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In this episode: Seasonal living is often presented as though all Manifestors should experience it in the same way. But what if your rhythm doesn't look like anyone else's? In this episode, Caro explores the deeper nuances of being a non-sacral, cyclical being in a world built around consistency and linear output. She unpacks why some Manifestors thrive with more structure while others need greater flexibility, how chart configuration, nervous system capacity, conditioning, life stage and environment all influence our experience of energy, and why comparing yourself to other Manifestors can be just as damaging as comparing yourself to Generators. Through personal stories, observations from supporting the Manifestor Community, and reflections on her own journey as a 1/3 Emotional Manifestor, Caro explores what seasonal living can actually look like in real life, beyond the theory. Inside this episode: The difference between cyclical and linear living Why no two Manifestors experience energy the same way Defined vs open centers and how they influence capacity Structure versus flow and finding what supports you Hormonal, environmental and life cycles that impact energy Seasonal living in business, relationships and everyday life The dangers of comparing your rhythm to someone else's Questions to help you identify the season you're currently in Resources mentioned: Healing Lounge Business Lounge Manifestor Parent Lounge About Caro: 1/3 emotional Manifestor I am the Community Support Manager at The Manifestor Community. My work centres on creating spaces where Manifestors feel genuinely seen, supported, and connected. Community and support have been central themes in my journey, especially through my work in community management, social media, and virtual support. Before becoming self-employed, my path moved through many roles such as journalism, event coordination, hospitality management, language tutoring, translation, sales, customer support, and content creation. Each of these experiences became an essential piece of the skill set I bring into my work today. I now support aligned clients with their workload, whether through social media or VA-related tasks, bringing structure, responsiveness, and care into everything I do. I've worked alongside Holly for nearly 3 years as Community Manager for The Manifestor Community and also host the Incubator Calls, where connection between Manifestors is at the heart of the experience. Stepping into the role of Community Manager felt like a natural evolution, allowing me to initiate projects and experiences that bring Manifestors together and bridge the work of our wider departments. Originally from Germany and now living in Southern Spain, following the urge to move abroad has been one of the biggest catalysts for my growth. -- Start Here: If you're unsure where you are in your Manifestor journey, begin with our quiz: Where Are You in Your Manifestor Journey? Discover whether you're in a Discovering, Healing, or Leading phase — and the resources that support your current season as a Manifestor.
REGISTER FOR DUX 2026!Innovation in waterfowl hunting gear doesn't happen by accident — it comes from hunters solving real problems in the field.In this episode of the DUX Series, hosts Jimbo Robinson and David Schuessler sit down with Art Diaz, Community Manager for Banded Hunting Gear, to explore the evolution of one of the most recognizable brands in waterfowl — from its roots in Avery Outdoors and Greenhead Gear to its modern identity under the Banded name.The conversation blends culture, history, and innovation, diving into how gear has changed, what drives new product development, and why authenticity still matters in a crowded outdoor market.In this episode, listeners will hear about:Art Diaz's journey from musician to outdoor industry professionalGrowing up hunting in South Dakota and discovering waterfowlThe connection between music, creativity, and the outdoorsThe legacy of Avery Outdoors and Greenhead GearGame‑changing innovations like breathable waders and detailed decoysBehind‑the‑scenes stories from the early days of GHGHow the internet changed product perception and adoptionWhy honesty and problem‑solving drive Banded's design philosophyThe importance of community and real hunter feedbackWhat sets Banded gear apart in today's saturated marketThe continued demand for high‑quality decoys and technical gearInfluencers, ambassadors, and real‑world experience in product validationThe growing connection between outdoor culture and broader audiencesWhat to expect from Banded at this year's DUX showA preview of major upcoming innovations (without giving too much away)This episode is a deep look at how heritage brands evolve — and how Banded is positioning itself for the next generation of waterfowl hunters.REGISTER FOR DUX 2026!Listen now: www.ducks.org/DUPodcastSend feedback: DUPodcast@ducks.orgSPONSORS:Purina Pro Plan: The official performance dog food of Ducks UnlimitedWhether you're a seasoned hunter or just getting started, this episode is packed with valuable insights into the world of waterfowl hunting and conservation.Bird Dog Whiskey and Cocktails:Whether you're winding down with your best friend, or celebrating with your favorite crew, Bird Dog brings award-winning flavor to every moment. Enjoy responsibly.
