Showing posts with label social networking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social networking. Show all posts

Tuesday, 23 March 2010

Foursquare







I've been playing foursquare for the past month now and I am loving it. Why do I love it? Because it's fun. I think it's a great way to explore the city and discover new things. I feel like I am playing a game and I like that.

When I went to the event for Social Media week a month ago one of the presenters was talking about foursquare. I have some friends back home who play it, but I was curious about what it would be like over here in London. The big question playing on my mind at the moment is whether or not people actually interact with each other off the back of it. 

While I was sitting in the room waiting for the talk to begin there were loads of people tweeting away and following people who were in the room. I wanted to know if they would ever speak in person. Would someone go over and say hi to the person that they just followed or were they happy to hide behind "social" media?

So I am going to do some research. I want to know if people in London would interact with another player in a real space. At the moment I am sitting at the Diner off of Carnaby Street. I've checked in and at the moment I am the only player here. If there were more people here would we talk to each other? Would someone come over and say hi Rhea! Or would I do the same? 

In London, for the most part strangers don't speak to each other. There have been rare occasions were I've sparked up conversation with a stranger without them thinking I was totally mental; it's just not the norm. I've decided that I will say hi to any other foursquare player if we're both in the same place. Why not? I am up for taking a risk and seeing what will happen. 

I've also decided to take people up on the offers that they've tweeted. For example, I was at a coffee shop the other day and after checking into foursquare a message popped up that a nearby agency had a free desk going if anyone wanted to come in and use it.  Had I not been going to an interview there in 20 minutes I would have totally taken them up on it. 

The question I keep asking myself is if foursquare is supposed to be social? I wonder what would happen if I tried to swing by and say hello to my foursquare friend who had just checked in at say Saatchi and Saatchi. Do they want people to come find them? Or are they just trying to show off where they are? 

Which leads me to wonder about the integrity of the foursquare players. I am going to say this without any research to back me up that I think most people are honest about their whereabouts. 

You could check into a place and pretend to be there. I hope that people don't do this. The other day I was out walking around in Holland Park and I saw that a friend had checked into a place that was nearby. I thought, why don't I go there and say hello? 

I turned up about 20 minutes later and they were gone. That could totally be legitimate. They popped in for a coffee, signed in while waiting in the queue and then left. Perhaps it was just a take away coffee, but there was a split second when I wondered if they had been there at all...but I can sometimes be a little bit cynical. 

What do I like about playing foursquare? Well, it does make the city feel like a playground. I can be in one location and read some tips and go somewhere I've never been before. That's fun. 

I am going to do some research with my friends in Minneapolis and in London. I have to say that my foursquare friends here in London are a lot of people that I've never met in the first place. I've gone out on a limb and friended some people that seemed interesting and people have been nice enough to accept my request.

I put this question out on my FB wall: 

Here's a question for all you out there playing foursquare, do you ever interact with other people? If you're at say Starbucks and there are other people there who have checked in, do you say hello?

Here are some responses from my lovely friends


Zoe:
that's a dream of mine, hopefully someday, but i can never recognize people from their tiny pictures

I've sent a DM to "friend" someone I've actually met, but doubt they remember me to ask him the same. We shall see.


Dan
I have - yes. The only time it was someone I didn't know - it was because the guy was sitting next to me at the bar and laughed when I checked in.

Until then I am going to continue to play and try to interact with some real people :)


P.S.  I am friends with a guy who works at the agency where I had my interview today. While I was waiting in reception he walked through and said hello to me and called me by name. I've never met him before in real life. 


At the moment I am at a place called the Diner writing this post. I went and had a look at my foursquare account and noticed what this guy was up to. I noticed that you have the options to contact him by several different methods; twitter, FB, email, mobile or text. I decided to send him a text to his mobile saying that it was nice meeting him.


Now I don't know if this is a crazy thing to do, but if he's got his mobile number on there then it must mean he's open to being contacted. 


Has anyone else done this? I am out there all alone with my social experiments? Please leave comments and let me know how you interact with foursquare. 


Cheers

Wednesday, 24 June 2009

How Twitter found me my first job in London


Rechord, photos of my office

Finally I am going to write about my first job! That's what this blog was all about. My journey to finding my first job, the good and the bad. The triumphs and the tears. Finding my first job after college in London has been one of the most challenging things I've ever had to do. It hasn't been easy.

So you all know the story by now and if not you can find it all here within the pages of this blog. I had spent months looking for my first job in London, so imagine how surprised I was when it found me. I came to "find" my first job in London through Twitter.

One day I received an email from my now boss. She had come across my digital CV on my Twitter profile after setting up a search to find a web manager for her agency. She had set up a search and my feed appeared in it and she had a look at my extendr profile and decided she liked what she found. I had my contact details on my extendr and so she was able to send me an email with a link to the job description.

I couldn't believe it! I was over the moon, a job that sounded amazing had found its way to me. I got in touch with her and came in for a trial day.I've been at Rechord for one month now.

It's so crazy that I would get my first job this way, especially after what I had been going through. At first I thought it had just fallen in my lap, but I had also made a conscious effort to use social networking to help me find a job. When I first started looking I remember thinking that it would be cool to find a job just using Twitter. It's funny how things work out.



 
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