-
Website
http://adamhcohen.com/ -
Original page
http://adamhcohen.com/the-power-of-social-media-support-for-caroline -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Ari Herzog
13 comments · 23 points
-
Brad Schwarzenbach
1 comment · 1 points
-
judybest
2 comments · 2 points
-
SILENTBUTSMART
6 comments · 4 points
-
Urs E. Gattiker
1 comment · 7 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Social Media in 2010: Getting Smarter
3 days ago · 2 comments
-
No Amount of Social Media Overcomes Bad Customer Experience
2 weeks ago · 11 comments
-
Marketing Hot Seat: Andrew Davis
1 week ago · 4 comments
-
Spread the Joy: A Little Augmented Reality and a Rosetta Snow Day
1 week ago · 2 comments
-
Social Media in 2010: Getting Smarter
Glad to hear Caroline is in a good place now.
Also, Adam, you may want to consider editing the above links to be the specific tweet, e.g. this one from MC Hammer, so readers can see what they wrote, and not merely visit their main twitter page.
Though we'd post a little on our twitter experience - we are a online volunteer group raising profiles of missing children and working on some cases directly for family's in various ways, twitter is something we recently joined. One of our followers received a tweet about Caroline and let the author know about our group, they got in touch seconds later to see if we could help too, up when our blog and volunteers spent the night tweeting and sending out via our other channels until the wonderful news broke Caroline had been found alive.
The Twitter community has made it possible to get information out to the area's it counts and back again with in seconds often hours before the main news channels are reporting - we have been so very impressed by the help and response we continue get for missing children worldwide through our twitters, very proud members.
*little plug* = follow @helpfindmychild because who knows 1 tweet might help bring a missing child home !
Thanks adam all the best to ya!
Taya - Thanks again and happy to help, that kind of "plug" is the right one to point people to. Keep up the great work!
The other thing I have seen which is a little questionable are some of the comments in the twitter feed. In particular, one “twitterer” was receiving accolades simply because they had posted re-tweets of the issue - as to "how caring they really are.” As someone who enjoys giving anonymously, this was particularly crass in my opinion as it appeared as some community members and their followers/evangelists were taking advantage of this story for personal reputation enhancement.
Don't get me wrong - this is a great story about the positive power of social media. Unfortunately part of any community is a darker side which about I feel is worth cluttering your comments with my gripes. :) I certainly hope that Caroline is OK.
We were all watching and grateful to hear that Caroline made it home. I had two people affected by her disappearance so I felt very much involved. A sigh of relief was heard across Twitter when the news began to spread. It was the passing of the information that really counted. Thank you for making sure that I knew.
Beth, Liz - Thank you for sharing that - I didn't go far enough back in the search.twitter.com history to see what was out there, Liz definitely mobilized a great response from her network. I've added her to an update in the post. Liz, thanks so much for taking the time and for your thoughts and response.
As I mentioned, I was with my boys when we fist heard. We saw the picture and were immediately concerned for her safety. Any parent is terrified of this type of scenario. So glad she's ok.
Debra - I agree, there is something about online relationships that incent people to bring out their good side especially when it's transparent. Anonymously, that can be a different story. I hope the "good" trend continues and one day social media will really directly impact situations like these. Thanks for dropping by!