Anfang Mai 2026 war die Learntec in Karlsruhe und Thomas war kurz vor Ort um einige Stimmen einzufangen. Dabei ging es um allgemeine Eindrücke, Reflektionen aus Community Sicht und um ganz konkrete Lernerfahrungen. Mit dabei waren Gerd Stumm, der sich gezielt auf der Messe umsah. Stefan Diepolder und Jan Fölsing die beiden Community Manager des New Learning Lab schilderten, was sie an ihrem Stand erlebt hatten. Sie haben verschiedene Lernräume zur Reflektion angeboten, incl. einer „Spinner Suite“. Danach hören wir Giovanna Lo Presti von der Corporate Learning Community (CLC) zu ihren Eindrücken, und was sich derzeit in der CLC tut. Wir hören jedenfalls: Sichten auf digitale Weiterbildung und EdTech schwanken zwischen Evolution und Disruption. LinksLearntec Homepage: https://www.learntec.de/de/Corporate Learning Community (CLC): https://colearn.de/CLC Angebote: https://colearn.de/clc-angebote/New Learning Lab: https://www.newlearning.team/New Learning Team & Angebote: https://www.newlearning.team/
What happens inside a studio when a game explodes past every projection on launch day? Jeremy Fielding, Community Manager and Narrative Coordinator at Stunlock Studios, was there when V Rising hit 150,000 concurrent Steam players — and he walked us through all of it: the chaos, the 60-hour weeks, the improvised official servers, and the feedback systems they built on the fly.Joined by Steve McLeod, founder of Feature Upvote, this conversation covers the full arc of community management at scale — from why every community manager is fundamentally a game developer, to how Stunlock built player trust through transparency, to why studio announcements largely don't work and what does instead.If you work in community, player support, or live ops — this one is packed.What We Cover:Why community managers are game developers (and why that framing matters)What it was actually like inside Stunlock during V Rising's early access launchHow to build feedback systems that scale before you think you need themThe case for private beta feedback boards — and the "Dracula pun" password strategyWhy AI bots in Discord often backfire — and what players actually want when they reach outHow transparency converts skeptical players into studio advocatesThe measurement problem: why community impact is real but hard to quantifyThe rise of the double-A studio and why mid-size teams have a community advantageGuests:Jeremy Fielding (Jeremy Berson online) — Community Manager & Narrative Coordinator, Stunlock Studios | playvrising.comSteve McLeod — Founder, Feature Upvote | featureupvote.com | LinkedInTimestamps:00:00 — Intro & warm-up02:00 — Are community managers game developers?05:30 — How game dev is really about solving problems you made yourself09:00 — Translating player feedback to dev teams — the middle seat13:00 — V Rising's early access launch: what 150K concurrent looks like from inside21:00 — AI in community support: when it helps, when it backfires27:00 — Why honesty builds the community that defends you30:00 — Feedback tools at scale: what to look for, what to avoid38:00 — Private beta feedback with Feature Upvote (and Dracula passwords)44:00 — Turning feedback into competitive advantage49:00 — Why studio trust is the new double-A advantage54:00 — Guest intros & where to find themConnect with Player Driven:Discord: https://discord.gg/zdwAqvgvfyNewsletter: Player DrivenYouTube: Player Driven
Met Sprekende Voorbeelden - in samenwerking met MKB010>>NEXT - willen wij het MKB in de industrie inspireren, aan de hand van mooie praktijkverhalen van mede MKB'ers, om morgen aan de slag te gaan met verduurzaming, digitalisering en een Leven Lang Ontwikkelen. In deze aflevering spreken wij met Josephine van Luik, Community Manager bij Security Delta (HSD) en Cyberweerbaarheidscentrum Maakindustrie Zuid-Holland (CWM), over hoe essentieel het is om je cyberweerbaarheid op orde te hebben; hoe elke MKB'er getroffen kan worden; waarom niet alleen IT medewerkers maar álle medewerkers van een organisatie van de richtlijnen aan cyberweerbaarheid op de hoogte moet zijn; en over de diensten en oplossingen die het CWM biedt op dit gebied voor MKB'ers uit de industrie. Kijk voor meer informatie op https://cwmaakindustrie.nl/. Abonneer nu op de Innovatie Delegatie door op + of op 'volgen' te drukken en ontvang de nieuwste aflevering meteen in je playlist!
