5. They don’t know what they’re talking about – they’re not journalists!Some are, some aren’t – either way they can be a valuable resource for understanding the opinions out there and finding new/interesting sources to talk about them Using the right tricks and tools helps you cut down on the noise and use the tools for what you really need them for – getting tips and finding sources
6. For Google and Twitter, we’ll look at tools/tips for: Locating specific information or sources Browsing and staying on top of news before it breaks
7. Twitter: “Micro-blogging” Short updates Lots of links Easy to identify influencers You don’t have to be a member to use Twitter search, but you do for the other features we’ll discuss
9. Basic Conventions 1) Hashtags: A way to tag a tweet Hashtags identify tweets with a particular topic, and make it easier to search for tweets on that subject
10. Basic Conventions 2) @ mentions: A way to tag a person @ mentions show that a person is being talked to or about
12. Improving Twitter Search The standard way to find tweets is by doing a search for a key term. The results are good, but there are some tricks to get even more relevant results.
13. Tip #1: Click on Hashtags Clicking on a hashtag automatically does a Twitter search for that hashtag so you can see all the tweets being tagged. If you know the hashtag for a particular event, it is usually more effective to search for that tag than for a related term.
14. Tip #2: Use Advanced Search Go to search.twitter.com and click Advanced Search Now you can exclude terms, choose to see tweets only in Arabic or English, search by location or date, only look for tweets with links to articles, etc.
15. Tip #3: Use Search Operators Instead of using advanced search, you can type these search operators directly into the search box to get the same results
17. Improving Twitter Browsing If you’re following useful and relevant people, your timeline (homepage) will often have useful stuff. But you’re also likely to encounter information overload. Plus, if you follow lots of people for lots of different reasons, you’ll need ways to zero in on the information you actually need.
18. Tip #1: Use Saved Searches You can save any Twitter search and then toggle easily between your standard timeline and a feed of search results
19. Tip #2: Use Lists (Create) Add Twitter users to a list in order to easily access tweets from a set group of people in one place
20. Tip #2: Use Lists (Find) Find lists curated by other Twitter users and follow them. You can toggle easily between your timeline and any lists you create or follow
21. Tip #3: Look at Regional Trends Trendsmap.com lets you zero in on locations to see real-time trends
22. Tool You Should Know: Hootsuite Follow multiple searches and lists all in one place. Create an account at hootsuite.com. You can also use TweetDeck to do the same thing. Go to tweetdeck.com.
23. Who/What is Important? Evaluate authority by looking at: Top Tweets – Twitter’s algorithm for deciding who is important Who is being retweeted and @mentioned Where a person is physically located How many lists a person is on and who has listed them The number of followers and ratio of following to followers
24. News and Blogs Blogs and other non-mainstream news sources often have information first. They can also offer new viewpoints and perspectives.
28. Tip #3: Use the Menus The menus along the top and sides of a Google search let you narrow your results, or view them in different ways. News, Blogs and Realtime (social media) are particularly useful.
30. Tool You Should Know: Google Reader Lets you keep track of all items published to blogs you subscribe to
31. Tip #1: Use an RSS Reader Lets you organize into folders, so you don’t have to look at everything all the time Lets you search, with options to search within specific folders or feeds Lets you sort by “magic,” which brings the most important items to the top
32. Tip #2: Subscribe to Searches (RSS) For blog searches For news searches The search results will now appear as a feed in your RSS reader alongside any other blog feeds you subscribe to
33. Tip #2: Subscribe to Searches (Alerts) Google.com/alerts Choose Deliver to: Feed to receive the alerts as an RSS feed rather than to your email inbox Using alerts rather than the full feed cuts down on the amount of items you receive. Google uses its algorithm to send you only what it considers most important.
34. Who/What is Important? Evaluate authority by looking at: Google Reader “magic” sorting Who blogs are linking to and debating with Who is being tweeted, retweeted and @mentioned Where a person is physically located
35. How to Build Your New Sources Follow a few tweeters and blogs that you already know and trust: @acarvin @sultanalqassemi globalvoicesonline.org 2) See who the bloggers and tweeters you trust are trusting (linking to, debating, retweeting) 3) Follow a few lists/searches and start getting a sense for who pops up often as an authoritative figure