Sharing Your #LRTweetup Story – Part V

Untitled by @plecroybrown

While only a little bit of information can be conveyed in 140 characters, a relationship with another person can be formed via multiple posts or direct messages over time. Forming relationships is the true power of Twitter and I feel that is where this platform will excel in the upcoming years. Like-minded people will gravitate  toward each other to form new partnerships or friendships and thus create new ideas, perpetuating the underlying creativity behind Twitter.

Read her full post at plecroybrown.wordpress.com

But What’s Your Real Name? by @laureneclark

I love to meet the real people with real lives and real names behind the nicknames we recognize from our minute-to-minute glances at our screens. We’ve all found ourselves in the middle of introductions referring to each other as @______. But nothing beats seeing each other IRL…and nurturing those virtually founded friendships. So don’t be surprised if, after the great things you and I may have shared on this Twitter-thingy, I smile and ask “But what’s your real name?” when we do finally meet. Because behind every good Twitter name…there’s a real person, #fine and #fabulous!

Read her full post at burstofquestioningwind.tumblr.com

So long, and thanks for all the tweets

Just wanted to say a quick thanks for everyone who came out to our first LRTweeties/1 year birthday bash last night. You all made this our largest Tweetup so far.

I’d like to send a special shout out to the others on the planning group with me: @alextcone, @andreasmalec, @angelmg, @ghidotti and @tsudo. Somehow in spite of everything they turned this crazy idea dreamed up over queso into a reality.

We had a great video shot by @jeffdailey and produced with the help of @cueincorporated that is posted below along with the list of winners from last night. Thanks again and lets make year 2 even better.

Twitter Conversationalist – @kerrijack
LOL Tweep – @angryczeck
Twitter Rampage – @amybhole
Tweeter You’d Like to Hear More From – @sarabethjones
Best Tweeting in a Supporting Role – @katiemcmanners
TMI Tweep – @kerrijack
Most Creative Use of Hashtags – @andreasmalec
Deep Tweets – @alextcone
Most Likely to Run for Office – @blakerutherford
Best Live Tweeting – @tolbertreport
Most Random Tweets – @angryczeck
Best Biz Tweeter – @capitalhotel
Best Use of Twitter for Pushing Only Your Blog – @blakerutherford
Night Owl Tweets Award – @tsudo
Most Likely to Break Twitter (Most Prolific Tweep) – @kerrijack
Plays Nicest in the Sandbox – @katiemcmanners
Best Twitter Couple – @bryanjones & @sarabethjones
Puddy Tat – @cmcase
Party Tweep – @robbymatthews
Best Out of Town Tweep – @cateyleo
Best Cameraphonoatography (Twitpic of the Year) – The gym locker by @amybhole
Tweet of the Year – “My “k” is sticking. And I’m writing lots of copy about Arkansas this afternoon. I’m fuced.” by @amybhole

Recent Posts & Press

from ArkansasBusiness.comeiflings_mug

Arkansas Business published a masterpiece by media reporter and tweetup regular Sam Eiflling, @SamEifling.

On May 18, the loose band of Twitter users who have made Little Rock Tweetups a monthly rite of beery canoodling are getting together at Juanita’s Cafe & Bar in Little Rock for the Little Rock Tweeties – an awards night to recognize the most clever and creative among this digital tribe…

…The notion of handing out awards for tweeting makes you wonder just how interesting some people find their navels. But the entire tone of the enterprise has been tongue-in-cheek, and a nod to the bona fide human connections that the Tweetup crowd seems to have stumbled onto while trying to network.

Read his full article “Twitter’s Influence Felt in Tornadoes and Tweeties

from the desk of @LTLT-New_crop2

Our friend and co-founder Lance Turner, @LT, wrote a great post that recalled some of the highlights from the past year.

This whole #LRTweetup enterprise was founded nearly on a lark. And you can read much more about the history of the event (in which I played a small role), plus other stories from the #LRTweetup community, right here from the people who lived it. Throughout the year, this ecosystem of 140-character oversharers has raised money for nonprofits, shared many thousands of MBs of information and helped cultivate a stronger, more connected business community. And this is just the start.

Read the full post “#LRTweetup: Join Us Next Week for the LRTweetie Awards!

