like the Spiceworld 2009 poster contest, there were around loads of good designs and the winner is shown on the right designed by Denise Parrish. Companies like Experts Exchange (BOO HISSSS) and the Spiceworks community (well recommended lets make it bigger than experts exchange…) have managed to grab onto the fact that people in IT are often willing to help out others with IT problems. In my case this is mainly because its better than doing my normal job. This gives the helpers a good feeling that they are doing something with there time and the people being helped managed to get the job done quicker.

This brings a very wide range of people who have many different skill sets into one place doing this brings community, sharing, and connecting. I have used the Spiceworks Spicecorps to meet new people in my area that work in IT and Spiceworld London will help me expand my network of offline friends.

Building up social networks you can give you great feedback on your products. Just look at the Spiceworks community, the 4.5 and feature request sections all the Spiceheads have given feedback on the latest beta version to help make it better and there are 100’s of feature requests of things people want to see in Spiceworks all peppered up (voted for) by the people who use it. Spiceworks have harnessed this power and on many occasions got feedback on there ideas like the HTML emails they just added. They have also managed to get ideas from the community like a dummies guide to Spiceworks in which the community will start to build over the next few months. The community has proven to be a very powerful tool and lots of companies have there own community. Like the smoothwall forums. Spiceworks has managed to grab the market by making a multivendor forum where any question can be asked no matter what its about or how complex someone will be around to help from either the community of the vendors themselves. Microsoft, IBM, CDW and many more have active members of their staff in the community.

The downs (Disadvantages)

MyShell The main downside and the reason for writing this post is that news is easily leaked before you want it to be known publicly. My example of this is when Myshell was going to leave. Spiceworks-News managed to get wind of this and got it up on twitter and our wordpress blog around a month before Spiceworks wanted to announce it. Needless to say we quickly got moan at for this has had to delete it. For larger companies multiple sources can leak the information and it becomes hard to stop rumours being made and make covering up a difficult job. (Was a sad day when the famous Myshell (Spiceworks community manager) moved on and left Spiceworks, she did a great job and it does appear from time to time Spiceworks are still finding it hard to fill her boots.)

Information and pictures were published before the release of both the iPhone and the Blackberry Storm, both apple and Blackberry then found it hard to stop people reposting these leaked images even setting up websites about the leaked information. From there people will start rumours about what features the phones will have, this can damage the company if the end product does not have x feature that everyone was getting so excited about. Then again this can help with marketing, I remember stories about when Windows7 was first leaked people believe that Microsoft did this on purpose to get feedback and start all the excitement about the product around a year before it was going to be released. This allowed them to get a wider base of “testers” with different hardware even if they didn’t know they were testing it for them.

Anonymity… well there always has to be one or two people who want to ruin a company. Anyone can setup a website very quickly and with new sites allowing you to register domains without giving your details out to the public you can become even more invisible. This makes it easy for people to moan about products and services of a company without feeling as under threat. Finding people who want to be anonymous can be hard and companies will normally give up trying to hunt down the producers.

With websites so easy to make and publish we can end up with a information overload, it because hard to keep track on the information you want to. Say you want to keep a eye on Spiceworks there are loads of people to follow on twitter… @spiceworks, @spiceworksnews, @jdorfman, @dscammell etc etc etc then you want to follow windows 7 stuff you have to follow loads more people. This distracts from your real job and offline life. You always want to be in the know, for me its so that I can do this sort of thing and repost about 4.5 releases or the latest Spiceworld information even though I wasn’t there. So ok after writing that one I can see positives and negatives…

akp982 stats Social media can however be time consuming, its a Saturday at 14:03 and I’m writing this… I was up till 11 last night watching and taking part in Spiceworld and often find myself being distracted at work by the Spiceworks community all my lunches are taken up by it. If I don’t go out I’m on the community. On the right you can see my Spiceworks Community stats, 3000 odd contributions (these are not all my posts, you get 1 contribution per topic you post in or create) and 6000 odd posts. Ive spent time and written 6 how-tos and 5 plugins for the members off the community. All time I could have spent doing something else like walking the dogs or being in the outdoors enjoying the sun rather than the light bulb above me while sat in a room on my own on my laptop, or even just playing cod4… *must get ring of death on xbox fixed*

Things like twitter and sky player are coming to devices like the xbox making it easier for companies to share information with users in all sorts of forms but this brings another problem for companies that they may not care about us much… their real life morals, is it really right to give people ways to just write 120 words to each other? My anglish isn’t the best as you have probably noticed already and I don’t just blame myself, using word for spell checking and social media where people don’t always mind if you get it wrong. The community allows me to post words that are stupidly wrong and no one seems to care. Its just a fact of life on forums. This is not always something that companies need to care about either, people should have more control and if they don’t do it someone else will so I can’t blame them.

