Archive for the 'AussieBloggers' Category

Accountability Partners – Everyone Needs One!

They say that all successful endeavours (programs, products, businesses) were once nothing more than an idea – so today I want to present you with an idea:

Last Thursday I wrote a article called – Eight Steps to Getting out of that Rut – I spoke about the notion of using an Accountability Partner; someone to help you stay focused, objective, proactive, positive and productive on your journey. I also talked about the value of channelling your energy into something (a project) or someone, other than yourself. The truth is that (1) from time to time we all need a coach to kick our butt, answer our questions, listen to our concerns and support us through a challenging time and (2) we can all benefit greatly by investing our time, energy, knowledge and compassion into the lives of others; taking the focus off us for a while. By helping others we actually help ourselves; the perfect win-win relationship.

Well, these two factors seem to have pushed some buttons with a few of you and have given rise to an idea. A bunch of comments and emails have told us a few things:

1) Some of you struggle from time to time to keep doing what you need to reach your goals and could benefit from having your own Accountability Partner… but finding one is easier said than done.

2) Some of you would like the opportunity to ‘give back’ and are interested in being able to coach, mentor, support (be an Accountability Partner for) someone who needs some help… but you don’t necessarily know how to make that happen.

3) Some of you may want to support someone else while seeking out an Accountability Partner of your own (even coaches need coaches) at the same time.

With this in mind, we (Webmaster Johnnie and I) have launched the first Aussie ‘Renovate Your Life Forum‘ to make this happen; a cyber-place where you can find an Accountability Partner, or become one for someone else.

Interested?

If you’re interested in (1) finding an Accountability Partner to help you reach your goals or (2) becoming an Accountability Partner to help someone else on their journey, you may want to check it out. If you have any thoughts, ideas and / or suggestions we would GLADLY welcome your input and help. Goodness knows, we need it!

Imagine being able to do good, help a stranger and genuinely make a difference without even leaving your house; volunteer work from your keyboard – too cool.

Goin’ Up the Country (Our Treechange Story)

Earlier in the year, I offered to write a guest post for the Aussie Bloggers site ….. well here it is!

Seven months ago now we pulled up stumps in Sydney, and relocated to hinterland of the Mid North Coast of New South Wales, on the eastern seaboard of Australia, to follow a very long held dream of owning a farm and producing organic foods.

So why would two otherwise intelligent forty-something’s go into partnership with another couple, choose to live with them under the same roof, have the husbands walk away from seemingly good employment with nothing firm to go to, with none of them having any previous farming experience save for a trained urban horticulturalist? This must be some mighty strong dream we’re following.

Australians know that there is something in our psyche that draws us to the beauty that is the wide open spaces and natural splendour of this ancient continent. For me that was instilled at an early age, growing up near and spending early years playing in suburban bushland, that later led to bush-walking and cross-country skiing through our wonderful National Parks.

Family visits to farming friends also played a part in the genesis of The Dream! Declaring that I wanted to be a farmer to the assembled family in my early teen years bought looks of disbelief, and comments of derision. I clearly needed to take a different tact.

After spending a decade and a half being a ‘city farmer’ (landscape gardener) following a decade in sales and marketing in the music industry, I began to question how we could really make a difference to this world and roll all of our beliefs and desires into what we were doing.

The organic food movement was finally starting to gain momentum here in Australia, and thanks to the explosion of Farmers Markets around the country, regional foods and real, tasty, wholesome produce was finding a market. The universe was starting to align!

My Irish wife Therese, had spent three months as a WWOOF-er (Willing Workers on Organic Farms ) in Tasmania when she first returned to Australia early in 1993, and remembers that she made a personal pact to always try and eat organic food from that point on. A year living in the Southern Highlands just south of Sydney confirmed for me what I already knew – we needed to find a way to support ourselves so we could move to the country and set up our own organic enterprise.

The final straw came when we witnessed a very animated David Suzuki on his last Australian tour in Wollongong – aside from his awesome lecture on the state of environment, climate change and the then general inactivity of our governments, some of the last words that he said were “and for heaven’s sake, EAT ORGANIC FOOD!” We both left the hall knowing that our future path was set, now we just had to make it happen.

