marzo 20, 2010

Startup Visa, la ley de visa para emprendedores se introduce en Washington

La ley de Startup Visa de la que escuchamos a inicios de este año ha sido introducida en Washington por los senadores John Kerry y Richard Lugar que impulsa la creación de empleos en Estados Unidos y brinda oportunidad a empresarios inmigrantes crear nuevas empresas que les permitirán obtener residencia permanente en Estados Unidos.

Visa Startup

A inicios de este año se anunció el movimiento de Startup Visa que busca talento en todo el mundo en el campo tecnológico para crear empresas que provean de empleo y representen un beneficio económico para Estados Unidos. Los senadores John Kerry y Richard Lugar han presentado su propuesta ante Washington (Descargar en .PDF) en donde explican los por menores de la misma.

Emprendimiento, inmigración y Startup Visa

En varios medios se han actualizado opiniones sobre el tema; en el siguiente vídeo, Eric Ries y Eric Diep nos hablan sobre el movimiento Startup Visa y el emprendimiento.

Según la propuesta de los senadores, lo que se desea con Startup Visa es permitir que un empresario inmigrante reciba 2 años de visa siempre y cuando pueda demostrar que tiene un inversor con una suma de 250 mil dólares como capital de riesgo. Si después de dos años el empresario puede demostrar que ha generado por lo menos 5 empleos a tiempo completo y atrajo un millón de dólares en inversión adicional al país o tiene un ingreso de la misma cantidad recibirá la residencia legal en Estados Unidos.


Stephanie Falla Aroche Stephanie Falla Aroche para Maestros del Web.
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marzo 13, 2010

Daniel Monastersky En C5N invitado por Alexis Garbarz

alexis

Ayer en la noche por invitación de Alexis Garbarz (@alexisgarbarz), y junto a Daniel Monastersky (@identidadrobada), platicando de como cerrar la brecha entre los niños y los adultos en cuanto a plataformas sociales se refiere.

Me parece que estuvo interesante la plática, y por eso la pongo acá para todos, gracias a Ch1v4Records, por la captura de imagen.


febrero 24, 2010

Crear contenido para tu blog pensando en social media

Crear contenido para tu blog pensando en social mediaEscribir para la web es un arte vinculado con la experiencia de crear contenido de calidad, que sea atractivo para el lector pero también un arte que debe difundirse en todos los medios que en la actualidad utilizamos para comunicarnos; escribimos un post que luego promovemos a través de las redes sociales porque sabemos que son las vías adecuadas para llegar al público que nos interesa, pero la tarea no es sencilla.

Los blogs siguen siendo la plataforma más fácil para gestionar contenido, pero algo que definitivamente ha cambiado es la manera en la que se consume ese contenido publicado en el blog. Resulta que ahora debemos escribir pensando no sólo en el lector del blog que esta suscrito a través de RSS, también es necesario incluir en cada entrada las opciones sociales para promover, compartir el contenido y hasta en los diversos dispositivos móviles de acceso.

Elementos sociales vinculados al contenido

Este ejemplo de Social Media Stats diseñado por Josh Hallett y publicado en Voce Communications nos permite visualizar los elementos sociales vinculados al contenido que generamos en cada entrada de nuestro blog. El ejemplo fue aplicado a la promoción de un evento, pero también podemos aplicar mucho de los vínculos al contenido de un post de nuestro blog.

Social Media Stats

En la gráfica se observa que al crear una entrada en un blog es importante pensar en los vínculos que tendrá con las redes sociales, tomando en cuenta que cada una tiene acciones diferentes de distrubución de contenido. Vicular los servicios sociales y hacer que nuestro blog sea amigable para los mismos, permitirá que tengamos acceso a mayor información en el comportamiento estadístico de la distrubución del contenido y analizar las tendencias de consumo.

