Posts Tagged ‘networking’

Another great tip from Keith Ferrazzi

Friday, January 9th, 2009

I find Keith Ferrazzi’s blog a great resource. He recently posted a video about not being top of mind and as a result, losing a sale.

He also has great idea about Thanksgiving Day cards. Worth watching.

http://nevereatalone.typepad.com/

Upgrading your profile for Zentact

Saturday, December 27th, 2008

I got a Zentact today from a long lost colleague. I had no idea what he was up to so I looked him up on LinkedIn. I still don’t know what he is up to which made me think about using Zentact and your public profile.

If you are connecting with people you haven’t talked to in a while, you should make sure your public profiles are up to date.   Almost two years ago, Guy Kawasaki wrote a great post about what you should do on LinkedIn - http://blog.guykawasaki.com/2007/01/linkedin_profil.html Lots of great suggestions!

Add Contacts to Zentact via Public Twitter Message

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

We previously posted on the ability to add contacts via a Twitter DM. Scott Rafer called out that we didn’t use the originally discussed syntax and method. He’s referring to adding contacts via a public tweet to @zentact.

While we didn’t follow the “exact” syntax, we’re happy to announce that adding contacts via a public twitter message is live.

Here’s the Twitter syntax:

With a full name

@zentact @johnsampson John Sampson #Zentact #networking #San Francisco

Without a full name

@zentact @johnsampson #Zentact #networking #San Francisco

That’s all there is to it to add contacts to Zentact remotely. Becoming better at networking requires both online and offline interaction, this will help keep those interactions in sync. Use it at your next meeting, dinner, conference or whenever you’re away from your computer.

Quick Tips: Be sure you’ve added your Twitter account to your Zentact profile (enter it on the “My Account” link). Also, if you leave the full name out, the user will be classified under the “Unknown Last Name” section when managing contacts.

Why both public and direct message?

Consider using Direct Messages to add contacts when you’d rather not share tag information about one of your contacts with the world — keeping things more private. Otherwise, tweet away publicly - others will love to see how you’re using Zentact with your contacts.

How did we do it (technically)?

To extract your twitter contact adds, we’ve tapped into the Twitter publisher feed offered via the Gnip Consumer API. We parse all tweets sent to @zentact looking for the syntax listed above, and bang - your contacts are added to Zentact.

Thank you Scott!