Drew Flugstad-Clarke never planned to work in brain cancer. She planned to play Division I soccer at Georgetown. She planned to paint. She even tried investment banking, answering emails at 4am in a cubicle that never slept. Then in June 2022 her father, Jim, was diagnosed with glioblastoma at 57. He died 1 day shy of 7 months later, just before his 58th birthday. His symptoms began with emotion, not seizures. A steady HR executive suddenly cried. His golf game slipped. By the time he entered the hospital for a scan, he did not leave without surgery. A subway poster for a 5K became a lifeline. Drew showed up. She found a community. She later joined the American Brain Tumor Association as Community Manager for the Eastern Region. This conversation walks through anticipatory grief, caregiving in real time, strategic numbness, and what it costs to curate hope when the median survival clock is already ticking.RELATED LINKSDrew Clark Flukestad on LinkedInTopor StudiosAmerican Brain Tumor AssociationGeorgetown University Women's SoccerFEEDBACKLike this episode? Rate and review Out of Patients on your favorite podcast platform. For guest suggestions or sponsorship email podcasts@matthewzachary.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
El periodista y escritor reflexiona sobre que el PNV haya plantado a Moncloa tras un tuit del PSE con IA sobre Aitor Esteban
La relación laboral comenzó bajo un acuerdo verbal por un salario de 2.500.000 pesos mensuales para desempeñar funciones de community manager. Sin embargo, la formalización del vínculo nunca llegó. Según relató Londoño, la empleadora justificó la ausencia de un documento físico alegando trámites pendientes ante la Cámara de Comercio. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today I'm joined by my colleague Monica. She's the Community Manager for Tribe Sober and she's also celebrating her 5th Soberversary next week. I've known Monica since her first Day One and it's giving me such joy to walk alongside her on this life changing journey. In this conversation, we explored: Why so many people struggle for years before reaching out for help The trap of trying to do it alone Why relapse is part of the learning process The importance of community and connection in recovery How mindset — not willpower — is the key to lasting change The danger of “I can have just one” thinking Practical tips for getting started Monica shares powerful advice for anyone at the beginning of their journey:
Contratás a alguien para que te maneje las redes, te cobra 100, 150 dólares por mes y te promete dos o tres publicaciones por semana. Pensás que estás haciendo marketing, pero en realidad estás tirando el dinero.Este episodio es vital para que no te roben la guita.
Contratás a alguien para que te maneje las redes, te cobra 100, 150 dólares por mes y te promete dos o tres publicaciones por semana. Pensás que estás haciendo marketing, pero en realidad no está pasando absolutamente nada. Te están robando.
Burnie and Ashley discuss Irish twins, gestation periods, Sims logic, gamertag value, giving up the inverted life, free games in sales platforms, platinum trophies on Xbox, Community Managers, Artemis splashdown, and the SpaceX IPO.
Podcasting, especially video podcasting, can be a great way to share your message with the world. There are so many things to learn and do, but it's hard to know where to start if you've never done it before.Producing a podcast can initially seem daunting; it's easy to feel overwhelmed when starting something new. Using a Video First approach with Ecamm Live will make it much easier and save you lots of time.The Flow is here to help. We'll take you step-by-step through creating a video podcast, from planning and production to promotion and monetization. You'll learn how to build an efficient workflow that will make your content shine, leaving you to focus on creating great content.It's time for a reset. This month on The Flow, we're diving deep into interviewing. And for Week 2, we're joined by one of the most respected voices in podcasting: Elsie Escobar.Elsie has spent nearly two decades shaping the podcasting industry. Today, she serves as Creator Success and Community Manager at Captivate, while also leading her own media platform, Multimodalee, where she mentors established creators navigating growth, burnout, reinvention, and long-term vision.In this episode, we explore:• What makes an interview actually meaningful (not just informational)• How to approach interviews as relationship-building, not content extraction• The role of creative sovereignty in modern podcasting• Navigating growth, burnout, and reinvention as a long-term creator• Why sustainable creator work requires community, not just downloadsElsie shares insights from her work inside Captivate.fm, her mentorship programs like The E-League and Creative Sovereignty Sessions, and her evolving work under Multimodalee, including her upcoming private podcast, Slight Spiral Dispatch.If you've ever wondered how to interview with more depth, more intention, and more impact, this conversation will shift how you think about it.