Comprender el ecosistema social

Entonces conectar nuestro contenido a las redes sociales o distribuirlo a través de ellas no solo es mandar a través de nuestra cuenta de Twitter o Facebook el link al nuevo post. En realidad se requiere más que eso, debemos conocer el ecosistema social, comprender cómo se dialoga con quienes consumen contenido y los canales en que se consume ahora la información.

Un aspecto importante es no caer en la dinámica de Spam en donde utilizas los medios sociales para mandar links de forma masiva, porque eso no es saludable. También debes brindar opciones sociales dentro de tu blog para que sea incluso el mismo usuario quien se encargue de promover tu contenido utilizando las herramientas sociales.


Stephanie Falla Aroche Stephanie Falla Aroche para Maestros del Web.
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febrero 17, 2010

The 39 Social Media Tools I’ll Use Today

Amazingly, it seems like there’s more social media tools than Jonas brothers, with the gap growing every day.

I don’t feel the need to experiment with every new piece of software that emerges from its chrysalis, but I do feel a responsibility to you and my clients to have some idea of what’s out there and what’s worthwhile.

Also, at my social media speaking engagements hither and yon I’m often asked what tools I use. So, I took a personal inventory and created this overview of the 39 social media tools I use daily.

Twitter

Tweetdeck
I use Tweetdeck for serious twitter sessions. I find it to be especially valuable and hassle-free for updating Twitter, Facebook, and LInkedin simultaneously. I do this only occasionally, however, as my friends/followers on each site don’t have much overlap.

Tweetie
This extremely intuitive Mac-only app is my hour-to-hour choice for Twitter. It doesn’t have the advanced functionality of Tweetdeck (such as cross-posting to Facebook), but it’s so easy-to-use that it’s my favorite Twitter app. It takes up a lot less screen real estate that Tweetdeck, and I always use Tweetie when conducting my live, Twitter 20 interviews.

Objective Marketer
This power-user Twitter app is the preferred vehicle for Guy Kawasaki. I use Objective Marketer for all of my in-advance Tweets, and when I want to engage in some headline and/or time of day testing. Lifetime statistics, cross-posting, multiple accounts, etc. If you’re serious about Twitter, this is a great app. It’s a good choice for agencies, too. (Disclosure: Objective Marketer gave me a free account)

Note: There are thousands of Twitter apps (literally). If you really want to roll around in the possibilities, spend some time over at Laura Fitton’s (@pistachio) One Forty, the app store for Twitter.

Facebook

I don’t use a lot of apps for Facebook, preferring to play it pretty close to the vest there – for now. (I’m working on a Fan Page that will be launching next month). Meanwhile, however, I do very much like Facebook Lite, which strips down a lot of the shiny distractions, and gives you a threaded News Feed, birthdays, and events – and that’s about it. I think Facebook Lite makes Facebook engagement easier – maybe you will too?

Blog Comments

(The blog is on WordPress)
Disqus
This is what I use to manage comments here at Convince & Convert. There are some elements of Disqus I don’t like, especially that it doesn’t always play nice with other plug-ins, but it does make commenting easier and faster for most of you who already have a Disqus account. I’ve seen my average number of comments increase since I moved to Disqus.

ChatCatcher
This is a nice little tool that finds Tweets about your blog posts, and automatically adds them as comments. This is one of the plug-ins that doesn’t sync well with Disqus, so it’s not working as well as it used to, pre-Disqus. Also, some bloggers (including Ari Herzog and Valeria Maltoni) don’t favor including tweets as comments, since they are not true “comments.” But, if you want to organize and harvest the tweets about your posts, this is the plug-in you want.

Virality & Search

Topsy
One part virality tool, one part tracking mechanism, one part social listening post, Topsy is becoming one of new favorites. I’ve moved from Tweetmeme to Topsy on my embedded tweeting, due to improved metrics, and Topsy’s competitive intelligence capabilities are impressive. Find a tweet your competitor sent, and see how many times it was retweeted, by whom, which among them are influencers, etc. It works like bit.ly, but incorporates all URL shorteners into the data mix.

