Category Archives: Social Networking

VBSR Panel to focus on Local Online

Posted on Thursday, March 20, 2008 by 3 comments

I’m excited about a panel that I’ll be part of at the annual conference of Vermont Businesses for Social Responsibility. Here’s a draft of what to expect…

The World Wide Web Comes Home
How “Local Online” Is Changing Your Business

Richard Donnelly, Burlington Telecom
Christopher Grotke and Lise LePage, iBrattleboro.com
Chris Middings, Seventh Generation and Champlain College
Paula Routly, Seven Days
moderator: Michael Wood-Lewis, Front Porch Forum

The fifth great wave of the Internet—after communication, commerce, search and social networking—may well be “local.” People increasingly look online for answers to local questions about shoe stores, plumber recommendations, meeting people, directions, crime reports and more. A vast array of tools and services are being developed in Vermont to meet this demand. Much of this activity is fueled by online ad sales, which grew nationally to $20 billion in 2007. The Internet is driving business change, and companies are increasingly learning how to use this medium to focus on local markets. This session will provide attendees with concepts and tips for keeping up and getting ahead.

The conference (always a hit), will be held May 14 at Champlain College in Burlington, VT. The panel is tentatively scheduled for 1:15 to 2:30 PM. Come join the conversation… bring your experiences, questions and comments!

For a list of local businesses that have advertised online recently via Front Porch Forum, click on our sponsor link.

INVITATION: If anyone wants to get the conversation started early, leave a comment below…

Gotta have my Front Porch Forum

Posted on Monday, March 17, 2008 by No comments yet

We’ve been the lucky recipients of some great feedback about Front Porch Forum recently.  Just now a member wrote in after discovering that her new street address didn’t fall into one of our pre-existing neighborhood forums…

I just moved to Burlington and [my] street appears to not be part of a forum. I can’t imagine this is possible. If is is though how does one get started? I have been part of Westford’s forum and I love the information that is shared. I rely on it for local news, political info, resources, etc. and I will miss not having that in Burlington. I will look forward to you response. Thanks!

Good news for this subscriber… yes, her street does belong to a very active FPF neighborhood forum.  Our registration process just hiccuped and misdirected her… all’s well.

Local Business finds Clients through FPF

Posted on Thursday, March 13, 2008 by No comments yet

Thanks to Elaine for this wonderful note today…

I just wanted to tell you that right after the announcement that I had started my business was posted on the Five Sisters Forum, I received an email from a prospective client. I’m happy to say that he is now an official client and I foresee a successful working relationship ahead. Many thanks to you and Front Porch Forum for making connections like these happen!
— Elaine Sopchak, Vermont Voices Marketing Services

I wonder how she’d do if she reached out across all 130 of our neighborhood forums in addition to the single one she tried the other day?

Newspapers, Audience and Community

Posted on Sunday, March 9, 2008 by No comments yet

Several compelling bits from J.D. Lasica’s posting at PBS.org/MediaShift/IdeaLab today…

As newspaper analyst Dave Morgan observed last year: “Ad revenue in most large newspaper markets will keep dropping 3-5% per year for the next five years. Real circulation — excluding the tons of papers dumped on schools, hotels and the constantly-churning “free ten-week trial” — will keep dropping 3-7% per year for the next five years.”

And…

On Friday, Beatblogging.org’s David Cohn pointed to Clay Shirky’s new book, Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations, and quoted this excerpt from Shirky’s book:

A good deal of user-generated content isn’t actually “content” at all, at least not in the sense of material designed for an audience. Instead, a lot of it is just part of a conversation.Mainstream media has often missed this, because they are used to thinking of any group of people as an audience. Audience, though, is just one pattern a group can exist in; another is community. Most amateur media unfolds in a community setting, and a community isn’t just a small audience; it has a social density, a pattern of users talking to one another, that audiences lack. An audience isn’t just a big community either; it’s more anonymous, with many fewer ties between users. Now, though, the technological distinction between media made for an audience and media made for a community is evaporating; instead of having one kind of media come in through the TV and another kind come in through the phone, it all comes in over the internet.

