The 4MileCircus Episode 7: Louisa Solomon and Eli Oberman of The Shondes (Part 1)
In our seventh episode, 4MileCircus partners Sean Mannion and Nicole Solomon talk with Louisa Solomon and Elijah Oberman of independent […]
In our seventh episode, 4MileCircus partners Sean Mannion and Nicole Solomon talk with Louisa Solomon and Elijah Oberman of independent […]
When social media is part of your job it becomes less distraction and more burden. Give yourself a break from time to time.
You have probably heard the cliche “a picture is worth a thousand words.” That concept is pretty relevant when you’re on twitter dealing with 140 character maximums.
While some of us [*cough!*] may sometimes be known to hang out on twitter all day rather than talking to other people face to face, using our actual voices, most of us have neither the time or inclination to spend every hour skipping from platform to platform, dropping bon mots, helpful links, and dank memes all the live-long day in an effort to maintain a consistent stream of content while building an engaged audience.
Your social media profile is the first thing anyone who cares enough to click will see in their efforts to learn more about you. It’s a relatively easy and painless way to put your best foot forward and present yourself as the person you want people to see.
We’ve already discussed WTF are hashtags even, so I’m gonna dive right in on how they are your Instagram friends.
Hashtags are used slightly differently on different platforms, and today we’re talking about the platform on which they really took off: twitter.
In our second episode, 4MileCircus partners Sean Mannion and Nicole Solomon sit down with filmmaker Christina Raia (Summit, IndieWorks film series), to discuss social media and crowdfunding. Part two of a four part interview. We also share a social media tip on using images to attract attention, and Nicole and Christina try to guess the oldies song Sean misheard as containing the lyric “She’s a slut you mourn, and you will know.”
Want dedicated followers on any platform? Consistency is key. Post regularly, on a schedule you can comfortably maintain, and keep your […]
You probably want “friends” or followers on any social media platform you’re using–and not just your IRL friends, either. Fans. An audience. […]