Sexy Bookmarks Plug-in
My friend Michael Stelzner from Social Media Examiner (where I guest post monthly), turned me on to this excellent plug-in that improves upon the social sharing user interface. See an example at the bottom of this post (the little squares that animate when you put your cursor over them).

What Would Seth Godin Do
Technically, I don’t use this plug-in any longer, as my apres-post appeals are now hard-coded, but this is an excellent little nugget that not enough people utilize. Use WWSGD to include a little message before or after each of your posts, asking readers to subscribe to your RSS feed (or buy you a drink). The genius of this plug-in (and the reason it’s named after Seth Godin) is that you can set one message for first-time visitors, and a second message for repeat visitors. Smart.

All In One SEO Pack
Like many bloggers, I utilize the excellent All in One SEO Pack plug-in to optimize posts for search engine rankings. This nifty piece of software allows you to specify page title, description, and keywords for each post. A must.

Photos

Apture
Although I don’t use it all the time, I find myself turning to it with increased frequency. Apture is a handy plug-in that finds photos, videos, links and related content that you can embed or link to within your posts with a single click. Extremely handy for locating and adding links to specific Web pages (see link to Seth Godin above).

Flickr Creative Commons Search
This is my go-to source for photos for the blog and presentations. Using Flickr’s advanced search, you can browse photos that are specifically made available under a Creative Commons license, allowing you to use them with attribution in blog posts, etc.

Shutterstock
When I want a slightly higher grade of photo, or more precise searching, I utilize Shutterstock. This robust source for inexpensive stock photography is my secret lair of images for my presentations and workshops. Pricing is very reasonable, as you can download and use 60 images a year for just $229.

Skitch
I’m no Photoshop wizard. In fact, I’m basically illiterate at photo manipulation. That’s why I use Skitch, an incredibly intuitive image grabber and cropper (for Mac) that has the very attractive added benefit of being free.

Tracking

Google Analytics
No surprise, this is my primary statistical source for Convince & Convert. Despite being free, Google keeps adding functionality to Google Analytics. I have a few goals set up, including visits to my speaking page; visits to my consulting page; time spent on the site, etc.

bit.ly
The dominant URL shortener is also the best – in my opinion – at tracking and analytics. I implement bit.ly URLs whenever possible, and make liberal use of their “+” feature. Add “+” at the end of any bit.ly URL to see how many times it’s been clicked on, and by whom. Try it yourself. Excellent for down-and-dirty competitive analysis.

Swix
This is a slick new social media dashboard program that I’ve been trying. I’m planning to write a full post about it soon, but the real genius of Swix is that it allows you to easily create a unified scoreboard of all your key social media metrics like blog traffic, subscribers, Facebook fans, Twitter followers, YouTube subscribers, and much more.

Authority Labs
By far my favorite tool for tracking search engine positioning, Authority Labs shows you at a glance whether you’re #4 or #40 in Google, Bing and Yahoo! for whatever search terms are important to you and your business. Owned by my friend Chase Granberry in Arizona, Authority Labs gave me a free account.

Content Creation

Cameras
For still photos, I typically use my iPhone 3GS or Panasonic Lumix TZ5. I use the Panasonic a ton with my family, as I find it to have the best combination of zoom and wide angle capabilities.

For videos, I recently got a Kodak ZI-8 which I prefer to my old Flip because it has an external microphone jack. This is an important advantage, as I bought a $30 lavalier microphone and can now grab good audio even at crowded conferences, etc. The one downside is Kodak’s built-in video software pales in comparison to Flip’s, forcing me to use iMovie on the Mac, which I can barely tolerate.

TubeMogul
For video upload and syndication, I often use TubeMogul, which allows you to upload a single video clip to dozens of video sites – not just YouTube. The real advantage of TubeMogul, however, is that you can get comparative statistics. For example, how many views did your video get on each site, and how long on average did viewers watch your clip on each site? It’s a great tool for moving beyond video upload to strategic video optimization.