Most of the downs for social media are out of the control for companies like Spiceworks, even if they didn’t take part people would still post the information, but being in the know about what’s being posted can help you can control the impact it has on your products and or services.

That’s it…

Not the most interesting post I know but was mainly posted for the downsides… the big one being the Myshell leaving being announced before Spiceworks told everyone.

Social media does have its up’s and downs but I would suggest any company try to use social media. It doesn’t cost much if anything, but does take up your time.

Hope this helps someone? ok maybe not but hay it was nice to do my first real article the rest of my posts are normally very short and not very sweet.

Sorry about the spealing or grammer’s mistakse, I’m not the best.

And please leave a comment and let me know what you think :-)

I hope Spiceworks don’t mind me using them as examples :P

Feel free to quote from the above if your going to link back :-)

Again any comments would be lovely :-)

Don’t know what Spiceworks is?

Spiceworks is the complete network monitoring and managment system, it includes a helpdesk, PC inventory, software and hardware reporting and a network map. Its the solution to manage everything IT in  small and medium businesses.

Download Spiceworks Now

22
Oct

Some Spiceworks Facts and quotes from today #Spiceworld2009

  • 20% of Enterprises in the U.S. use @spiceworks #spiceworld2009
  • @spiceworks has 1,200 new members a day. 1 million users by 1Q 2010 #spiceworld2009
  • Spiceworks is a Social Business App. 770k user/members. 200 Spiceheads on hand to learn more. #spiceworld2009.
  • “Sometime the best place to get your strategy is to just listen to your customer.” Wish more companies thought that! #spiceworld2009
  • More sponsored plugins to come, thanks to the API some great new plugins are coming
  • @spiceworks revenue growth 2009 3x from 2008 #spiceworld2009
  • “Spiceworks is the fastest growing IT app in history”. Scott Abel. #spiceworld2009
  • @spiceworks cash flow positive 1Q 2010 #spiceworld2009
  • Spiceworks was started because Scott wanted to be with the guys again, nothing about a good idea.
  • “I think people are just scared of the term add supported.” by JAFOLLIT on the Livestream chat
  • We mention “The iTunes of IT” and Francis shut up by Scott
  • Ad supported came from a Gmail advert for $69 logo designs
  • scouch40: My IT motto- Hope for the best, Plan for the worst.
  • zelleie: My IT motto – “If you can’t dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit”
  • Motley2_98: Some call me willis
    Motley2_98: cause no one knows what Im talkin about
  • Remember the glide function, well it FAILED and got taken out because it didn’t go that well
  • Its not a website, its not a app, can you guess what it is yet?
  • domjuk: How can you not be pessimistic in a negative way?
  • zelleie: example for Dom : “You, sir, are an idiot but you’re very good at it”
  • Scott Abel – maybe a little too consecutive in the beginning
  • “We started the company due to the enormity of the bet” – Scott
  • “I’m a fox news guy” – Greg
  • BigTimmy: Tabrez is the man
  • “Now i read the Spiceworks community digest” – Jay
  • “We have 6 pending patents”
  • “Were not going to ram ads into your face” – Scott
    • “We have turned down some big cheque” – Scott
  • “Were not a website were an app that runs in a browser” – Greg
  • BigTimmy: I have a smoke machine and throw all my apps in it
  • “Tell us how it was working for Steve Jobs”
  • dscammell: Gotta go sit on a @Spiceworks panel at #SpiceWorld2009. How can I still tweet? *lol*
  • bluee504: When I think virtualization i think machines with 32+ Gb of ram and raid 10 of 15k rpm drives, aka IT porn
  • domjuk: “THE BEARD HOLDS THE ANSWER” – When scott was shown on screen

The list is getting a little long so that’s it for now, checkout some more tomorrow if i find the time

10
Oct

How Spiceworks grew by giving its product away

SpiceworksFocusing on the often-neglected information technology manager is paying off for Spiceworks Inc.

Founded by four former Motive Inc. executives, the Austin company set out four years ago to build software that would make life easier for the workers who oversee computer networks at small and medium-size businesses.

Before writing a line of code, Scott Abel, Jay Hallberg, Greg Kattawar and Francis Sullivan spent three months interviewing IT managers at 40 Austin companies to find out what drove them crazy about managing their systems.

The answer? Just about everything.

Read more

The bit that I though was interesting was:

Spiceworks user Justin Davison, a systems engineer and help-desk manager at material analysis company RJ Lee Group in Pittsburgh, is an example of how the company has won fans.

