"A mentor is someone whose hindsight can become your foresight."

designs I like
invisiblechildren.com
notimeleft.org
maasaimarathon.com

things I trust
yFrog
> images and video for Twitter
Netvibes
> manage your favorite feeds
Ning
> build your own social network
Digsby
> all social things in one place
Mashable
> social media tips & tools
Tip: use your LinkedIn and Facebook places when you need vendor references (or, just ask me).

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Susan

Hi Bill. A frolleague is a work colleague who is also a friend (but probably not a BFF). Most social networks are unrestricted, once a member is accepted, and gives everyone equal access to all your postings, videos, comments, photos, etc. Admitting frolleagues is the friendly thing to do but it also tends to erode privacy and freedom which begins to defeat the whole social network idea. Some admit frolleagues but I think far more frolleagues remain "pending" until social places offer better admin options, and help frolleagues be a joy instead of a concern. -Susan

Bill

What is a frolleague?

Susan

Hi Erika - The hardest thing about starting a blog may be just me but I think it is starting with a depth of posts so visitors can feel real value from having stopped by. I usually counsel the author to launch with at least 6 posts -- any combination of current posts plus things like favorite links, videos, webcasts, previous articles/reviews you've written, etc. -Susan

Erika

what's the hardest thing about starting a blog?

Susan

Hi Kyle. Here you go. Write down these 3 items: cheap, done right, on time. Typically, people expect all 3 of these things from a Web project. They expect perfection. Realistically and historically, 99.9% of all Web projects only meet 2 of these 3. You can get a project done on time and cheap, but not done right. Or, done right, on time, but not cheap. Etc. It is important for a Webmaster to shape this team expectation ahead of time and plan contingencies, and this is a friendly way to do that. --Susan

Kyle

can you repeat what you said about "you get only 2"?? that was great, too true. thx

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