Posted in Cool Tool

Monday Morning Cool Tool: Bit.ly

I love learning about new tools to make social media marketing more creative and effective, so I’ve decided to share some of my favourite free tools with you at the start of each week. This week’s cool tool recommendation is Bit.ly, a tool which creates shortened links to track the performance of your content once you promote it. If you create a custom short link for each content promotion campaign, you can track what works well and what doesn’t.

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Also check out Snip.ly  a url shortner tool which allows you to enhance every link you share (whether your own content or someone else’s) with a call to action.

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When people click on the Sniply-generated link, they can view the article you shared and see a CTA.

Both these tools are extremely useful to track how your content is performing and if  you aren’t already using them, I highly recommend you start today.

Posted in Cool Tool

Monday Morning Cool Tool: Instagrok

I love learning about new tools to make social media marketing more creative and effective, so I’ve decided to share some of my favourite tools with you at the start of each week.

This week’s cool tool recommendation is Instagrok which allows you to research any topic with an interactive concept map, that you can customize and share.

 

As you can see from the above example it’s an interesting site to input your particular topics and get related information, giving you the ability to learn about the topics in detail before you brainstorm and giving you a new interactive way to share information with your audience.

Posted in Cool Tool

Monday Morning Cool Tool: GIMP

I love learning about new tools to make social media marketing more creative and effective, so I’ve decided to share some of my favourite tools with you at the start of each week. This week’s cool tool recommendation is GIMP – a free and open source image editor for such tasks as photo retouching, image composition and image authoring.

GIMP (an acronym for GNU Image Manipulation Program) has many uses from a simple paint program and a quality photo retouching tool to an image format converter and an online batch processing system. Here’s an example from one of GIMP’s step-by-step tutorials showing how to modify the filesize of an image when exporting it to a format like JPEG.

This  is a basic feature, but there are many more advanced features to explore. It’s a useful alternative to Photoshop for those who don’t have access to it. Check it out at www.gimp.org and see for yourself.

Posted in #HCSM

Social Spotlight: Dr Richard Brady

 

This week I caught up with Dr Richard Brady, advanced intestinal failure / abdominal wall reconstruction Fellow and owner of website and app development company Research Active, to find out more about the role social media plays in his work.

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Hi Richard, I’m a keen follower of you on Twitter and I’m curious to know when did you start using social media?

RB: Strangely, although never really actually meaning to be, I’ve always found myself an early adopter and a “techie”. For me, social media is an obvious, rapid means to engage in global communication, keep up with events and developments within my interests and help to level the traditionally conservative hierarchical and cultural barriers to open and free information.

Very early on, I found that social media was remarkably absent of such barriers. There was a general willingness to learn, engage, support, grow and communicate by everyone, from medical student to professor. I was also really interested in the dynamics of this game-changing technology on the interactions and behaviours of surgical communities.

Since then, I have been performing research in the field, managing a range of social media accounts for medical businesses, giving advice and consultancy, and speaking regularly at conferences. It has certainly opened up a world of interest, fascination and opportunity for me.

I agree with you that social media breaks down traditional barriers. It’s one of the things that I have found most empowering about social media. Can you think back to what initially prompted your interest in social media?

RB: Twitter has opened so many personal opportunities for me, from job offers, to research, to consultancy, to invitations to speak at conferences and many, many more. I guess I’m keen, given so very many good things are happening out there, that other trainees and surgeons can experience the world of opportunity. I also think that the medium is a massive leveler; with open, free communication, no pay-walls, transparency, making distance an irrelevance and providing unedited, immediate and concise information. It transcends economics, background and borders, and with instant translators, language is no longer a barrier. It has the potential to connect surgery, speed up adoption of new techniques and disseminate good practice, like no other technology in history. The next 10 years will be an exciting time in surgical education.

Your enthusiasm for the future is infectious Richard! I’m curious to know of any projects you are currently involved with that leverage social media?

RB: I initially experimented with a LinkedIn group amongst surgical trainees. This was generally well supported but it was an eye-opener, resulting in a diversity of social media behaviours within a very focused user group of trainee surgeons, all of similar age and grade. From those who avidly shared far too much, to the deafening and inhibitory presence of silent lurkers, to the ultra-conservatives who refused to even join, warning others the sky would fall in! It was a good and early experience, but in retrospect, it was perhaps slightly ahead of its time and the cultural curve which existed then but it served as a useful experience.

Since then, as more medics have become comfortable with social media, Twitter has become an amazing medium for highlighting and sharing high quality information quickly and efficiently. Those who have engaged with this platform have gained access to the immediate and intimate opinions of experts, news and developments from the best centres, societies and associations, and I have been struck by the frequency by which these interactions have forged friendships, projects and collaborations in the real world.

I’ve also undertaken and written a number of studies in which we have investigated contemporary social media usage in specific specialties, including colorectal, vascular, and hernia surgery, and others which are due to be published. Recently, social media has been the link within a number of projects I am involved in, where Twitter is used as the medium of choice between massive numbers of collaborators.

Just 12 weeks ago, a number of colorectal surgeons formed an informal campaign to assist those with an interest in finding information relevant to the specialty, by using the hashtag “#colorectalsurgery” in Twitter posts related to this subject. After lots of word of mouth and following a collaborative multimedia video campaign to encourage more understanding, we have gathered more than 20 million impressions/views on over 6000 tweets, involving nearly 1000 different people on the #colorectalsurgery hashtag.