A chance conversation with a mutual friend led to the partnership with Lyndon and Beth being formed and the search for suitable land that met all (or most) of our criteria began. Weekends were spent travelling the countryside, following up leads that the hours of searching real estate sites on the internet had produced. Other weekends were spent at Farming Field Days, most notably Mudgee and Tocal .

This went on for some time, and then one weekend after traipsing around we came across a picture and description in the window of an agent in Port Macquarie. Could this small property really be it? Calls were made, website addresses and links forwarded, and an initial inspection arranged. The property looked great – 22 acres bordering the Pappinbarra River with enough infrastructure for us to start our enterprise with, and it hadn’t had any intensive farming activity for some years, perfect for intending organic farmers – and while the house was no diamond, it was large enough for two mature couples to live in and would be adequate until a second property could be purchased in three years time.

Sums were done, mortgage brokers consulted, offers made, and … ACCEPTED. Wahoo.

All the logistics were sorted – removalists booked, tenants found, leases drawn up, bosses enrolled in our wives ‘tele-commuting’, hours spent dealing with Telstra about broadband (!!) etc – and on September 1 we were in.

Since then we’ve been very active, both in the local community here in the Hastings Valley, and on ‘Near River’, our property at 1466. We get to really appreciate the ambience of the rural lifestyle, the birdlife and visiting mammals, and we are slowly repairing the vegetation along the river bank by removing the noxious weeds that have taken over. The front paddock that will be our 2.5 acre market garden is taking shape, but as we are practicing bio-dynamic farming , herbicide use is forbidden, so the loathed Kikuyu grass is being removed by hand after covering it by all matter of things (grass slashings, corrugated iron, tarpaulins, black plastic). And seedlings are going in. Last week our first livestock purchase arrived, two Dexter cows, who are both due to calve in July.

What’s next? In conjunction with planting more seedlings, we need to promote our marketing vehicle, which is Community Supported Agriculture. This refers to a partnership between a farmer and a community of supporters. Initially started in Japan, then Europe and now very popular in the USA, we are looking to help lead the way with this form of farm produce marketing in Australia that reconnects farmers directly with their customers. It also provides people with an opportunity to know the people that grow their food, know where and how it is grown, and have a connection with a rural community again. This will be one of the ways we will contribute to the wider community.

And what else? Enjoy all that there is in the wonder of the regional areas of this majestic country. And for those familiar with the Canned Heat tune ‘Goin’ Up the Country’, yes the water really does taste like wine.

C’mon Aussie c’mon to the Carnival of Australia

Our own Carnival of Australia is set to celebrate her first birthday this month, right here at Aussie Bloggers. Throw the snags on the barbie and the beer in the esky for this BYO event, cos we’re set to do it in real Aussie style – with posts from all you Aussie bloggers.

Our pink flash of Lightening Online hostessed the last Carnival of Australia and did a beauty of a job. Have you visited her Carnival post yet? **Megan is pointing her finger at you!** If you have no idea what a Carnival is, then having at squiz at Lightening’s Carnival and learning a bit more, here, is a must.

The Carnival of Australia first threw its Akubra in the door on April 25th, 2007: The Carnival of Australia: ANZAC Day Inaugural Edition. I had already been blogging for almost a year, was participating in several blog carnivals and was frustrated that there was little around, Carnival wise, to showcase Aussie blogs and Aussie bloggers. Finding the motivated Aussie community at Bumpzee was a God send and the Aussie carnival centric idea grew from discussions there.

Open to all Australian bloggers or those who have blogged about Australia, the Carnival of Australia has its niche in the variety and diversity of our great southern land. Some things will not be tolerated in our Carnival though. Each host has the right to weed articles offensive to their blog or beliefs. Given I am a child protection advocate, I am fundamentally opposed to any adult content or posts that sexualise children. Racism, hate and over the top swearing are also weeded – sometimes even before they make their way to the fortnightly host.