SlideShare
I upload most of my presentations to SlideShare, and find it to be a valuable resource for growing an audience. My presenation “7 Ways to Build Stunning Business and Personal Brands in Social Media” was originally given in person to 35 people. Since I uploaded it to Slideshare, it’s been viewed 12,360 times. That’s the magnifying power of Slideshare – which also now allows you to upload audio tracks to accompany your presentations.

Listening

Twazzup
For quick Twitter searches, I prefer Twazzup, due to its straightforward interface, and overall speed.

SocialMention
For more comprehensive social media searching, I use SocialMention, which indexes blogs, tweets, message board posts, and a lot more. See my post on How to Create a Share of Voice Report for a free worksheet that uses SocialMention.

Google Alerts
Like most marketing professionals, I have several Google Alerts set up for my name, my company name, and topics of interest to me. This is invaluable for finding bloggers that have linked to my posts, so I can go to their blog and thank you in the comments – a practice I highly recommend.

Radian6
For advanced social media listening, I often recommend my friends at Radian6, who have – in my opinion – the most robust feature set and product development roadmap of all the widely available social listening platforms.

Email

ExactTarget
To produce, send, and track my free, twice-monthly email newsletter “The Social Media Messenger” (sign up here if you don’t receive it yet), I use my friends at ExactTarget. Given the simplicity of my newsletter, sending it via ExactTarget is like flying on a jet plane to go get a quart of milk, but it’s nice to know that massively advanced functionality is available if I need it. (disclosure: ExactTarget is a client, and I have worked with them for more than six years)

Feedburner
To power my RSS feed and to send daily emails whenever I write a new post, I use Google’s Feedburner service. It’s not perfect, but it’s free and easy to implement. Note that nearly 40% of all subscribers to this blog are via email, not RSS. Are you pushing email subscriptions to your blog hard enough?

Flowtown
As mentioned in my post last week, this is my favorite new tool. Flowtown allows you to take email addresses (like the people subscribed to my newsletter) and determine in which social networks they are active. This is especially handy when you need to segment your audience. For example, when I’m ready to invite people to my new Facebook Fan Page, I can use Flowtown to determine which of you are active on Facebook, and send an email only to that group. Nifty.

NutshellMail
See tomorrow’s post for a deeper look at this tool, but NutshellMail brings your social media activity to you via email, instead of you having to surf around and use tools to see what’s happening. Extremely handy while traveling, I also highly recommend Nutshell for casual social media users.

iPhone

Just about anyone that builds a social media audience partially does so because they create a lot of content, and are responsive. Mobile access to the social Web is a virtual requirement to do it well.

Tweetie 2
I’ve used at least six iPhone apps for Twitter, but for now I prefer Tweetie 2, which makes the best use of the iPhone’s swipe features. You can do more in less time with Tweetie 2 on the iPhone, and it’s super fast and bug-free.

Facebook
The original Facebook app on iPhone was just okay, but it’s been massively improved, to the point that Facebook access via mobile might actually be easier than on a computer. (100 million people use Facebook mobile every month, by the way). The single best aspect is photo and video upload and captioning, which is integrated so tightly with iPhone that it truly is better than laptop or desktop uploading.

Linkedin
Similarly, the Linkedin iPhone app has made major strides, and I find myself rarely using Linkedin via a computer any longer.

Gowalla
For presence-based status updates, I use Gowalla. I’ve tried Foursquare, too. But for me, more of my three-dimensional friends who are close enough geographically that I care what restaurant they are at are using Gowalla. I push Gowalla updates to my Facebook friends, but not to Twitter where I figure my geographic status is less illuminating.

WordPress
The WordPress iPhone app is slick. You can write, edit, update posts; add photos; and approve comments (although not with Disqus). Great little app for on-the-fly blog management.