✨ This is Week 2 of our March series on Interviewing:• Week 1: Framing the power of interviews• Week 2: Expert perspective with Elsie Escobar• Week 3: Taking action• Week 4: Mailbag + Q&AIf you're building a podcast, growing your influence, or trying to create work that lasts, you're in the right place.Send us your questions and get involved at https://flow.ecamm.comChapters0:00 Intro and Welcome to The Flow3:15 Introducing Elsie Escobar6:45 Transactional vs Meaningful Interviews9:30 What is Creative Sovereignty14:00 Overcoming the Voices That Squash Your Voice18:15 The Tech Connection Metaphor23:30 Respect Layer One: The Foundation28:00 What Hosts Get Wrong About Guest Selection33:45 Avoiding the Me First Marketer Trap38:15 Evolving as a Host Through Doing43:00 Why Nature Needs Boundaries48:30 Resetting the Room and Handling Drift53:15 Mastering the Art of the Pause58:00 Specificity in Community Engagement1:03:00 Lightning Round Questions1:08:30 Respecting Marginality and Identity1:13:33 Conclusion and Final Thoughts
"I didn't set out to make B2B cool." Christina Pearo, Social & Community Manager at Slate joins House of Content as our first guest of the season to discuss employee-generated content, LinkedIn and B2B social.Christina details how she's flipping the script, making B2B content exciting, brand-led, and fun. If you've ever wondered how to take your brand from generic to remarkable, this episode is your ignition switch.Key topics:Transforming stale B2B marketing into share-worthy, culture-driven content that people love to interact with.Tapping into cultural moments to stand out without risking your brand's reputation.Real-world examples from Ramp, Air, and other trailblazers crushing it in this space.
1328. Los clips de vídeo que hacemos los podcast para redes sociales... ¿atraen oyentes o solo sirve para nuestra propia vanidad?. Ese es el melón que abro hoy, aunque en realidad no lo abro yo solo. Hoy me traigo un “robao' con permiso”, porque participé en un debate dentro de la comunidad de Quiero Ser Podcaster y me pareció tan interesante que tenía que traerlo a este lado del micrófono. Todo empezó por aquella noticia de Apple Podcast integrando vídeo en su aplicación. Y claro, cuando la plataforma te pone el vídeo sobre la mesa, lo siguiente que pensamos es: “pues ya que grabamos en vídeo, hacemos clips para redes”. Y de ahí surge la gran pregunta: ¿merece la pena el esfuerzo de crear clips verticales para atraer nuevos oyentes al podcast? En el debate participaron perfiles muy distintos: quien usa el podcast como parte de una estrategia de marketing más amplia, quien monetiza con membresías, quien lo vive como escaparate profesional y quien, como yo, hace un podcast diario que ya de por sí consume todo mi tiempo. Y eso es importante, porque no todos partimos del mismo objetivo. Se habló de estrategia, de SEO, de YouTube como buscador, de miniaturas, de descripciones optimizadas para IA, de newsletters y de comunidad. Y poco a poco la conversación fue girando hacia algo que a mí me parece clave: el clip puede dar visibilidad, puede dar notoriedad, puede incluso alimentar la marca personal… pero convertir a alguien que consume contenido rápido en redes en oyente habitual de un podcast largo es otra historia muy distinta. También salió el tema de la viralidad. Esa zanahoria que nos ponen las redes sociales delante: “mira las visualizaciones que has conseguido”. Pero la pregunta es: ¿queremos visualizaciones o queremos oyentes fieles? Porque no es lo mismo tener 10.000 seguidores en una red social que 100 personas que te escuchan cada semana y confían en lo que haces. Yo lo tengo bastante claro. Si tengo que elegir dónde invertir mi tiempo, prefiero hacerlo en mejorar el podcast, en trabajar las descripciones, en cuidar la web o en construir una newsletter que en perseguir un algoritmo que mañana puede cambiar. Eso no significa desaparecer de redes, pero sí tener claro para qué estoy ahí. Este episodio no pretende sentar cátedra. Al contrario. Lo que quiero es que escuches el debate completo, que saques tus propias conclusiones y que me cuentes las tuyas. Porque al final, más allá de clips, SEO o miniaturas, lo importante es tener claro qué papel juega el podcast en tu estrategia y qué estás dispuesto a sacrificar por él.Con la participación de:Marianela Sandovares de Community Manager, tu podcast https://pod.link/1449453557Ignacio de Miguel de Branded, el podcast de Agencia Podcast https://pod.link/1678715363Juanma