University of Florida new media professor Mindy McAdams chimed in:

Newspapers used to be centered in communities. Now they are mostly not. People in much of North America don’t even live in communities.Is this why newspapers are dying? Because there are no communities? …

It’s about what Shirky said: Audiences are not the same as communities, and communities are made up of people talking to one another.

What does a community need? How should journalists supply what communities need? …

This is what Front Porch Forum is all about… helping nearby neighbors stitch together community at the neighborhood level… in every neighborhood in a region. And, as Professor McAdams said above “People in much of North America don’t even live in communities.”  And many want to.

Soup Mama Delivers to the Neighbors

Posted on Thursday, March 6, 2008 by No comments yet

Congratulations to the Soup Mama, Lorraine Murray.  Nice coverage in today’s newspaper

The only thing better than a bowl of homemade soup in winter — at least for those of us who arrive home from work simultaneously with the family’s demands for food — is a bowl of homemade soup we didn’t actually have to make.

If that soup made in somebody else’s kitchen were actually delivered to our front door, why we might just fall down and kiss the hem of that cook’s garment.

And she exists, at least if you live in Burlington. Hooray for Lorraine Murray, the Soup Mama, who delivers her homemade concoctions door-to-door every Monday.

Murray, the 26-year-old mother of one, launched her business in October. It works like this: She posts her soup-of-the-week on the neighborhood e-mail newsletter, Front Porch Forum, and her Web site (http://thesoupmama.wordpress.com/) each week. Customers place orders by Saturday evening.

Lots of small and micro businesses use Front Porch Forum to get the word out about their offerings… another great use of this service.

Past coverage in Ghost of Midnight… one, two and three.

Word-of-mouth has been very, very good to FPF

Posted on Wednesday, March 5, 2008 by No comments yet

I was talking to a marketing professional this week and he was asking me how big Front Porch Forum‘s marketing budget is considering the high level of local buzz about it.  Well… what budget?  We depend on happy members to spread the word… neighbor to neighbor… social “contagion.”  So I was glad to read this posting from Perry in a Burlington neighborhood forum today…

I heard about [Front Porch Forum] some weeks ago, then yesterday, within about 12 hours, three different people mentioned it. I figured that’s the sign I need to become part. Looking forward to becoming more familiar and involved with the neighborhood.

8,000 local subscribers and counting… out of a base of 50,000 households.

More Sample Forum Headlines

Posted on Tuesday, March 4, 2008 by 3 comments

People post items on Front Porch Forum across a wide variety of topics. Here are some of the headlines from one day (Feb. 1, 2008)… just to show a random cross-section…

(And you can read more about Front Porch Forum on our blog.)