Analytics
For basic stats tracking, this app is better and faster than Google Analytics on the computer. It also includes a handy “today” reports that shows you what’s happened on your blog since last night – a report that Google Analytics still doesn’t offer.

Print n Share
For true device-agnostic types, this is a great app that allows you to print from your iPhone to any printer. You probably won’t use it every day, but when you need to print a boarding pass or slide handouts from your iPhone, you’ll be delighted you have this one.

Zenbe
This is a no-frills to-do list app that syncs between the Web and iPhone. Indispensable for me, and I’m constantly checking it to see what projects I have due, what posts I need to write, etc.

Bonus: DirecTV
If you have an iPhone and DirecTV, this is uber-handy. If you forget to tape a show, or just want to tape some super crazy show remotely to freak out your spouse when he/she looks at your playlist, this is a must-have.

I’m sure you have your own ideas about tools I’ve overlooked, or things you use that readers (and me) could benefit from. Please leave a comment and let’s discuss.

noviembre 10, 2009

How Social Media is Taking the News Local

newspaper-keyboardAny news organization’s web site can get a story picked up by popular sites such as Drudge Report, Huffington Post, Digg, or even Fark, resulting in a bump in page views. But that’s a traffic anomaly. A key metric media companies want to grow is their local audience, because local traffic is where the money is.

“Local advertising pays the bills in most cases and local advertisers want to reach people who can actually come to their stores,” said Serra Media CEO Mark Briggs, author of “Journalism 2.0,” and the upcoming book “Journalism Next,” in an e-mail interview. “And, as national news has become a commodity, local news is the differentiating factor most local news operations are emphasizing these days. Or, at least they should be.”

Local media companies are working with social media tools and user-generated content contributors to expand their local reach.

“I sense an inevitability is setting in with media companies with regard to social media. Those that thought … it was a fad that would quickly fade away are beginning to resolve themselves to the cold reality that social media is here to stay and will have to play a role in news coverage and audience building for a long time to come,” Briggs said.


The “Unbrand” Approach


chicagonow

Attracting local audiences can be a matter of launching a new, separately branded site with a targeted topic or geographic reach.

That’s what the Chicago Tribune Media Group did in August, when it launched ChicagoNow, a local blog hub dubbed a “new web site created by Chicagoans for Chicagoans.”

Bill Adee, editor for digital media for the Chicago Tribune, told me the Tribune has a huge local audience but there are certain areas they don’t index well. With ChicagoNow, he said, they wanted to focus on blogs, topics and people that visitors don’t get from ChicagoTribune.com. The site has just over 120 local blogs so far and Adee said the Tribune uses its other brands to promote the new site and its bloggers.

For example, he pointed out that if the Tribune’s cable TV station needs an expert on the Chicago Transit authority, they have one. “That’s something we can offer that a lot of other properties can’t,” he said.

ChicagoNow bloggers are paid $5 per 1,000 local page views, according to Adee, who said they focus their bloggers on Facebook and Twitter and encourage them to comment on other ChicagoNow blogs. About every month or so the site hosts a party so everyone can meet the new bloggers. The site had 1 million unique visitors in September and 45% were local — double what they expected to have at this point in the site’s development and they’ve hit every page view goal so far, he said.

“I think it’s gone beyond my wildest dreams so far,” he said.


Neighborhood News Coverage


seattle-blog

Early last year, journalists Cory Bergman and his wife, Kate, started a Seattle-area neighborhood network of news blogs called Next Door Media, which won the Online News Association’s first Community Collaboration award in 2009.

Cory Bergman said in an e-mail interview that about 80% of their stories come from their neighbors and what they post in the blogs’ forums, comments, e-mail, Facebook and Twitter. Experienced journalists who live in the neighborhood cover stories they find via those methods, using traditional journalism skills to gather and confirm information. When the stories are posted to the blogs, a hat tip is given to the user who originated the idea.

