I was inspired by my friend Melissa Gilliam aka MilliGFunk, and this post, Grace in Small Things, sharing what readers love about St. Louis, Missouri. I decided to put the question to my own community of Charlottesville, Va.
Here are some of the small things we love about Charlottesville:
- Marco and Luca dumplings
- The view coming down 250 from Pantops
- Beer Run
- The Whale Tails
Walking on the grounds of UVa
- Number 904 at Saigon Cafe
- Seeing people you know
- Dogwoods in the spring
- Connecting with dogs’ siblings via social media
- Dog friendliness
- Being able to pick apples, ride a horse, float a river or hike the Appalachian Trail within a short drive
- Outdoorsy feel
- Big city offerings in a quaint small town
- Azaleas in full bloom in May along the 250 bypass
- The hike to Bear Fence Mountain in Shenandoah National Park
- Walking the downtown mall
- Having lunch (or even better WINE) outside on the downtown mall
- The fact we still have bookSTORES
- The independent coffee shops
- The Festival of the Book
- Pie Fest
- The VA Film Festival
- The Chocolate Festival
- Knowing the name of your mailman
- Food: specifically tons of amazing local restaurants, local farms and farmers markets and CSAs, most of the population loving local and shunning chains… I don’t know what I’d do without Spudnuts, Bodos, Beer Run, Mas, The Nook, Sticks, Christians, Horse & Buggy, Relay Foods, the Saturday market…all our awesome, awesome local businesses
- Iconoclastic bagel shops that won’t slice more than 3 bagels per order and will look at you like a space alien if you mention the word “toasted.”
- Any given day of the week, half the town is in a coffee shop. Love a bustling morning office
- Local eggs and other great local groceries
- Support for entrepreneurs. This town makes most things possible!
- That despite the first snow of winter there were musicians playing outside at the Downtown Mall
- Public observation night at UVa observatory
- Cafe Con Leche from Cafe Cubano
Another reader had a “like,” and a question: “I like the fact that, even in the midst of a traffic jam, it is a custom in Charlottesville to let somebody else merge into the stream of cars from the side, ahead of you. This little piece of civilized, polite behavior makes me feel good about my city. Tell me, is this common elsewhere, or is Charlottesville unique in this feature?”
What do you think?
Do you know what is being said about you, your brand or your company online?
Maybe you have been using Google Alerts to monitor for news about your organization, but do you know what people are saying on the social web?
What is the social web? Twitter, blog comments, bulletin boards, Facebook and blogs are some, but not all the elements of the social web.
Today’s Social Media Assignment
Take about half an hour to play with some of the tools displayed in this post. Try out Social Mention and IceRocket in particular — free tools that allow you to search the entirety of the social web.
With these tools you can subscribe to the search you create and continue to monitor mentions on an ongoing basis (recommended). You may find you have to tweak your search terms until you refine them to exactly the right keywords to find the results you seek.
Another approach to consider — search for your customers, clients or employees — do you know what they’re doing or saying online?
I recommend you spend some time listening — not just one day, or one half hour of one day. It takes time, and ongoing attention. And while you’re listening, take time to develop a plan for how you will respond to any mentions of your brand — positive or negative mentions.
For years, people have offered to pay me for my time to sit and walk them through social media and help them figure out a plan for growing and using their social networks. Until I began Jaggers Communications I couldn’t devote time to share my expertise on that level, but the demand continued.
In response to that demand, I developed Social Media Immersion for the Executive. Here’s why it works:
- Clients at the executive level do not want to attend a workshop, seminar or class to get up to speed in social media; they want one-on-one attention and a focused one-shot time to cover the basics of what they need to know over a few hours’ time.
- In the Immersion session, any question, no matter how basic or advanced, can be asked and answered.
- Executives come away with a concrete plan of action to continue to work from, continuing on a path to greater understanding and benefits of social media engagement.
- Time is a huge factor; a full or half-day session will help make sure all social media engagement is efficient and meaningful.
- The Immersion session is confidential; a crash course in social media is not something all executives want shared.
- The results are immediate; before the session has ended, the client’s social profile and network will be upgraded, goals will be in place and direction will have clarity and purpose.
Is there a CEO, CFO or other executive you know who could benefit from an Immersion session? Are you interested in learning more?