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šPeek at my WeekĀ
Iām on the uni open day circuit with Julieta this month.
So far, weāve done Sussex University, Brighton (an inspiring talk on International Relations, but the campus is too Brutalist and āthe animal protesters ruined it.ā Itās also a bit too close to home for her, given weāre just down the road in St Leonards on Sea.
Weāre off to Royal Holloway in Egham, Surrey, this weekend and Southampton on Wednesday. Southampton sent her a personalised invitation - very slick; she liked that.Ā
I think sheāll love Royal Holloway. Beautiful campus in 135 acres of parkland (she wants Hogwarts). Itās close to London but not in the dirt. Egham is a tiny town full of pubs! Easy to get around and socialise, which is just as important.
Sheās spending her 18th birthday at the open day bless her, but weāll make a weekend of it - nice hotel, Christmas lights, and shopping.Ā
Itās got me all nostalgic for my unidays, and comparing the two. The Web was new (opened to the public in 1991), so we were getting used to that. We had a computer room, but I didnāt have a laptop, so I hand-wrote all my essays.
No mobile or email till my mid-20s, but more headspace. I survived!Ā
My life revolved around books and journals, and I spent a lot of time in the library (still my favourite place to go when I travel somewhere new).Ā
Fingers crossed she gets the grades she needs.š¤
š¦Bluesky starter packsĀ
I set a client up on Bluesky. Thereās been a mass exodus from X with recent events, and Iāve noticed a big drop in followers. Seems like everyoneās migrating to Bluesky.Ā The era of massive social media platforms is over.
Iāve enjoyed Bluesky because itās simple and also values links and has no algorithm driving it. - Jay Acunzo
Weāre staying on X. But weāll be posting on Bluesky (journos love it - friend requests coming in fast) and LinkedIn too. I donāt want to be in an echo chamber.Ā Ā Ā
So far, itās all very civilised and calm. It looks the same as X but feels different. I like the ad-free experience and white space. But I miss the breaking news, live sports and dramaāthe Twitter town hall. I realise how conditioned Iāve become to that dopamine hit.Ā
Iām seeing lots of starter packs like this one from Reuters on the future of journalism with good people to follow. People want to make friends and find their tribe, so itās worth doing one if you're on there.Ā
Interesting take on it from Sophia Smith Galer.
Bluesky has a problem: Journalists like it.
The rush to Bluesky is happening partly because of a media yearning to cling to a form of social media that suited them, not their audiences.
Thatās my feeling about doing more of the same (text posts) on another platform. I canāt see the point.Ā
āPeople want personalities - and this shift began years ago.ā Thanks to TikTok, vertical video has taken off, and I see LinkedIn pushing it too. Sophiaās talk at the International Journalism Festival was sold out.Ā
By all means, try it out⦠ābut donāt use it *again* at the expense of trying out a video platform that will future-proof you and reach audiences a lot more successfully.āĀ
Good advice. I will have a play to get better with video and because I like the diversity of people and topics it brings you and how it mashes up the storytelling structure. No beginning, middle and end.Ā
It also builds community around fandom culture, e.g the trend āDelulu is the soluluā - aka embracing the fake it till you make your dreams come true.Ā
To me, being delulu means having so much self-confidence and self-assurance that you completely refuse to believe anything else.
It means showing up to life with radical optimism and joy.ā - Courtney Johnson (247.3K followers).Ā
Go, Courtney. Gotta be your own biggest cheerleader. I wish Iād had that much confidence at 28.Ā
How to get started on TikTok? āJust make content and see what works.ā
šHow to Build a World Class SubstackĀ
Build a sustainable and thriving publication without burning out.Ā
Thanks to Claire & Russell for their book baby! I treated myself to a physical copy.
Is it worth writing a biz book these days? Things are so fast-moving, wonāt it be out of date?
I asked Russell and he said heāll update the digital edition. Check out their Kickstarter for other perks.Ā
So interesting itās not called How To Build a World Class Newsletter. I have mixed feelings about that.
ā¶ļøRead, Listen, Watch, BookĀ Ā
Creating a profitable Substack that grows your brand | Lucy Werner & Enterprise Nation.
Louis Grenier: Stand the F*ck Out - a masterclass in launching a book on LinkedIn | Lulu Publishing.
Behind the Byline: Navigating challenges and improving working conditions for freelance journalists. Free webinar on 26 Nov, to discuss some of the biggest challenges freelancers face along with newly-launched Freelance Guidance for Editors | Women in Journalism.
Cheers,Ā Nika š„
PS More experiments! Iām hosting a newsletter Writing Hour every Friday, 2-3 pm BST, for the next three monthsāreal-time support and accountability. Iād love you to join me - info here.Ā
Join The Shift and connect with a creative community of entrepreneurs shaping the future of work.