Whilst acknowledging that social media is clearly not for anyone, the next stage is to encourage those who are “offline” and haven’t quite realised its potential, with an education campaign through traditional means and surgical associations. Indeed, many associations have shown interest in getting involved.

It’s really interesting to hear about how you are using Twitter as a collaboration tool. Of all the many social platforms out there, which do you enjoy using the most?

RB: Undoubtedly Twitter – conversation is focused (in its 140 character limits) and by its nature is less formal, easy to understand and highly collaborative. It also has its own particular brand of humour and culture – some of which takes a little getting used to.

Twitter is my favourite too. I see it as THE place for  healthcare conversations. Which topics particularly interest you?  Do you take part in any specific twitter chats?

RB: I have a keen interest in medical technology and mobile apps and have spoken widely on regulation and potential dangers within this field. There are often mobile health chats that are very interesting to engage with. In colorectal surgery there are a series of professional “Twitter chats” planned in the coming year and I look forward to either being involved or watching their progress. The key will be to provide a supportive atmosphere and encourage a diverse and enthusiastic engagement and conversation.

I know you are keen to get more healthcare professionals involved in social media. What advice would you give someone just starting out on social media?

Don’t expect results immediately, and have patience – it takes time to learn the language and culture of social media and build strong connections. I also really like the 12 words of advice from Farris Timimi MD, the medical director for the Mayo Clinic Center For Social Media, “Don’t lie, don’t pry, don’t cheat, can’t delete, don’t steal, don’t reveal”. Stay true to this and you will rarely go wrong.

Finally, would you like to share a favourite quote with us?

A favourite and one I think is relevant here, attributed to Grace Murray Hopper is

The most dangerous phrase in the language is “we’ve always done it this way!”

I think this applies equally to surgery, the NHS, and innovators everywhere.

Thanks Richard for taking the time to share so generously with us your thoughts on using social media in your work. It’s been illuminating and inspiring. 

Follow Richard on Twitter @researchactive

 

 

Posted in SlideShare

How To Master The Art Of Social Media

It’s been one of my dreams to attend SxSW – the annual music, film, and interactive conference and festival held in Austin – and I hope one year to make it there. In the meantime, it has been enlightening and entertaining to follow the tweets, blogs and other social media from the event.

Here’s a slide-deck I particularly liked from Peg Fitzpatrick and Guy Kawasaki on mastering the art of social media as it focuses on the value of being helpful and gracious in developing your online presence – something which I think doesn’t get enough attention from social media “gurus”. In addition the emphasis on tackling social media in a consistent and smart way is invaluable advice.

Enjoy the slides and do let me know what you thought of them in the comments here.

Posted in #HCSM, SlideShare

2015 Worldwide Internet, Mobile and Social Media Trends Report

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Looking for internet and social media statistics in one easy to reference place?  

Then look no further. We Are Social have produced a comprehensive new report which covers internet, social media and mobile usage statistics from all over the world. It contains more than 350 infographics, including global snapshots, regional overviews, and in-depth profiles of 30 of the world’s largest economies.

Report Highlights

  • The number of global internet users passed 3 billion while worldwide social media users exceeded 2 billion in 2014
  • Mobile’s share of global web traffic leapt 39% since the same time last year, with one-third of all web pages now served to mobile phones. India’s web traffic is dominated by mobile devices, with phones alone accounting for 72% of all web pages served in the world’s second most populous nation
  • Almost 42% of the world’s population has access to the internet in January 2015, representing a significant jump in reported numbers since last year’s report, when the same figure was just 35%
  • The average internet user spends around 4 hours and 25 minutes using the net each day
  • The average social media user spends 2 hours and 25 minutes per day using social networks
  • Facebook continues to dominate the global social media landscape, claiming 1.366 billion active users in January 2015.

If you’d like to explore individual country data in more detail, you can download the complete report for free by clicking here.

 

 

 

Posted in SlideShare

Social Media And Cancer Care


Dr Matthew Katz is a great example of a doctor who uses social media to good effect. In this slideshare presentation, he shares his tips on how to communicate with a health audience using social media tools.

 

 

Posted in Health Literacy

What Causes Health Information Disparity?

Google-Search1A growing number of people are seeking health information on the Internet. To meet demands, healthcare providers are increasingly disseminating information online. While online health information has enhanced the dissemination of health information and improved people’s health-related knowledge, critics posit that such dissemination has widened knowledge disparities in health information and health benefits as a result.

Are we in effect creating another level in our two tier health system – the digitally savvy, information rich haves and the have-nots? What factors increase this disparity? A study by the School of Library and Information Studies at the University of Oklahoma set out to answer this question. The result published Dec 27, 2013, show that education lies at the heart of the disparity and impacted other elements such as health literacy and computer self-efficacy.  What is most interesting is the finding that although an individual may possess high levels of computer self-efficacy, this does not correlate with health benefits. What this means is that access to a computer and knowing how to use it, does not impact on health information disparity; but knowing how to search for health information and what to do with that information does.

Ref: Yong-Mi Kim, J. Info. Know. Mgmt., 12, 1350032 (2013) [10 pages] DOI: 10.1142/S0219649213500329