To start the Carnival, I just did it: I had an idea and I acted on it. While I am definitely a ‘Seeker’ of meaning, there was no “Carnival is over” thoughts for me. Not one to obsessively procrastinate on ideas until everything is crystal clear, I cyber spoke to a few other Australian bloggers to gauge interest, and then claimed the Carnival at BlogCarnival. I advertised on my old child protection blog spot blog, the home schooling blog that I kept at that time and on Bumpzee. Both Leigh from All for Women and Meg from Blogpond also started advertising on their blogs, and the submissions grew each fortnight.

I knew that I wanted the Carnival to have joint ownership so I called for other Aussie bloggers to share the hosting. Colin from Adelaide Green Porridge Cafe was the first external host and he has since hosted another three times. Thanks Colin. Just as in the beginning, the Carnival of Australia runs fortnightly on different Aussie’s blogs.

To host a Carnival of Australia you can either do minimal work (its a cut and paste job from instacarnival) or put your personality, your sense of humour and own commentary into the edition that shows on your blog. When I host, I prefer to always make additional comment, to visit, read and to stumble all submitted posts. Just as I do my children, I spend time on my Carnivals because I am the Carnival of Australia’s mother.

Carnivals do bring additional hits, visitors and trackback checkers. To increase traffic to a new blog, both participating in and hosting Carnivals can be a useful strategy. For me though, celebrating the diversity of Australian though, life and interest remains my motivator. I have such little time in my hectic professional life to spend on forums and social networking sites, that Carnivals now act as my pivotal meeting place for new blogs.

One of the success attributes for the Carnival of Australia has been the regular reminder emails – an email arrives to remind you to submit your post and to provide you the link to make submission super easy. A follow up email then alerts you that the Carnival is live and that you need to go and check your links. Whereas I used to collect email addresses of all people who participated in the Carnivals and send them off an email from me, nowadays, I use an aweber automated system that bloggers need to sign up to in order to get email alerts. If you want to capatalise on this service, then sign up via the Carnival of Australia’s home page.

The open and click through rate to the automated email reminder service is quite acceptable and acts as a measure of Aussie blogger participation: there are 39 Aussie Bloggers subscribed to the list (yep, while this is okay, you had better sign up, hey). For the immediate past Carnival hosted by the beautiful Lightening, 29 people opened their email reminder and there were 22 clicks onto links (15 to blog carnival to submit, one to Aussie Bloggers, three to Imaginif and three to Lightening Online).

C’mon Aussie, c’mon, c’mon – let’s make the first birthday edition a Carnival to remember. Hosted here on Wednesday 23rd April, you need to have your post submitted to BlogCarnival by Monday 21st April, 11pm. Submit now!

**Aging seeker, breaks into song** Say goodbye, my own true lover,

Megan, mother of Carnival of Australia, from Imaginif

Blogging – an Addiction, or show me the way to Bloggers Anonymous!

When I first got introduced to blogging it was on behalf of a client. I’d been asked to investigate what it was all about and whether it was a suitable medium for my client to gain more activity for her business.

Being the dutiful assistant I am, I not only started researching, but also set up a blog of my own so I could spend my own time practising this new art and perfect the new skill I was about to deliver to my client.

Well, I merrily wrote a few posts here and there for about six months, blissfully unaware that an addiction was just around the corner. I decided to set up a family blog that Christmas to replace my annual family Christmas newsletter and sent the link to family members around the country. And then one of our cats went missing so I blogged about that and when he showed up again 4 days later (it was an intense hot summer that year here in Australia), I posted photos of our injured and dehydrated cat for family members to see after he’d come home from the vet.

What happened then took me by surprise. I had people from the other side of the world post comments about my poor cat and a conversation began to take place in the comments of my family blog. How did that happen?

I was unaware at the time how quickly search engines pick up blog posts and didn’t really understand about Technorati tags at that time, although I had been using them and exploring this new world of blogging.

Suddenly I found out what the real attraction was about blogging and I began to write much more regularly to both my blogs. I wanted more people to come talk to me!

