March, 2009

Project Announcement – Questions, Answered, Again

San Francisco, California.
Leading Off | San Francisco, California | Jan 2009

Project Announcement

This past August I asked friends to ask me questions for me to answer with images and words; after I selected ten questions to answer, I gave friends the chance to vote on the final five for me to answer.

This project is called “Questions, Answered, Again” because this is a reprise of an earlier project called, surprisingly, “Questions, Answered”.

It took me a little bit to complete, but I’m happy with the results. Click here to enter the project.

Your Chance to Participate

More importantly, this is just the start of the conversation: I’m interested in seeing how you would answer the same questions in your own words and / or pictures. Leave your responses in the comments (login with Facebook, or just leave your name, or comment anonymously) in the project pages or leave links to your own answers on your websites.

I enjoyed thinking about each of the questions, and I’m looking forward to your own answers. Don’t be shy :)

Enter the Project >

Link: http://www.taylordavidson.com/qaa/index.html

Hidden, Fort Davis, Texas

CLICK TO VIEW LARGER: Hidden, Fort Davis, Texas

Hidden | Fort Davis, Texas | Feb 2009

To follow up from my Why Should Photographers Twitter? post, I mentioned how I should write a “How Should Photographers use Twitter?” post.

Well, I kind of already have: Lesson 4: Connect with context and content:

We’re all overloaded with content, yet we’re constantly looking for what’s new and better. We create context when we find, organize, analyze and share “new” and “better” with our world. Technology can’t completely replace people: we’re still flawed people making flawed decisions with incomplete information. Use your platform as a leader to help people make decisions, solve their problems, give them the right information, lead better lives… and be better photographers.

I could lay out the exact steps for you and your business, but what fun would that be?

You get out of Twitter what you put in.

Dig in, listen, figure it out. It’s about the people, not the tools; the community, not the technology. Listen, reach out, help, share, and above all, be a person. Think of the web as a giant party where everyone’s conversations are available, archived, shareable; how would you act? What would you do?

Read the rest of the post for more thoughts and specifics.

 

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