Well, it is about time. It’s been over a year since I last
posted on here. And it’s not that I didn’t want to. Not at all.
But it’s about time.
With a full personal and professional life, trying to fit in
blogs of some kind of substance (not to mention sense!) became next to
impossible. Until I got the kick up the pants to get back to the keyboard.
Coming up in Sydney in a few month’s time is this fantastic
event.
For anyone who hasn’t
been to a World Harp Congress before I can highly recommend this week of harp
overdose. I was fortunate enough to have attended the 1999 Congress in Prague
and it was AMAZING.
This is the first time the WHC has ever been in Australia
(yah!) so it is wonderful opportunity for locals to see a world beating array
of harps and harpists, and an even better opportunity for overseas harpists to
come and see what we have to offer.
And at 4pm on the Friday of the conference I’ll be
presenting a paper on ‘The Harpist’s Guide to Social Media’.
It’s a fascinating topic for any gigging harpist that I
explored first in a paper for the Australian Harp Festival last year so I’m
really chuffed to have another chance to delve into the wonderful world of
Facebook, Twitter and Instagram in a little more detail.
To help gather my thoughts (and get some feedback too I
hope!) I’ll be blogging my way through the research of this little baby. I’m
always on the lookout for interesting harpists to follow so feel free to get in
touch with your suggestions.
But it’s about time. That’s the big disadvantage of social
media. It might be free, but it is costly. It can cost A LOT of time. In this
regard the theory and reality of my paper isn’t necessarily going to match up.
But I figure that’s ok. Because we all live in the real world and not everyone
can tweet twice a day while posting on Facebook and Instagram as well. Even
with a product like Hootsuite it still takes time.
So how do you balance the theory and reality of social
media?
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