This beautifully illustrated infographic (above), designed by South China Morning Post’s graphics director Alberto Lucas Lopéz, shows the most spoken known languages in the world and where they’re spoken by the 6.3 billion people included in the study. Based on records collated from the database Ethnologue, the infographic illustrates the wide-ranging facts and figures of the world’s living languages catalogued since 1951.
It’s great to see so many of my readers are as excited as I am about going to this year’s Information Development World conference. This event, organized by Scott Abel, The Content Wrangler, and Val Swisher, Content Rules, takes place September 30 – October 2, 2015 in San Jose, CA. It’s jam-packed with awesome presentation topics (over 80 presentations, case studies, and panel discussions to choose from), plus eight full-day skills development workshops, and two floors of exhibition space. It’s a content creator’s paradise!
Wouldn’t it be cool if you could attend for free?
You can! Here’s how.
1.Login to your Twitter account.
2.Post a tweet explaining why you should should receive a free ticket to the event. Creativity counts!
3.Include these two identifiers (@InfoDevWorld and #WhyMe) in your tweet.
One lucky TechCommGeekMom reader will win a free All-Access pass to the event. The All-Access pass includes your selection of one pre-conference full-day skills development workshop on September 30 and unlimited access to the conference, October 1 and 2. It also includes light breakfast, lunch, coffee breaks, and snack breaks daily.
Restrictions:The free All-Access pass to the conference does not include transportation costs (airfare, train, car, parking) nor does it include accommodations or dinner at the event.
You can enter as often as you like until 1:00 PM EDT on July 15th. I’ll then tally all the entries, and pick a winner within the next day or so after that!
So what are you waiting for? Commence Tweets……NOW!
This is a great article by one of my e-learning heroes, Clark Quinn. While this article is geared towards those in the e-learning field, everything he mentions could easily apply to all tech writers who are working on help content or instructional content of any kind. Sometimes it’s hard to get through to SMEs (Subject Matter Experts), but Clark provides some good guidelines to help you wade through and get to the heart of the information you truly need.
This article shows you the creative and expert social media marketing strategy behind the famous cookie loving brand Oreo, and what you can learn from it.
I have to say, I’m really liking a lot of the content that Kerry Butters (@kesbutters) curates. She posted this great article on Twitter, and I had to snatch this up. While this article is certainly geared towards digital marketers to show how using social media can truly work advantageously, I think it’s a great example of how content as a whole can be used to promote ideas in social media with the right strategy.
This is a fun article to read, and you might learn something in the process. Thanks for the share, Kerry!
I received this nice little message in my blog’s notifications:
Yes, that’s right! There are 1000 posts on this blog!
Some posts are gems! Some are duds! Some are somewhere in between! But over three years, content has been curated and content has been written on the topics of m-learning, e-learning, all things tech comm….the addition of digital marketing more recently…with some geeky tech stuff thrown in as well. There’s something for just about everybody here!
Have you taken a look at some of the past content? I’ve been here for more than three years, folks–look at the archive links on the right-hand column. Take a look in the search and see if there are any posts on a topic you are interested in.
I’ll see about getting another 1000 posts up ASAP, okay? Enjoy!
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