“In essence, we’re providing a layer of journalism over an empowered community. It’s a neighborhood answer service, rooted in journalism,” he said. Bergman said when it comes to breaking news, because the writers live in the neighborhoods they cover, they often beat traditional local news media to the scene. When a house fire broke out recently, they received seven e-mails and two photos in 15 minutes, he said.

He also added that Facebook and Twitter have been instrumental in helping Next Door Media get the word out about their sites, especially as they expand to new neighborhoods. MyBallard.com gets 600,000 monthly page views and 50,000 unique users and 95% of the traffic is from Seattle, which is “significantly higher than an average local news site and the engagement numbers are off the charts,” he said.

The company’s success is two-fold, according to Bergman. Editors care about their communities and go the extra mile to provide local news coverage that traditional media companies are increasingly unable to cover, he said, and also the site is not afraid to trust its neighborhoods.

He pointed out that launching successful sites isn’t easy and recommends news organizations partner with promising neighborhood sites rather than competing with them.

“Hyperlocal is a lot of work. There’s no magic formula. We’ve invested a lot of time in covering stories, attending community meetings and introducing ourselves to just about everyone. It’s about people and relationships and trust, not just code. It takes patience, which is rare quality these days,” he said.


Going Viral Locally


derusha-tweet

Internet memes can spread fast using social media, and news topics are no exception. What started out as crowdsourcing for a news story morphed into a local meme in the Twin Cities when WCCO-TV reporter Jason DeRusha, asked his followers on Twitter how someone gets an official day designated for them. He tweeted: “It’s National Cheesecake Day. How do you get a ‘day’ anyway? Good Question at 10. (Anyone have power to declare DeRusha Day?).”

That’s when the meme began. DeRusha didn’t anticipate how quickly the “DeRusha Day” movement would snowball. A Twitter user started a #DeRushaDay hashtag, and then someone created a poster, another person launched a web site and someone else started online petition devoted to the cause, which were all tweeted about. The end result? Sept. 21 was officially proclaimed DeRusha Day by the mayor’s office and a party marked the event.

So the viral nature of social media inadvertently spread among Twin Citians an idea that was closely tied to WCCO’s brand. How can others duplicate this success? Certainly going where your readers/listeners and viewers are is a start. Then you must regularly engage with locals in that social media space in a two-way conversation, rather than simply push out content. In DeRusha’s case, he uses social media in the story gathering process, often talking about the stories he works on and getting feedback from fans and followers. On TV he invites viewers to go to his blog and then discusses news stories there with them.

“I’m really interested in closing the loop between online fans, who follow me in the process, and TV viewers,” he said. “How do I get those web people to tune into the TV at ten? I try to put those people on TV. That seems to help.”

derusha-day

John Daenzer, WCCO’s director of new media, said in an e-mail interview the station’s use of social media has absolutely helped grow its local online audience. “We wouldn’t be as aggressive as we are about engaging in all sorts of social media if we thought otherwise. And we work very hard to ensure that when we use social media we’re not just pumping out promotional garbage. We also want to participate in the conversation and give folks new ways to connect with each other,” he said.

Facebook referrals to WCCO.com surged 1,287% in August and 1,082% in September over the same period last year, according to Daenzer’s data. Twitter referrals for August were up 1,029% over August 2008.


Keeping a Local Focus


statesman-twitter

Austin-American Statesman social media editor Robert Quigley has been the voice behind @statesman on Twitter since 2008. He also tweets for @hookemfans, the Twitter account for the Statesman’s football fan site Hookem.com, which relies heavily on aggregation and social media.

“Growing local audience is our local bread and butter,” Quigley said in an e-mail interview. “Our marketing department, through ads you can find on YouTube and many other campaigns, has been highlighting the work we’ve been doing online and in print. We’re making sure we understand and are serving that community through Statesman.com and Austin360.com.”