Many thanks to @LT and @SamEifling for their kind words and to Arkansas Business for their ongoing coverage of #LRtweetup.

A Year In The Making: 140 Characters At A Time

LRtweeties Logo

Twitter meet ups, or “TweetUps” as they are most commonly referred, seem to be everywhere these days – at conferences, personal interest groups and cities across the country. Typically a way to connect with online friends, meet new contacts and network over a few drinks, the growth and strength of the local “LRTweetUp” community over the last 12 months has blown “typical” out of the water.

Celebrating its first anniversary next month with a spoof-genre awards show appropriately dubbed “The LRTweeties,” this strong gathering of more than 200 users will come together to celebrate a year of professional growth, promotions, friendships and philanthropy in Little Rock.

The grand awards festivity, staged to embody the tomfoolery nature and sarcastic whimsy of that of its followers, will be held Tuesday, May 18 at Juanita’s Mexican Café & Bar beginning at 5:30 p.m.  Finalist voting for all award categories such as “Most Likely To Run For Office,” “TMI Tweep of the Year,” “LOL Tweet of the Year,” “Most Creative Use of Hashtags,” and more will begin this Wednesday.

“We’re doing more than just throwing a party for a networking group that has provided a way to connect with colleagues and friends through social media,” said Keith Crawford (@tsudo), one of the founders of the LRTweetUp (@LRTweetUp). “We’re celebrating the creation and growth of a community that has transformed the way many professionals in Little Rock cultivate relationships, do business and promote advocacy and  goodwill initiatives through philanthropic efforts. The LRTweeties are a simple, light-hearted way of honoring that.”

The LRTweetUp is the result of an idea brought on by two of its co-founding members.  In May 2009 two friends, Angel Galloway (@angelmg) and Natalie Ghidotti (@ghidotti) decided to organize a local meet up to celebrate reaching 400 followers. As the word spread and interest grew, the gathering turned into a series of monthly meet ups with the goal of helping members build personal and professional connections.

The community also began to evolve as a self-proclaimed new breed of civic group. Supporting local charities through fundraising and awareness initiatives, members participated in several programs benefiting Central Arkansas charities throughout the year as well including Heifer International’s “Pass on the Gift” campaign and participation in the state’s first “Twestival” which supported Reach Out and Read Arkansas(RORA), a nonprofit that partners with pediatricians and clinics statewide to raise awareness about early childhood literacy and provides resources to families to encourage reading in the home.

Although our organization is still young in terms of longevity, our impact and reach on the community can be seen far and wide,” Crawford said.  “Approximately 35 percent of our membership represent the amazing nonprofit organizations making a difference in the lives of those in Central Arkansas every day. Pair that with the sheer volume of volunteer hours, advocacy and contributions to organizations shared across Twitter stream at any given moment, and it’s hard not to be motivated yourself to give back.”

Personal stories from members of the LRTweetUp community, links to voting and more information about the event can be found at http://lrtweetup.com/.

The LRTweeties are presented by the Little Rock Convention and Visitors Bureau (@LittleRockCVB and @RiverMarket) with support from fellow sponsors CustomXM (@CustomXM), Eric, Rob & Isaac Ad Guys (@EricRobIsaac) and ParaTweet (@Paratweet).

You can download or print the press release here

2010 LRTweeties Press Release

How I Became a Fool for LRTweetup (in Three Acts)

ACT I: The Bald Man and the Challenge

I was introduced to Twitter by a preternaturally energetic bald man named @adambroitman. At the time he was Director of Emerging and Creative Strategy for Morpheus Media, before moving on to Director of Strategy at Crayon. He’s now Partner and Ringleader at Circ.us.

As a friend of @MaryroseWagoner, Adam was speaking at a PRSA luncheon on social media a few years ago, and he was incredibly nice, genuine and excited about the future of this medium. At the end of his talk, he encouraged the entire room of public relations professionals to create Twitter accounts. He challenged us, in fact, as communicators, to put Little Rock on the Twitter map.

So, I went right back to my office that same day and did exactly that. I opened a Twitter account, I mean. The rest wouldn’t come until much later, and as it would turn out, people I hadn’t even met would be responsible for meeting that challenge.