Davison tried Spiceworks last summer because he needed inventory management software and had nowhere near the $15,000 estimate he received from another company.

“Free was the right price for me,” he said. Read more

There are lots off really good quotes in this article its well worth a read.

09
Oct

Kimberlin tickled me… what’s happened to you?

The weirdest things happen on the Spiceworks community, recently i was tickled by Kimberlin

Kimberlin

Tickles andy to make him laugh and get in his blog

Read more

From tickling to riddles from Beattyc5

Beattyc5 Here is a riddle though – let’s see how smart you are:

Your mom and dad came to you and said “hey Andy, we had a baby!” It’s not your brother, it’s not your sister – who is it?

Read more and find the answer

All the way over to dirty feet from PaPa-Smurf

PaPa-Smurf

it will be like peppered hobbits feet

Read more

Even to Chris9132’s  bad jokes

Chris9132 What’s Mary short for?

  • She’s got no legs

whhhhttttttt taxi!!

Read more

The communities water cooler is full of randomness.

What’s the weirdest thing you have seen on the Spiceworks community?

23
Sep

The Future of Spiceworks

Justin recently posted a great article on his blog about the future of Spiceworks.

I just read Andrew Phelps’ article on the Spiceworks Script Center (Beta) and a light bulb turned on.  I have made many predictions about Spiceworks in the past and some of them became a reality.

Here is my new set of predictions of where Spiceworks is headed and if some of them come true I really think it will change the way the IT vendors conduct business with new and exsisting customers.

Ever since the Points System launched this year SpiceHeads have really been more active in the community. Don’t believe me? According to compete in the past year community.spiceworks.com has seen a 109.65% increase!

109.65% Increase

BTW that is all organic traffic, because the only domain they advertise (PPC) is www.Spiceworks.com which leads you to a well crafted Landing Page.

In his post Justin talks about the future of Spiceworks in 3 ways:

  1. Virtual Currency – What if Spiceworks gave you money for posting and getting best answers, what could you do with them and how it would increase the use of the community.
  2. The iTunes of IT – At Spiceworld Las Vegas, Greg Kattawar (VP of Dev & Co-Founder) was speaking and kept referring to Spiceworks as “The iTunes of IT”, Spiceworks plan to be everything IT, they want to keep you using there product(s) as much as possible so you see their adverts and they can gain more money from companies like Microsoft and CDW (they really need to find someone like CDW for the UK)
  3. Exit Strategy – What happens if it all goes Pete Tong? Justin thinks there are three options they could look at if they needed to… Read his post to find out what they are. For the record I hope for #3

Check out his full post here

Edited: 23/09/09 16:46 (GMT)

21
Sep

The Script Center

Save time by using scripts IT Pros have shared. Share the ones in your toolbox and help others.

scripts

So… The Script Centers been up for a while and when it was first launched my honest opinion off it was it was going to be filled with useless scripts no one will look at or use. So I didn’t bother doing a write up nor look at it much after the first day.

The other day, I decided to give it a second chance, I jumped onto the Spiceworks community popped into the Script Center and was VERY surprised.

Script CenterThe first script I saw was called, Windows Update Agent force script, email results version 2.6 this was exactly what I was looking for 2 months ago and gave up. I had a look at the top rated to find Set up Outlook signatures with Active Directory information which I was going to use in the upcoming months with a new project.

I was taken back by the amount of great scripts already included in the Script Center.

At there moment there are only a couple of lanaguges:

But the list will grow over time as more people want to upload different types of scripts.

Why not check it out for yourself over on the Spiceworks community you maybe as surprised as me about the great quality of scripts.

17
Jul

Live! From Spiceworld Orlando!

David Scammell has just posted:

David ScammellI’m at Spiceworld Orlando and so far so good.

Last I heard, we have 63 users, which makes us the largest 1-day Spiceworld this year. Woo hoo!

I’ll be posting in here from time to time throughout the day, so you’ll know what you’re missing (and will sign up for the next one).

Talk to you soon!

Read more

08
Jun

Scott Made it to ghost

Scott Alan Miller has made it to the Ghost Chili (70,000 – 100,000 points) level on Spiceworks… Well done :-)


Ghost Chili

Scott Alan Miller

Group Admin

version 2.1 United States Reviews Level 3 Champion SpiceCorps Member Report Contributor

Scott Alan Miller

Network/Systems Administrator at Niagara Technology Group
16 years IT experience

A+, MCP (XP), MCSE, Network+, Server+, Security+

I am an IT Strategist and Manager working in small business, healthcare and finance. I split my time between software development, systems engineering and strategy.

On Twitter: scottalanmiller

http://www.sheepguardingllama.com/

Want to know more about Spiceworks levels, checkout this post

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