Romero de Team Barça https://pod.link/1541294748Nidia Moros de Dramas con K de Kimchi https://pod.link/1794092795Sunne de Quiero Ser Podcaster https://pod.link/1110976583Jorge Marín Nieto de Al otro lado del micrófono https://pod.link/1478239610_____________Consigue tu entrada para el directo de 'Contando Kilómetros Podcast' el 28 de marzo en las Podnights Madrid a través de Eventbritehttps://www.eventbrite.es/e/entradas-contando-kilometros-podcast-en-podnights-madrid-1980175107050?aff=oddtdtcreator_____________ ¡Gracias por pasarte 'Al otro lado del micrófono' un día más para seguir aprendiendo sobre podcasting! Si quieres descubrir cómo puedes unirte a la comunidad o a los diferentes canales donde está presente este podcast, te invito a visitar https://alotroladodelmicrofono.com/unete Además, puedes apoyar el proyecto mediante un pequeño impulso mensual, desde un granito de café mensual hasta un brunch digital. Descubre las diferentes opciones entrando en: https://alotroladodelmicrofono.com/cafe. También puedes apoyar el proyecto a través de tus compras en Amazon mediante mi enlace de afiliados https://alotroladodelmicrofono.com/amazon La voz que puedes escuchar en la intro del podcast es de Juan Navarro Torelló (PoniendoVoces) y el diseño visual es de Antonio Poveda. La dirección, grabación y locución corre a cargo de Jorge Marín. La sintonía que puedes escuchar en cada capítulo ha sido creada por Jason Show y se titula: 2 Above Zero. 'Al otro lado del micrófono' es una creación de EOVE Productora.
What if the secret to running a thriving coworking space isn't fancy software or a massive team… but one incredibly grounded, genuinely caring community manager? I finally got to sit down with Nicole Antolino, Community Manager at Fireworks Coworking in Marietta, Georgia and this conversation was long overdue. Nicole has been part of our Community Manager University program since 2022 and I've watched her grow into one of those rare unicorn operators who can truly do it all. She talked about the real balancing act of this role. When to extend flexibility and when to hold the line. How to juggle task lists with real human connection. What it's like to be a working mom running a space. And why she believes customer service experience matters more than industry background when hiring. We also dig into: Why 30 percent meeting room utilization might actually be normal How she and her teammate divide and conquer to grow the business The evolution of Fireworks' ideal customer profile What it really takes to stay energized in this role year after year If you're an owner wondering what makes a great community manager, or you are a community manager trying to figure out how to build longevity in this career, this one is for you. Resources Mentioned in this Podcast: Fireworks Coworking website Nicole Antolino on LinkedIn Everything Coworking Featured Resources: Masterclass: 3 Behind-the-Scenes Secrets to Opening a Coworking Space Coworking Startup School Community Manager University Follow Us on YouTube
En este episodio abrimos un debate incómodo pero necesario para cualquier podcaster:¿Tiene sentido seguir creando clips verticales para redes sociales si lo que queremos es que crezca nuestro podcast?Con la presión constante del algoritmo, el empuje del vídeo y la sensación de que “si no estás en Reels no existes”, nos preguntamos si estamos construyendo audiencia… o simplemente alimentando plataformas que no nos pertenecen.Hablamos de estrategia, desgaste, monetización, comunidad y de lo que realmente convierte en un proyecto sostenible.Pero más que darte respuestas cerradas, este episodio plantea preguntas que quizá deberías hacerte hoy mismo:¿Los clips traen oyentes reales o solo visualizaciones vacías?¿Estamos trabajando para nuestro podcast… o para el algoritmo?¿Qué pasaría si ese tiempo lo invirtiéramos en otra parte de la estrategia?Si eres podcaster y sientes que vas siempre detrás del formato de moda, este debate te va a hacer pensar.___Redes sociales de los participantes:Marianela Sandovares de Community Manager, tu podcast @marianelasandovaresJorge Marín Nieto de Al otro lado del micrófono @jorgemarinnietoIgnacio de Miguel de Branded, el podcast de Agencia Podcast @ignaciomixeJuanma Romero – Team Barça @teambarcapodNidia Moros de Dramas con K de Kimchi @dramas_con_kSunne de Quiero Ser Podcaster @sunne_quiero_ser_podcaster_¿Quieres participar en estos debates? únete a la comunidad QUIERO SER PODCASTER PRO. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Thank you to the folks at Sustain for providing the hosting account for CHAOSSCast! CHAOSScast- Episode 128 Check out the original GR-OSS OUT episode on the GR-OSS OUT podcast: https://podcast.gr-oss.io/15-openssf-community In this episode of CHAOSScast, we have a special crossover episode with the GR-OSS OUT podcast, hosted by Tabatha DiDomenico from G-Research and featuring special guest Stacey Potter, Community Manager at the Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF). Stacey shares her journey into open source, which started in software license compliance and marketing before she found her passion in community-building through projects like Weaveworks and the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) ecosystem. Her experience spans the full project lifecycle from early-stage incubation to graduation, giving her a unique perspective on how healthy, sustainable open source communities grow. A central theme of the conversation is what makes open source communities truly welcoming. Stacey emphasizes the importance of clear documentation, accessible contribution guidelines, well-labeled “good first issues,” and, above all, kindness. Reducing the fear of “doing it wrong” is critical, especially for newcomers who may feel intimidated by contributing code in public. Creating psychological safety helps transform curiosity into long-term participation, and contributors feel mentored rather than judged. Community health, she notes, is fundamentally about people, not just processes or tooling. The discussion also explores how marketing skills translate into community leadership. Stacey reflects on the difference between top-down messaging aimed at executives and bottom-up engagement with developers. Understanding your audience, meeting contributors where they are, and fostering authentic relationships are essential to building trust. At OpenSSF, she is helping shift perceptions so contributors understand that participation is open to everyone, not just member organizations. She also believes it's important to support education initiatives and strengthen developer experience across projects. Finally, Stacey highlights several OpenSSF initiatives and projects that could benefit from broader community involvement, including Scorecard, Minder, and OpenVEX. She also previews upcoming events and a new ambassador program designed to make open source security more accessible, and even fun! The episode closes with encouragement for listeners to get involved, contribute to the projects they rely on, and help build secure, welcoming open source ecosystems. Links: CHAOSS GR-OSS OUT podcast G-Research G-Research vacancies Open Source Security Foundation (OpenSSF) OpenSSF Training & Education Linux Foundation Scorecard Sigstore SLSA (Supply-chain Levels for Software Artifacts) Minder OpenVEX Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) Flux Kubernetes KubeCon + CloudNativeCon North America OpenSSF Community Day KoreaSpecial Guests: Stacey Potter and Tabatha DiDomenico.
In this episode, we're joined by Tamika Jackson, Vice President and Community Manager at JPMorgan Chase for the Pleasant Grove/East Dallas area. With over 15 years of leadership in nonprofit and public service, Tamika shares how she's building bridges between corporate resources and community needs. We explore her approach to neighborhood revitalization, inclusive economic development, and the importance of amplifying local voices. Tamika reflects on what it means to lead with service, not just at work, but in every part of her life, from her sorority to her church to her personal relationships. Whether you work in community development, corporate social responsibility, or simply want to deepen your impact where you live, Tamika's story offers a masterclass in purpose-driven leadership.
Slovakia Today, English Language Current Affairs Programme from Slovak Radio
What does it really mean to shape European policy? From 5–8 February 2026, students in Košice experienced it firsthand. Model European Union brought together 60 high school students from across Slovakia for an immersive, English-language simulation of EU decision-making. Stepping into the roles of Members of the European Parliament, EU Commissioners, and national representatives, they debated pressing topics such as the EU–Mercosur trade agreement and the Green Claims Directive tackling greenwashing. Organised by BETA Slovakia in cooperation with FUTURUM Bilingual High School, and supported by the European Parliament Liaison Office in Slovakia, the event blended dynamic debate with real-world insight. We spoke with participating students, as well as Veronica Anna Lacová, President of BETA Slovakia, and Ján Haraslín, Community Manager at the EP Liaison Office in Bratislava. The programme was further enriched by the opening address of the Vice Mayor of Košice and by discussions with MEPs Katarína Roth Neveďalová and Michal Wiezik, who engaged directly with students about the work of the European Parliament and the importance of youth participation in European democracy.