By Nika Talbot at The ShiftšPeek at my WeekĀ
Iām on the uni open day circuit with Julieta this month.
So far, weāve done Sussex University, Brighton (an inspiring talk on International Relations, but the campus is too Brutalist and āthe animal protesters ruined it.ā Itās also a bit too close to home for her, given weāre just down the road in St Leonards on Sea.
Weāre off to Royal Holloway in Egham, Surrey, this weekend and Southampton on Wednesday. Southampton sent her a personalised invitation - very slick; she liked that.Ā
I think sheāll love Royal Holloway. Beautiful campus in 135 acres of parkland (she wants Hogwarts). Itās close to London but not in the dirt. Egham is a tiny town full of pubs! Easy to get around and socialise, which is just as important.
Sheās spending her 18th birthday at the open day bless her, but weāll make a weekend of it - nice hotel, Christmas lights, and shopping.Ā
Itās got me all nostalgic for my unidays, and comparing the two. The Web was new (opened to the public in 1991), so we were getting used to that. We had a computer room, but I didnāt have a laptop, so I hand-wrote all my essays.
No mobile or email till my mid-20s, but more headspace. I survived!Ā
My life revolved around books and journals, and I spent a lot of time in the library (still my favourite place to go when I travel somewhere new).Ā
Fingers crossed she gets the grades she needs.š¤
š¦Bluesky starter packsĀ
I set a client up on Bluesky. Thereās been a mass exodus from X with recent events, and Iāve noticed a big drop in followers. Seems like everyoneās migrating to Bluesky.Ā The era of massive social media platforms is over.
Iāve enjoyed Bluesky because itās simple and also values links and has no algorithm driving it. - Jay Acunzo
Weāre staying on X. But weāll be posting on Bluesky (journos love it - friend requests coming in fast) and LinkedIn too. I donāt want to be in an echo chamber.Ā Ā Ā
So far, itās all very civilised and calm. It looks the same as X but feels different. I like the ad-free experience and white space. But I miss the breaking news, live sports and dramaāthe Twitter town hall. I realise how conditioned Iāve become to that dopamine hit.Ā
Iām seeing lots of starter packs like this one from Reuters on the future of journalism with good people to follow. People want to make friends and find their tribe, so itās worth doing one if you're on there.Ā
Interesting take on it from Sophia Smith Galer.
Bluesky has a problem: Journalists like it.
The rush to Bluesky is happening partly because of a media yearning to cling to a form of social media that suited them, not their audiences.
Thatās my feeling about doing more of the same (text posts) on another platform. I canāt see the point.Ā
āPeople want personalities - and this shift began years ago.ā Thanks to TikTok, vertical video has taken off, and I see LinkedIn pushing it too. Sophiaās talk at the International Journalism Festival was sold out.Ā
By all means, try it out⦠ābut donāt use it *again* at the expense of trying out a video platform that will future-proof you and reach audiences a lot more successfully.āĀ
Good advice. I will have a play to get better with video and because I like the diversity of people and topics it brings you and how it mashes up the storytelling structure. No beginning, middle and end.Ā
It also builds community around fandom culture, e.g the trend āDelulu is the soluluā - aka embracing the fake it till you make your dreams come true.Ā
To me, being delulu means having so much self-confidence and self-assurance that you completely refuse to believe anything else.
It means showing up to life with radical optimism and joy.ā - Courtney Johnson (247.3K followers).Ā
Go, Courtney. Gotta be your own biggest cheerleader. I wish Iād had that much confidence at 28.Ā
How to get started on TikTok? āJust make content and see what works.ā
šHow to Build a World Class SubstackĀ
Build a sustainable and thriving publication without burning out.Ā
Thanks to Claire & Russell for their book baby! I treated myself to a physical copy.
Is it worth writing a biz book these days? Things are so fast-moving, wonāt it be out of date?
I asked Russell and he said heāll update the digital edition. Check out their Kickstarter for other perks.Ā
So interesting itās not called How To Build a World Class Newsletter. I have mixed feelings about that.
ā¶ļøRead, Listen, Watch, BookĀ Ā
Creating a profitable Substack that grows your brand | Lucy Werner & Enterprise Nation.
Louis Grenier: Stand the F*ck Out - a masterclass in launching a book on LinkedIn | Lulu Publishing.
Behind the Byline: Navigating challenges and improving working conditions for freelance journalists. Free webinar on 26 Nov, to discuss some of the biggest challenges freelancers face along with newly-launched Freelance Guidance for Editors | Women in Journalism.
Cheers,Ā Nika š„
PS More experiments! Iām hosting a newsletter Writing Hour every Friday, 2-3 pm BST, for the next three monthsāreal-time support and accountability. Iād love you to join me - info here.Ā
Join The Shift and connect with a creative community of entrepreneurs shaping the future of work.