Jim Storer
Community and social media strategist.
Co-Founder of The Community Roundtable
Father, husband, brother & son.
BBQ, craft beer, golf, snowboarding, runner.
Updates
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@vargasl someone loves her new toy. :-)9 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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10 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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RT @AssociCom: Are online communities for non-profits different? ( http://t.co/rPrPvLt1 ) From @gladtobelantz
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What's your favorite iPad2 protective pocket/cover? Something other than the smartcover?10 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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Checking out the stream from #socbizchat - interesting conversation today.12 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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More for the #sxswcmgr stream. Attend my panel "Get Lucky: Create Serendipity to Spur Innovation" on 3/13 - http://t.co/P1HLI9Az15 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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@swedishgurl i don't have plans to film at #sxsw this year, but will be taking pics again.15 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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Just started following @jenstorer here on the twitterz... not Jen my wife, but happy to make the connection. :-)15 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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@swedishgurl unfortunately vids and podcasts were with a former company and seem to have vanished into the ether. photos on my flickr page.16 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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@michellekostya good idea. i do the same, but with socks. #lessbulk Are you going to be there this year? I'd love to catch up.16 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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Leave your laptop at the hotel. Wear comfortable shoes. Drink water. Practice the "law of two feet." Get out of your comfort zone. #sxswcmgr16 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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@danbrostek is influential about Running on @klout. Give a +K if you think so too http://t.co/TTouIt3a
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Advice to #sxsw newbies (& CMs). Create interesting content. I've recorded podcasts/videos & taken pictures. #sxswcmgr16 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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16 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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Watched the movie "Big" with the girls last night. It was good, but definitely had an 80's feel to it. They loved it. #fb18 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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Ouch...that stings. RT @danbrostek We're all going to push our mental limits. That's 3 miles for Jim. @KyleFlaherty @jaffejuice @aaronstrout32 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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@KyleFlaherty I am in for 5-7 miles. @danbrostek can get his extra miles in before picking us up. cc: @aaronstrout38 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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@mbloomstein exactly! (especially the hat!) cc: @vargasl
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Watched this movie last night. The Finland Phenomenon: Inside the World's Most Surprising School System http://t.co/DsIzzDd442 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
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@gassnerotting ...but on Saturday morning of SXSW? I'm all for pushing through the wall, but... cc: @danbrostek @kyleflaherty @aaronstrout43 hours ago from web | Reply, Retweet, Favorite
Profile
Experience
- Jan 2009 - PresentPrincipal/Founder / The Community RoundtableThe Community Roundtable is a peer network for community managers and social media practitioners. Our goal is to support members with regular interactions, content and community. Shoot me a message if you're interested in learning more!
- Aug 2007 - Jan 2009Sr. Director - Social Media Strategy / Mzinga
- Aug 2004 - Aug 2007Director - Community Development / Shared Insights
- Mar 1995 - Aug 2004Product Manager / DCI
Education
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1999 - 2001Babson College - Franklin W. Olin Graduate School of BusinessMBA in Marketing/EntrepreneurshipActivities: Treasurer of the Graduate Student Association Founder/President of the Babson Barbeque Quorum (BBQ)
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1987 - 1991University of MA/AmherstBS in Hotel, Restaurant & Travel Admin
Additional Information
Posts
A few days ago we sent 20 of our craftier friends a Christmas card in the form of a challenge. The cards were made from circa 1970s Betty Crocker recipe cards and this letter was included inside the card:We know that when our Christmas card comes in the mail you have grown to expect a scintillating mix of Christmas tunes. This year, however, you're in for a different kind of treat! Steve said that the song selection is growing thin, so he's taking the year off. Instead, you're being invited to participate in the Bischof Family 2010 Super Seventies Christmas Bake-Off. Yes, you. While some of our friends and loved ones will receive perfectly lovely letterpress cards from a small island in Maine, we think you are up to the challenge of something more...interactive. And we hope you'll accept!
You'll see that your card is comprised of a super seventies Betty Crocker recipe card, replete with some seriously amazing food staging backgrounds. This set, circa 1971, was saved from eminent destruction when my parents downsized and I claimed the big yellow plastic box of recipe cards for my own. This year, I culled 20 choice Christmas-y recipes from the collection and decided to pass them on to you. Some recipes have a decidedly holiday flair [like the variety of fruitcakes and steamed puddings] while others were chosen for their Christmas-y color palate [like grasshopper pie, or cherry vanilla fudge]. Your card has been chosen especially for you.