What happens when a rodeo ambassador steps behind the brand curtain? In this episode, we sit down with Kaelanne Quinonez of Corral Boots to talk about the leap from industry advocate to brand-side strategist and how storytelling, community, and WESA come together to shape what retailers see next.Hosts: Jennifer Hebert, Morgan Nicole ZipperlenContact: Sophia Jagella, WESA Marketing SpecialistGuest: Kaelanne Quinonez, Community and PR Manager at Corral BootsInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/boujee_vaquera/
In a world humming with AI, automation, and endless digital noise, something quieter and far more human is making a comeback. Community.In this episode of The Women On Top, Valerie Lynn sits down with Meagan Allers, Community Manager and Partnership Strategist at Marco Polo, for a conversation about what it really means to create spaces where people feel seen, safe, and connected. Not the kind of community measured in numbers or engagement metrics, but the kind that lingers, roots itself in trust, and feels like coming home.Together, they explore the often misunderstood difference between community building and community management, why genuine connection cannot be rushed or manufactured, and how introverts, often underestimated, can become some of the most powerful community leaders. Meagan shares her own winding path into this work, from boldly cold reaching out to start a women's pickleball group, to helping cultivate meaningful connection inside a fast growing tech company.They also talk about the quiet return to in person gatherings, the role of storytelling in technology, and the beautifully unexpected range of people finding connection through Marco Polo today. At its heart, this conversation is a reminder that while technology can scale systems, belonging is still built in small, human moments, one conversation at a time.If you are building a brand, nurturing a community, navigating loneliness in a hyper connected world, or simply craving something more real, this episode is for you.About Meagan: Meagan Allers is a Community Manager and Partnership Strategist at Marco Polo, where she designs spaces rooted in connection, trust, and belonging. With a background in storytelling, partnerships, and community strategy, Meagan brings a deeply human lens to tech, grounded in the belief that meaningful relationships are the foundation of everything worth building.Chapters00:00 Introduction to Community Building02:56 Community Building vs. Community Management06:04 The Journey into Community Building09:08 The Importance of Authentic Connection12:03 Creating Inclusive Spaces for Women14:59 Launching a Local Pickleball Community17:53 The Power of Cold Outreach20:58 Managing Community Energy and Engagement24:07 The Rise of In-Person Communities26:52 Niche Communities and Their Growth30:03 The Value of Community in Tech33:01 Unexpected Lessons from Startup Life36:14 Measuring Community Impact38:57 Diverse User Demographics of Marco Polo41:53 The Deeper Why Behind Community Work45:03 Closing Reflections and QuotesConnect with Meagan:linkedin.com/in/meaganallershttps://www.instagram.com/meaganallers/?hl=enhttps://www.facebook.com/61574537443033/videos/Connect with The Women On Top: Follow The Women On Top Podcast on Apple, Spotify, or anywhere you get your podcasts. Subscribe for more empowering conversations and stories! Website: https://thewomenontop.com/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@thewomenontop Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thewomenontoppodcast/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/valerie-lynn/
From Eureka Park at CES in Las Vegas, a new portable device, Allergen Alert, lets users test small food samples anywhere and receive results in about two minutes. Margot Roche, Ambassador and Community Manager, explains what it detects now, what they have on the road map, and how it was born from a personal medical experience. Show Notes: Support: Become a MacVoices Patron on Patreon http://patreon.com/macvoices Enjoy this episode? Make a one-time donation with PayPal Connect: Web: http://macvoices.com Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/chuckjoiner http://www.twitter.com/macvoices Mastodon: https://mastodon.cloud/@chuckjoiner Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/chuck.joiner MacVoices Page on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/macvoices/ MacVoices Group on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/macvoice LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuckjoiner/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chuckjoiner/ Subscribe: Audio in iTunes Video in iTunes Subscribe manually via iTunes or any podcatcher: Audio: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesrss Video: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesvideorss
From Eureka Park at CES in Las Vegas, a new portable device, Allergen Alert, lets users test small food samples anywhere and receive results in about two minutes. Margot Roche, Ambassador and Community Manager, explains what it detects now, what they have on the road map, and how it was born from a personal medical experience. Show Notes: Support: Become a MacVoices Patron on Patreon http://patreon.com/macvoices Enjoy this episode? Make a one-time donation with PayPal Connect: Web: http://macvoices.com Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/chuckjoiner http://www.twitter.com/macvoices Mastodon: https://mastodon.cloud/@chuckjoiner Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/chuck.joiner MacVoices Page on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/macvoices/ MacVoices Group on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/macvoice LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuckjoiner/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chuckjoiner/ Subscribe: Audio in iTunes Video in iTunes Subscribe manually via iTunes or any podcatcher: Audio: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesrss Video: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesvideorss
