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About Greg
As a web developer for more than 15 years, I find my attention increasingly drawn to the intersection of computers, the Internet and communications, especially social media. On this blog, I indulge my interest in these and several other topics. I hope you find them interesting too. Read on...-
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Twitter Stream- New blog post: Google consolidates privacy policies and tools (are you listening, Facebook?). http://bit.ly/9njT3A about 23 hours ago from TweetDeck
- Can visitors can see your entire web page? Load it up in "Browser Size", from Google Labs, to find out. http://bit.ly/53Wel3 06:22:32 PM September 01, 2010 from TweetDeck
- Check out the "The Wilderness Downtown", built in HTML 5 (Chrome or Safari required). Pretty amazing. http://bit.ly/cRV3WQ 10:33:31 PM August 30, 2010 from TweetDeck
- Made my head hurt trying to figure out what the Facebook Like button really does. I now have them on http://webdancers.com. 10:43:02 PM August 29, 2010 from TweetDeck
- First hand account of how an acquisition fell apart. Not something that gets published every day. http://bit.ly/bgdKaC 08:50:03 PM August 27, 2010 from TweetDeck
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Who cares about your project?
Harvey Chess
Know the difference between the means and the end
A theme that wove its way throughout the two days was reflective of what you hear quite often in social media circles: Focus outward; the outcome for the people you are trying to serve is more important than the project itself. To paraphrase Chris Brogan in this context, nobody cares about your stupid project. The people who participate and how they will benefit, now that’s something to care about.
If the end-user’s not happy, nobody’s happy
Trying to write a winning proposal without input from those who will participate in the program is like designing an application without talking to the people who will use it. That’s not to say that this is never done; it is, a lot. But it usually means that the project will later need to be rethought.
Avoid circular logic
It’s tempting to propose that the benefit to people participating in the program is that they have participated in the program. Remember that benefits don’t accrue until after the program has been completed and some positive change has taken place in people’s lives.
Your organization is the proposal
This is probably Harvey’s central message and you can just as easily substitute “product” or “service” for “proposal”. What it means is that you have to know what you’re about. Unless an organization understands its mission, it’s goals, its raison d’ĂȘtre, it will not be able to successfully raise money. Understanding, in this case, means achieving consensus around these goals and then getting them down on paper.
Consider the following questions about your program (or product or service) and whether or not your organization can answer them clearly:
These are hard questions and I don’t yet know the answers to them in my own case. I also realize that I’m unlikely to be able to answer them by simply sitting down and thinking real hard. It will take working with others in our community to develop an understanding of what we hope to achieve. It’s a daunting task but one that I look forward to pursuing.