The challenge:
1) Sometime before December 25th, follow the recipe on the inside of your Christmas card, or one of its several variations, and make the item described.
2) Before you enjoy your Christmas treat, take a few moments to stage your food. Feel free to add props, create backgrounds, etc. The more 1970s, the better.
3) Take a picture of your final product. [We've scanned the originals].
4) Send Libby the picture via email: libby.bischof@gmail.com
5) All the images and comments will be posted on the blog we've created for the occasion: http://super70sxmasbakeoff.blogspot.com/Best staging receives a prize! Check in for blog updates as the season progresses.
Greatest Christmas card idea ever! I'm cloning it for 2011...
Campfire needs to have dial-tone level reliability to be trustworthy. For the past five years, up until this week, we believe we've had a pretty good track record of that. But given the severity of this outage, we know it'll take us a long time to rebuild this trust. Many thanks to those of you who are giving us that second chance.
Rachel and I depend on Campfire to keep conversations flowing on TheCR Network. We've come to really appreciate how easy-to-use and reliable the service is.
Over the last week or so they had some bad days. Some really bad days. While it didn't impact us as much as it might have impacted them and some of their other clients, we did notice.
Without going into all the details (you can click through and read it all for yourself), I LOVE their response & resolution. And not just because I'll feel it in my pocketbook (a free month is nice when you're a bootstrapped start up). IMHO, they completely nailed the response and resolution of this crisis. I don't know if all of their clients feel the same way, but I'll bet most do. They're standing by what they believe in and putting their money where their mouth is.
Now to the reason for this post. I'm starting to feel like our ISP's need to realize that an internet connection needs to have "dial-tone reliability." That needs to be the standard and they need to stand behind it (with $$ if necessary).
A few weeks back Comcast had a major outage up and down the East Coast. A LOT of customers lost their internet connectivity. There was a bit of a response on Twitter, but in general I'd give them a D on response.
But what we're really highlighting here isn't response, it's resolution. On that score Comcast gets an F (I'd give them an H, but I'd lose a bunch of you). As far as I've seen they haven't said "boo" to their customers since the outage. They may have apologized on Twitter, but I didn't get a phone call to apologize. No letter in the mail with a coupon for a free bowl of soup. Nothing. I did receive my bill for the month with no recognition for the outage (or break on my monthly charges).
Am I the only one that thinks this is wrong? I'd love to see the "big guys" like Comcast, Verizon, AT&T, etc. start to act like Campfire. Treat us like people, not account numbers, and you might start to build some trust.
I wanted to make a quick brine for tomorrow's bird and opted to use this one, even though I didn't have any apple juice. Instead I chopped up some old apples we had lying around and added them to the boil. I also added some apple cider vinegar for a little extra zip and didn't do the best job measuring the other stuff... it's a brine after all. I'll let you know how it turns out.
We went to see The New Mastersounds last night at The Paradise in Boston and they didn't disappoint. I've been following their music for 3+ years and have practically begged their publicist to get them to book a show in Boston during that time. Several times they've come tantalizingly close, but I've never wanted to make the roadtrip to NYC. When I noticed Boston on their latest tour schedule I thought it was a mirage, but sure enough they made the trek for the first time since 2006. BTW, last night they referred to that fateful show in 2006 (at Felt) as "the last time we came to Boston, we played for a six or seven people who have all since passed away."
This recipe is my interpretation of a dish served at The Blue Ox in Lynn, MA. I made it this past weekend for a dinner party and it was gone before I thought to take a picture. Easy, extravagant and tasty.
Making this for a dinner party tonight. Just realized I need to serve
it with Southern Tier Pumking. Yum!
...easy and fun to put together and delicious to eat. The kids had fun
helping. Give it a try.
Apparently I have mad skillz when it comes to fashioning impromptu
shower caps from plastic grocery bags. The girls want to protect their
back-to-school hairstyles from the ravages of a shower. :-)
We came upon this tree when we were hiking around Ragged Island on
Lake Winnipesaukee in NH. My youngest stopped and said, "WOW, cool
bark!" and I completely agree.
This is a great set from David Bowie, Live at Nassau Colliseum in 1976. Panic in Detroit is off...the...hook. Listen to Bowie in his prime.