A Special Christmas ‘Present’ from e1evation, llc!

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We at e1evation, llc are grateful for another fantastic year of business growth and would like to give back to the community. Between now and December 31, e1evation, llc is waiving all setup fees and charging only our low hourly rate of $70 per hour for any and all projects in the following areas…

  • Google Apps for Business
  • Posterous sites
  • WordPress sites
  • Social media sites like Facebook Pages and Twitter accounts
  • Social media integration

As an example, a Google Apps for Business installation which would normally cost $500 could cost as little as $70. A Posterous or WordPress site normally costing between $1,295 and $2,495 could cost as little as a few hundred dollars! The list goes on…

Here’s your chance to get a jump on the New Year by getting all your ducks in a row before January 1st. No project is too small, but hours will be booked around the holidays on a first come/first served basis. Other terms and conditions may apply. Use the contact form or call (920) 710-0790 to book your year end project now!

Stuff I saved in ‘Reader’ on December 14, 2010

Eagle Ridge Resort & Spa Undergoes Inn Room Renovations

Eagle Ridge Resort & Spa will be bringing in the new year in style as the property undergoes a renovation to all of the resort’s 80 rooms at the Inn. The renovation will begin in November and is expected to be completed before Christmas 2010, just in time for the holidays and the resort’s winter season.

Part of the renovation will include the incorporation of new Phillips flat screen 37” high definition TVs, new carpeting, paint and wallpaper to the rooms, in addition to some other “surprises” to further compliment the Inn’s scenic wooded and lake views of pristine 220-acre Lake Galena.

Ikhlas Ahmed, General Manager of the resort comments, “Overall the results will not only be impactful, but keep with the rustic country motif in an underlying modernized quaintness.”

Happy Thanksgiving!

This Thanksgiving, I'm especially mindful of my clients and my social media friends who have been such a tremendous help to me throughout this entire year — thank you so much for all you have done to help me [and my family] through our work together! May all your Thanksgiving wishes come true as you celebrate [in my mind] the best of all the holidays…

Pat-down backlash grows during holiday travel rush

Plan, Delegate, and De-stress Your Way to a Relaxing Holiday Get Together

Get Ready for Thanksgiving This Weekend

We’ll be butchering two Toms that we’ve been fattening up since the spring tomorrow. I’ll be taking the week off of work to relax and prepare for visitors. Thanksgiving is truly my favorite holiday of the year. How about you? btw, you can follow the ‘via’ link for tips on food, wine and yes, exercise…

10 things you can do right now to prep for Thanksgiving

We’re currently prepping 5 fat turkeys that will meet their demise three days before Thanksgiving. Two of them will feed the massive three generation crowd that will fill our house on that day. Can’t wait! Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday — no expectations except my wife’s great cooking and family fun…

4 Reasons Why Social Media is Like Caring For a Baby

I’ve just returned from a week’s holiday with my wife and ten month old daughter. I did my best to forget all about the social web for nine days but alas it wasn’t to be, and it was while playing a game of ‘take everything out of daddy’s bag when he’s trying to pack it’ with my little girl that it dawned on me that social media is just like looking after a small child. So here goes…

Follow the ‘via’ link for the rest of the article…

Posted via web from e1evation, llc

C S Lewis On ‘Rewards’

We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.

A great quote from Russ Shearer’s sermon Sunday…

Posted via web from Todd’s posterous

TGIM 2/8/2010

I love Mondays! I get to go back to work at my quiet office with a supercomputer and a fast internet connection! Can’t wait…

In the meantime, Lifehacker is rating the five best Podcast managers…

“Podcasts offer a fantastic way to catch up news, listen to radio shows, and get great media delivered right to your computer (they’re like newsreaders for media). Check out these five popular podcast managers and let the entertainment come to you.

Last week we asked you to share your favorite tool for managing your podcast subscriptions. (The term for downloading a podcast is actually podcatching, and a podcast manager is a podcatcher—the more you know!) We rounded up the top five nominations, and now we’re back for you to review them and cast your vote for your favorite podcast manager.” Source: Five Best Podcast Managers – Podcasting – Lifehacker

Continue reading “TGIM 2/8/2010”

Are location-based services overrated?

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Image via CrunchBase

Please consider this…

“Despite the buzz around location-based services, I have been ambivalent, if not skeptical about the technology.As much as social media has encouraged people to share information, I have not been convinced there is the same amount of enthusiasm for broadcasting your location.There’s the issue of privacy, as well as few “rewards” for telling the world your location.

In many respects, however, being unconvinced about the potential of location-based services has been like a Don Quixote-like experience, particularly when you’re an enthusiastic member of the social media community. The idea that you don’t really buy into the next new thing seems almost sacrosanct.

It was interesting and, to be honest, encouraging to read Joshua Brustein’s column in yesterday’s New York Times about whether the excitement surrounding location-based services is being driven by technology companies and investors, while consumers only seem modestly interested.

Brustein’s column came on the heels of a Pew Internet and American Life Project survey that discovered only 4% of Americans use location services like Foursquare and Gowalla, compared with 5% last May. Even among smartphone-toting 18 to 29-year-olds, only 8% use location-based services.

It may just be that location-based services won’t be widely embraced. Or it could be that location-based services have yet to find their sweet spot. However you want to explain it, the reality is location-based services have failed to live up to lofty expectations as social media’s next hot thing.

Perhaps Facebook’s entry into the market will change things, particularly if consumers are attracted to the link between the company’s Places and Deals services.

Or maybe not. It could be that most people have no use for location-based services despite the best efforts of companies and investors.

After all, you can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him drink” Source: Do Consumers Really Want Location-based Services? | Social Media Today

When I teach ‘curation’ as a form of blogging, I usually say that the author’s comment can be ‘yes, no or maybe so’. In this case, my response is a ‘maybe so’, but I’m leaning toward no. Let me tell you why…

Something like 87% of Americans have cell phones. Of that, 25% have smartphones. That number is projected to grow to 50% in 2011. The default mapping application on the two fastest growing platforms is Google Maps. Google just released a new product called Hotpot that makes it easy for patrons to write reviews directly on to Google Maps. Think about the implications. Say someone’s driving through Algoma, WI on their way to Door County and they’re looking for a place to grab a bite. They check Google Maps to see the options and as they try to decide, they check the reviews from Hotpot directly on Google Maps. Unfortunately, earlier that week someone had a rare bad experience at one of their choices. Do you think that won’t have an impact?

Michael Moon quoted Peter Drucker astutely in his book ‘Firebrands’ over a decade ago when he said that we’ve moved beyond the information age to the aged of ‘trusted relationships’. I believe that tech-savvy people with smartphones are going to change the face of American retail business by holding retailers accountable through mobile tools that allow them to report good or bad experiences immediately as they happen. These ‘trusted’ mobile ‘relationships’ will have the power to guide purchasing decisions at the mobile ‘point of sale’ like an endcap in a grocery store, directing potential customers to the ‘right’ place. Smart business owners will keep an eye on this trend…

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