He keeps a focus on quality local content. His consistent highlighting of Statesman’s content, engagement in dialogue with the audience and crowdsourcing is also paying off. Facebook and Twitter are both in the top 10 in referring traffic to the newspaper’s sites, according to Quigley, who tweets about every 45 minutes Monday through Friday, but tweets more often when news is happening. He also typically updates the Statesman’s Facebook Fan page a few times a day with stories, photo galleries or videos.

Quigley said newspapers and other corporate brands should use social media as a two-way communication tool. “I follow back most people who follow us, which I think shows a level of engagement (and allows me to receive news tips privately through direct messages),” he said.


noviembre 10, 2009

MOMO TechTalks: Android como plataforma de desarrollo

nuevo-encuentro-de-momo-buenos-aires-modelos-de-negociocamino-a-la-convergencia-informacion-de-prensa-2-372x300

Mobile Monday Buenos Aires (www.momobuenosaires.com) invita al segundo encuentro MOMO TechTalks. Este evento se realizará el próximo lunes 16 de noviembre a las 19:00 hs, en el Aula Magna de la Facultad Regional Buenos Aires de la Universidad Tecnológica Nacional (UTN),ubicada en Medrano 951, Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires,.

El encuentro estará  totalmente dedicado a Android, el nuevo sistema operativo de Google, a fin de acercar un panorama de esta novedosa herramienta a los profesionales interesados en la temática. El encuentro contará con la presencia de dos destacados oradores.  James YUM, Ingeniero del Programa de Desarrollo del equipo Android de Google, USA, y German Greco, Gerente Regional de Producto del área de celulares de Motorola. Yum expondrá en inglés su tema: “Inside the Android Application Framework”. Greco, por su parte,  se referirá a “La nueva generación de celulares Android”.

Además, participarán de la charla desarrolladores locales convocados por Mobile Monday Buenos Aires, quienes realizarán un showcase de proyectos creados bajo plataforma Android.

Al finalizar el evento, Motorola sorteará varios teléfonos móviles como parte del lanzamiento en Argentina y otros 4 países más del Motorola Milestone

El evento es de acceso libre y gratuito. Sin embargo, los cupos son limitados por lo cual se requiere inscripción previa completando el formulario de registro en línea en el sitio de Mobile Monday (www.momobuenosaires.com) o en http://tinyurl.com/momotechtalks

noviembre 10, 2009

Google en La Plata

news_google_ok

La Plata Valley sigue creciendo. Y esto se debe al trabajo de un excelente equipo y a todos los miembros de nuestra comunidad que como vos nos siguen y nos eligen en cada actividad que les proponemos.

Para festejar el cierre del año tendremos una sorpresa! Por primera vez en La Plata contaremos con la visita de Alejandro Villanueva, Director del Programa para Desarrolladores, América Latina. Google Inc.

La misión que tiene Alejandro es la de planificar y ejecutar iniciativas de difusión de nuevas tecnologías, apoyo a las comunidades de desarrolladores y transferencia tecnológica en proyectos estratégicos, para asegurar el éxito de los desarrolladores en la utilización de las tecnologías de Google.

Por otra parte Alejandro también nos dará su visión del mundo que viene desde la mirada de una de las empresas que está cambiando el paradigma de Internet en esta era.

Para esto solo hace falta que te registres al evento y vengas a hablar con Alejandro quien estará disponible para escucharte.

También podrás hacer networking con los invitados de las empresas que habitualmente nos acompañan y para lo cual pronto les estaremos comentando las novedades al respecto.

La acreditación del evento , como siempre es gratuita pero los cupos son limitados. Por supuesto habrá sorpresas y regalos. Pero esto lo sabrán más adelante!

Conferencia Internacional de GOOGLE, 2 de Diciembre en La Plata Valley Fest19 hs en Wilkenny

Se pueden registrar gratis en nuestro website
www.laplatavalley.net

Desde PV les deseamos un buen networking!