See, up to this point in my life, I was happy to remain relatively anonymous. I had a small circle of friends, many professional colleagues and an unlisted phone number. You could say I was more guarded than an iPhone prototype on a Saturday night, but that would just be mean. Putting myself out there, online, for Google to index and for all the world to see really made me nervous.

What if I said something stupid? I would most assuredly say something stupid. Whoever penned the words “Tis better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt” had never signed up for a Twitter account, I was sure of it.

But I wasn’t about to back down from Adam’s challenge.

So I took the plunge. I followed @adambroitman and a bunch of other people, including @chrisbrogan and @cc_chapman and @steverubel. I followed people all across the country, like @Scobleizer and @jowyang and @charleneli. I followed @TechCrunch and @SocialMediaClub and @Mashable. And I listened and learned from these folks and many, many others as I tried to understand this new form of communicating and connecting.

ACT II: Kind of like Magic: The Gathering, Except with Less Black

Fast forward a year and hundreds of (probably stupid) tweets later, and I still knew only a handful of local people on Twitter. Then something happened, some critical mass of adoption, participation and planetary alignment, and when someone said “Tweetup” out loud one day, the local Twitter scene blew up right before my eyes.

I watched as @LT created a hashtag, #LRTweetup was born and people came from all corners, excited to meet other local people on Twitter. Natalie ran to fetch nametags. We peeled them with glee and wrote our usernames in Sharpie marker, tittering at the complete silliness of it all, and we descended upon Sticky Fingerz like a parliament of geeky rooks. It was, in a word, awesome.

While Natalie and I may have started this hot mess, it was people like @tsudo and @alextcone and @bryanjones and @jgreghenderson who jumped in and organized us, blogged us, scheduled us and pushed us toward our first official charity event, Twestival. It was people like @amybhole who offered us @capitalbargrill and special blue drinks. Then it was all the rest of you, who came out despite your fears of what you might find.

And let me tell you, I am so glad you did.

ACT III: Only Fools Fall in Love with Hashtags

Watching this community grow has been one of the most amazing experiences of my life.

I’ve learned that #printlives. I’ve learned to #passonthegift and #taketimetogive and #reachoutandread. And I’ve learned to follow #ARwx at the first sign of bad weather, a hashtag deserving of its own theme music and tagline: “Come with me if you want to live.” Say it with the accent. It’s fun.

You all amaze me with your talents. I learn something from each of you on a daily basis. Your funny, endearing, ever so smart and generous words encourage me to keep writing, after suffering a case of burnout so severe I had to change careers. I watch you take care of each other and support each other. And you continually inspire me to be smarter, nicer and braver today than I was yesterday.

Really, what more can you ask from a group of total strangers you met on the Internet? We’re incredibly lucky to have been here in this moment, to see this unfold in precisely this way. It speaks to the immense power of this medium we share, and to our limitless potential as human beings to accomplish so much more together than we ever could alone.

I’ve learned from all of you to keep opening my mouth, stupid or not. And if that makes me a fool, or a geek, or a nerd, then I’m certainly among some of the best company I’ve ever known.

#thankyou #lrtweetup

Gallery of Twitpic of the Year Nominees

Finalist voting is goes live this Wednesday so we wanted to give a sneak peek of the pictures that have been submitted for “Best Cameraphonoatography”. The are shown in no particular order.

Update: Unfortunately we are must disqualify the Paris picture as it was not taken with a cameraphone. We apologize that we weren’t more clear in category requirements. The category is “Cameraphonoatography” so only pics taken from mobile phones are allowed. Our mistake. Thanks to @ashahrens for her honesty and for sharing this amazing picture with us. Update #2: Matt also shared that his pic was found not taken. We’ve taken it off the ballot.

Winter Wonderland by @sarabethjones

WinterWonderland_sarabethjones

Paris by @asharens [Disqualified]

Paris_ashahrens

The Gym Locker by @amybhole

locker_amybhole

The Commandeered Table by @jgreghenderson

table_jgreghenderson

The Backpack by @mattowenmatt [Disqualified]

backpack_mattowenmatt

Christmas Jubilee by @bootsmc

christmasjubilee_bootsmc

In the midst of the storm by @pstrack

storm_pstrack