Kennedy-Spaien, Dot Com

The Podcast Doctor is in: What can I do for you?

Ning: Worth a go?

A long time ago, I soured on “hosted solutions” such as Blogger/Blogspot blogs and the like. I have had content just go away magically, and that is a sad thing!

Working with Grasshopper New Media, especially in the earliest days, was all about leveraging other people’s bandwidth. Chris Brogan had us using free dropboxen, PBWiki, free groupware, etc. Chris has a great nose for trying out and adopting new services.

I’ve come around a bit thanks to this influence, chiefly because Chris changed my email account over to Gmail for Domains last fall. That actually worked out incredibly well.

So now, I try to leverage all kinds of services where appropriate… Blip.TV, YouTube, Flickr, MySpace, FeedBurner, etc, etc. I suppose one advantage of using so many different (yet somewhat redundant) services is that if content disappears from one, it is still available somewhere else.

One thing I have been holding off on is implementing a GNMHealth wiki. I did set one up at PBWiki for the Health Hacks Podcast, but it isn’t in use.

So I’m now thinking about trying Ning. They offer complete social suites with forums, wiki, photo sharing, etc. You can have your own little MySpace! It seems big, though, and not to be taken on casually. Do I really want to monitor forums, for instance? Is there enough of an audience for the shows yet to support an online community? I just don’t know.

I would be interested to hear your perspectives on Ning, though. Have you seen it? If not, why not have a look.

UPDATE:

Justin Kownacki just Twittered about this same dilemma. Somehow a simple answer came to me when HE asked: It depends on the size and dedication of your audience. Ergo: No, GNMHealth is NOT ready yet.

1 Comment so far

  1. Justin Kownacki March 14th, 2007 8:58 pm

    Good point. Creating a social network built around your brand or community insinuates that it’s large enough to take on a life of its own.

    STBD may be there, but exactly HOW we can take advantage of the social networking tools to do things off-site that we can’t do on-site remains to be seen. We have our ideas…

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