A couple of months later I was listening to a speaker at my church and he mentioned a word which appealed to me so I wrote it down, thinking I could write about it sometime (did I mention I’m a writer too? Wink) but before the service had finished I realised there was more than one article inside me on that topic and I rushed home to buy a new domain and set up a new blog. Enter number three…

Over the next year I had purchased several more domains and set up several new blogs and each began to develop their own following. I had become addicted and it happened without noticing.

At least, I didn’t notice but I think my family did. Now my family tell me I’m a ‘domain junkie’, and a ‘blogging addict’ amongst other names. Me, I just like to think I’m interested in lots of things and it would appear there are readers for each thing as well so I’m not alone in my interests. Perhaps it’s just because I like an audience but they can’t see me so it’s kind of done anonymously… well, almost because I do use my name.

So, if you’re wondering what this blogging bug is all about and how to get started, what should you do?

  • Well, join our Aussie Bloggers for a start. You’ll get to meet a bunch of people as crazy as me and some not so crazy.
  • Then you need to decide on a blogging platform. I started with Blogger.com which is owned by Google by the way, but shifted to WordPress because I wanted to have control. Control over the hosting, control over the domain name, and I wanted ownership – they were mine, mine, mine!
  • Then you need to start writing and publishing your posts. It’s as simple as that.

But after awhile and after visiting heaps of other blogs you’ll notice different templates, and things they call widgets and plugins and heaps of extras and suddenly your plain ole blog will be just that – plain but perhaps not quite so ‘ole’. Don’t worry, you’ll get heaps of advice about that too and pretty soon you’ll be like the rest of us and you’ll have to join Bloggers Anonymous because we’re pretty much beyond help! So why not come and join the fun?

Interview with Josh Sharp of techCollective

This is an interview with Josh Sharp of techCollective and Josh Sharp – web application development blog. techCollective is Josh’s new project, an aggregation site for Australia’s brightest and best Web 2.0/social computing blogs.

Andrew: Josh, what are you aiming to achieve with techCollective? What’s the main selling point, the message you’re trying to get out there?

Josh: I really feel that the Australian web industry is under-represented as a whole. You have to look hard to get a good feel for a local perspective on startups, technologies, and the like. And that’s the one thing I’d really like to change. My main aim is to bring the focus back to the local industry – by giving Australian bloggers a voice, and by giving interested readers a chance to find content they may have otherwise missed. There are all these authoritative, local voices coming from people who have launched startups, or are changing how the web works at some fundamental level, or just have brilliant ideas. And it’s very hard to hear them over the likes of big international and US-based content like http://techcrunch.com. It’s a real shame.

So my aim is to at least get people aware of these bloggers, so even if they just bookmark the site and browse it every so often, they’re still going to get more of a local perspective on things.

Andrew: Where do you see techCollective going? Is there a limit to the number of blogs you can aggregate with it in the current one-page format?

Josh: You’re right, there is. When I came up with the idea I didn’t have any long term plans aside from raising awareness about the local industry. But I’m open to ideas, and I’d love to grow the site over time. Ultimately I think it could become a portal to local tech content, with further niche content available, forums, the works. But I’ve only just launched! :)

Andrew: So are you thinking of allowing user-generated content, like tagging of individual stories? What about individualised RSS feeds or some other sort of personalisation?

Josh: I think ultimately that growing and evolving techCollective will be a community process – I’d love if it expanded to include a forum, or some other form of user interaction. Blogging is unique in that it’s turned reporting and journalism into a two way conversation, and I’d like to take advantage of that. User-submitted content is a good idea, and if there proves to be an enthusiastic community waiting, I think that’s something I’d love to turn my attention to. But those sort of extras will come with time. At the moment I’m keeping it simple, and focussing on promoting local bloggers.

Andrew: Finally, if anyone knows someone that should be on techCollective, how do they get in touch with you?

Josh: Easy – just head over to my contact page, and tell me about your blog.

Andrew: Thanks for agreeing to be interviewed, Josh, and all the best in the future.

Josh: Thanks Andrew.

« Previous PageNext Page »