Charity, Social Media, And Shamelessness
Aug. 7th, 2014 12:36 pmOkay. I've been a devoted LJ member for years now - a decade, I think. I love it here, and I've done my best to avoid drifting to other social media. But there are challenges. In particular, while people say they're still here and paying attention, it sure as heck doesn't seem like it.
I'm told that LJ has more content, that the connections and communication here are deeper, that people are still reading and that it matters. But...
I've posted about Work For Charity Day here twice so far, and I've gotten a grand total of one person signing up. I posted on Facebook, and already got over a dozen. Which, given that I've got three times as many theoretical readers here, is pretty shameful.
I don't want to drift to Facebook. And I don't want to pit one social media against another. But for the sake of charity, I'm willing to be shameless, and drive competition, and generally issue meaningless challenges.
So. If you're here, and you're reading, and you're a loyal livejournaler and really want to prove to me that this is still a medium that matters? Go to the Work For Charity Day website and sign up. Pledge to donate one day's income to the charity of your choice - or if you can't donate money, donate time. And if you can't do that, spread the word.
There's an official way to register, this year - at the top of the page, there's a tab for 'Join the Project.' When you do, put down that you're there via LJ.
We'll see if people here can match other social media for attention, and contributing....
I'm told that LJ has more content, that the connections and communication here are deeper, that people are still reading and that it matters. But...
I've posted about Work For Charity Day here twice so far, and I've gotten a grand total of one person signing up. I posted on Facebook, and already got over a dozen. Which, given that I've got three times as many theoretical readers here, is pretty shameful.
I don't want to drift to Facebook. And I don't want to pit one social media against another. But for the sake of charity, I'm willing to be shameless, and drive competition, and generally issue meaningless challenges.
So. If you're here, and you're reading, and you're a loyal livejournaler and really want to prove to me that this is still a medium that matters? Go to the Work For Charity Day website and sign up. Pledge to donate one day's income to the charity of your choice - or if you can't donate money, donate time. And if you can't do that, spread the word.
There's an official way to register, this year - at the top of the page, there's a tab for 'Join the Project.' When you do, put down that you're there via LJ.
We'll see if people here can match other social media for attention, and contributing....