  • Another Neighbor Joins Forum
  • BABYSITTING MINGLER AT UVM
  • Car Repair Shop Recommended
  • Carpooling to Downtown Burlington?
  • Cat Clue
  • Centennial Lot Activity
  • Colchester Ave. Sidewalk Update
  • credit where credit is due – Winooski Schools
  • Daisy no longer on prowl
  • Daycare Substitute Teacher Needed
  • Democrats gathering Feb. 10
  • Dion Street traffic comments
  • Dog Play Time?
  • Dry CleaningPlant Proposed Near School
  • DSL Expanded in Westford
  • Eastwoods Winter Party back on at Twin Oaks!
  • Eco Kid’s Craft at The Bobbin Sat.
  • Fire/Water Damage Repair Service Recommended
  • Five-Gallon Buckets Available
  • Forum Introduction
  • FORUM RAFFLE FEEDBACK
  • Forum Welcome
  • FPF Postings for Political Parties
  • Fundraiser via real estate transactions
  • Go Winooski Go! High School Basketball
  • Group Home Improvement Projects Anyone?
  • Help Animals by Supporting VSNIP!
  • Hey Front Street – float time?
  • hey neighbors
  • HISTORIC MARKERS FOR BUILDINGS
  • Housing available
  • Islander Timing
  • Jazzercise now on Saturday
  • Learn to Curl Feb. 2
  • Local Candidate Forums
  • Looking For Feedback on community education
  • Looking for housing
  • Looking for metal detector
  • Looking for Queen-sized sheets
  • Meet Candidates Feb. 21
  • More Neighbors Join Forum
  • New Rec Path Section
  • New to Neighborhood; Seeking play options
  • Pancake Supper Feb. 5
  • ROOMS FOR RENT – JUNE
  • school commissioner update and re-election campaig…
  • School information online
  • Schoolboard position – write-ins?
  • Seeking dentist recommendations
  • seeking holisitic primary care MD recommendations
  • Seeking Housecleaner recommendations
  • Seeking newspaper bags
  • Seeking pet/house sitter recommendations
  • Seeking Super Bowl Shoulder Roast Recipe
  • Senior Housing Proposal Comments
  • Sidewalk Plowing and mailboxes
  • Singing Valentine Offered
  • Speeding on Dion St.
  • Such Blessing
  • Support Green Mountain Children’s Museum
  • Tax Prep Offer and March of Dimes
  • Town Meeting with Bernie at MMU Feb. 10
  • Welcome your involvement in autism radio show
  • WING it! Williston Event April 11-12
  • Winooski Fire Dept. seeking new members
  • Winooski Schools Comments
  • Winter Botany Walk at Red Rocks Park Feb. 9

“Army of Davids” use internet tools against unwanted development

Posted on Tuesday, March 4, 2008 by No comments yet

The Planning Commissioners Journal blogs today that…

Free, new media have empowered neighborhood groups tremendously. A decade ago, anyone wanting to oppose a rezoning or a development had to go door to door or make scores of phone calls to get people to meetings. Time and distance greatly constrained what people could accomplish.

But now an increasing number of neighborhood groups are using tools like Yahoo or Google groups, which allow e-mail messages to go out instantly to group members — and only to group members — so quickly that neighborhoods are now as agile as their industry opponents. Neighborhoods are also using free blogs to give them a public face and to archive public documents.

I think this new “Army of Davids” power is very apparent in Greensboro, where developers have lost recent rezoning battles (or given up before they started) in response to neighborhood pressure. It looks like they’re going to lose a few more.”

— David Wharton, “And They’re Getting More Organized All the Time” (Dec. 4, 2007, on his A Little Urbanity blog about living in the middle of Greensboro, North Carolina)

People put Front Porch Forum to use in this way too… dozens of times in the past year or two.

Town Meeting and Front Porch Forum

Posted on Monday, March 3, 2008 by 1 comment

When my wife, Valerie, and I created Front Porch Forum a year and a half ago, we had a simple mission in mind… to help neighbors get to know each other better and foster the sense of community at a very local level.  We haven’t tried to dictate what people write about… we just wanted folks to sign up and put this free service to work.   And they do!

So we didn’t know what to expect with our first real experience with an election cycle.  Wow!  Front Porch Forum has been awash with comments, announcements, endorsements, analysis, opinions and more for the past month or two.  Here are some numbers (rough estimates)…

  • 8,000 households subscribe in Chittenden County  (including 30% of Burlington)
  • 130 neighborhood forums hosted locally
  • 1,400 postings/month typically

Moran Plant Redevelopment Proposal (City’s pitch)

  • 150 people posted
  • 500 households reached on average by each of these posting

Burlington City Council Races

  • 100 people posted

Chittenden County School Board Races

  • 90 people posted

Presidential Primaries

  • 25 people posted

Lots of (mostly) great discussion.  Many people have told me that they are glad to hear their neighbor’s views on these matters.  Others though have said that they are looking forward to getting this Town Meeting Day behind us… soon enough!

Front Porch Forum on YouTube

Posted on Friday, February 29, 2008 by 4 comments

I guess Front Porch Forum has arrived… we’re now on YouTube!

Special thanks to CCTV Channel 17 (Meghan O’Rourke, Sam Mayfield and Lauren-Glenn Davitian) and the dozens of local folks who appear in the clip.