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Amanda Lehner

Amanda Lehner As the Interactive Services Project Director, Amanda Lehner is responsible for website development, project management, social media and other interactive projects for our campaigns and internal Ad Council projects.

Posts by Amanda



Your SXSW Greater Good Panel Picker – Rock the Vote

Written by Amanda Lehner | 3:36 pm August 18, 2011

SXSW-panel-pickerIt’s SXSW Panel Picker Time! Having trouble sorting through them all? We have you covered, here’s our top picks from the Greater Good track. Vote and comment please!

Content As A Means For Social Change
Arianna Huffington – Huffington Post

Help MTV crowdsource a pro-social campaign @SxSWi
Jason Rzepka, MTV

Reaching Teens on the Digital Streets
Anastasia Goodstein, Inspire USA Foundation/ReachOut.com

Be a Design Superhero: Vanquish the Wasted Pretty
Eve Simon, Lawrence Swiader, Traci Sym, Maria Giudice

Build. Community is easy, saving the world is hard
Eric Asche, Legacy

The Hills are Alive … With Social Data
Annie Lynsen, Small Act

Better Nonprofit Websites: 52 Tweaks in 52 Weeks
Chris Tuttle, Blackbaud

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A Search Story

Written by Amanda Lehner | 3:51 pm July 26, 2011

It’s hard to feed the content beast. It’s a hungry beast that is best fed now and fed well. For nonprofits, content production can be even harder as you have to compete with big budgets. Yet if you are a thrifty content producer, not all your projects have to start from scratch. There are many opportunities for a content production partnership where both parties get what they want at a low cost.

Here are two ways to get content on a budget: 1) Find content generating tools that you can customize 2) Get content from the people (a.k.a user-generated content).

When I search for good content generating tools, my first stop is Google. For example, I knew I wanted new video content for this here blog post. Google’s Search Story Tool is not new, but it’s new to me and Ad Council has never used it to tell a story of a PSA campaign. Here Google has done a very smart thing by perfectly balancing the mutual benefits. I get good customized content, they get a customized video that shows the power of Google’s Search Engine. We both come out on top. Here’s a Search Story I put together on our beloved Smokey Bear.

A new documentary Life in A Day presented by YouTube and National Geographic is a great example of user-generated content at its best. One year ago YouTubers were asked to upload a video reflecting a day in their lives. People from all over the world uploaded 80,000 videos with 4500 hours of footage. It’s been described as “a historic cinematic experiment to create a documentary film about a single day on earth.”

Filmmakers get to save a bundle on production costs and time. Also, the buzz about the documentary and the public’s excitement was big before the movie was even released. This is way more than a simple trailer could do. As for the people who provided the content, they get the opportunity to be in a really cool movie.

These two examples are very different but the same in their offering and results. Both parties get to customize, both parties get the content they want — a beautiful partnership indeed. Let’s face it –  it’s hard and costly to produce truly original content these days. At times, all we can hope for is to take something and do it better, mash it up, or find creativity in how we collaborate.

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For a Real Time Tweet @JeffPulver

Written by Amanda Lehner | 10:32 am June 29, 2011

JeffPulverJeff Pulver and friends put on another great show when the traveling Real-Time Web Carnival, also known as The 140 Conference, came to town a couple weeks back.  AOL’s Tim Armstrong, Ann Curry, Cory Booker and Deepak Chopra were among the headliners. Other speakers were refreshingly new to the digerati stage as Mr. Pulver is known for being inclusive, open-minded and eccentric. At different times, graffiti artists and the cop who supports them, a sixth grade teacher and his students, a neuroscientist, a beat poet and a bombshell, all took to the stage. For two days, one presenter, or panel, told unique tales about the power of social media in 15 minutes. Then Oscar speech music swept people off like the Apollo sandman.

The “real time” theme is what I pondered the most as I would look up from my blackberry (no iPhone, don’t judge) from time to time to see the bowed heads of the audience, tapping their devices, desperately trying to tweet the best quip or summation ending, of course,  in #140conf. But can you be really be offline and online at the same time? And if you try for both does it take away from both considerably?

I found the speakers that I responded to were the ones who, in so many words, were reminding us that we are humans. What a funny thing to have to be reminded of. One speaker told us to put down our devices just for couple minutes so he could talk about how to listen. I’d say half the audience complied. Tim Armstrong talked about how offline is the new online. Deepak Chopra talked in depth about how are bodies are physically reacting to new technologies (with a wink to Marshall McLuhan).

What is right in front of us is becoming the most valuable because we are forgetting about it. And those who can hang on to the human element while still being an early adopter will be better people, and by that virtue, better marketers. They will cut through the noise simply by applying common courtesies: don’t’ interrupt, don’t talk over people and don’t only talk about yourself.

Most of the 140 Conference speakers didn’t have powerpoints with bulleted top tips for a good social media campaign. They had little in the way of case studies. They didn’t bog me down with buzzwords or try to scare me by telling me that everything I’m doing is DEAD. These people made me feel present and told me to be myself. “Be Yourself,” is an old adage for individuals, but now that media is forced to be social, brands have to be human and this is new wisdom.

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