Trecentosessantaseiesima puntata della trasmissione "Generazioni Mobili" di Radio 24, il primo "passaporto radiofonico valido per l'espatrio".ON AIR: su Radio 24 tutti i sabati dalle 14 alle 14.15, in versione "Express"IN PODCAST: sulle piattaforme di Radio 24 / Spotify / Apple Music / Amazon Music... e tante altre, in versione "Extralarge"In questa puntata:- Federico Fabiani, fondatore di "Scambi Europei", ci elenca le ultimissime e concrete opportunità di studio, stage e lavoro in Europa e nell'UE;- Gaia Cavallaro, Events & Community Manager 40enne al lavoro a Barcellona, ci spiega come approdare nella capitale catalana -iconica meta di espatrio per i giovani italiani nei primi anni 2000 - per avviare un percorso di crescita professionale - ospite in onda Jacopo Martella, co-founder dell'associazione Italian Professional Network;- Alessio Romeo, Digital Innovator e HR Startup Inventor, ci porta a scoprire i trend lavorativi e le migliori offerte di impiego in Europa e nel mondo;- nella rubrica "Expats Social Club" nuovo appuntamento con i consigli pratici dell'Associazione delle Camere di Commercio Italiane all'Estero, con la quale andiamo ad esplorare le opportunità di fare impresa a livello globale. Oggi facciamo tappa in Australia, insieme a Veronica Misciattelli, segretaria generale della Italian Chamber of Commerce and Industry - Victoria and Tasmania.CONNETTITI CON "GENERAZIONI MOBILI""Studiate/lavorate/siete imprenditori all'estero? Siete junior o senior? Avete una storia da raccontare e consigli preziosi da dare per cogliere opportunità oltreconfine, sfruttando le occasioni di mobilità internazionale? Scrivete a: generazionimobili@radio24.itOppure, avete domande da porre su come studiare/fare stage/lavorare/avviare start-up all'estero? Inviatele a: generazionimobili@radio24.itInfine, avete un sito/blog all'estero, nel quale fornite consigli pratici su come trasferirsi nel vostro attuale Paese di residenza? O avete scritto un libro su questo tema? Segnalateci tutto, sempre a: generazionimobili@radio24.it
This week, Jamie Russo tackles a slightly uncomfortable question—especially for someone who runs a program called Community Manager University. But if you're struggling to find quality candidates when you post that job title, this episode might change how you think about recruiting. Here's the problem: the community manager title anchors candidates on member interaction and engagement. But the actual job? It's pipeline management, CRM updates, billing follow-up, vendor coordination, office turnovers, social media, sales tours, and—oh yeah—also community building. When you hire someone expecting to spend their day chatting with members and they end up spending three hours in HubSpot, you've got a mismatch. And that mismatch starts with the title. We talk about: Why "Location Manager" might attract better candidates (and who's testing it successfully) How to prioritize the five hats: operations, community building, sales & marketing, finance, and leadership The front-of-house vs back-of-house split when you have two people on site Why the biggest gap is CRM use—and how the title sets the wrong expectations How to design a daily schedule based on what actually matters most in your business right now When community manager IS the right title (and when it's not) The downloadable template to help you prioritize hats and write a job description that matches reality This conversation is for operators who are tired of hiring people who don't fit the role—or who lose great team members because the job wasn't what they expected. If you're about to post a job or wondering why your last hire didn't work out, this episode will help you rethink your approach. Resources Mentioned in this Podcast: Profit Accelerator Program Everything Coworking Featured Resources: Masterclass: 3 Behind-the-Scenes Secrets to Opening a Coworking Space Coworking Startup School Community Manager University Follow Us on YouTube
Ever wondered what it takes to become a Google Developer Expert or how the world's biggest tech communities actually stay connected? In this episode, Brooke & Matt sit down with Magda Kustosz, the Angular Community Manager for Google, to explore the human side of the ecosystem. From practical tips for introverted engineers to stay involved, to a manager's guide for spotting a toxic team culture before it starts, Magda breaks down how "community-first engineering" can skyrocket your career and your job satisfaction. If you've ever felt like just a gear in a machine, tune in to learn how to find your voice and make a real impact in the dev world!Connect with Us:https://www.linkedin.com/in/magdakustosz/https://www.linkedin.com/in/jedibravery/https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthewbchristiansen/Follow us on X:@DevLifePodcastThe DevLIfe Podcast is a part of ng-conf. ng-conf is a multi-day Angular conference focused on delivering the highest quality training in the Angular JavaScript framework. Developers from across the globe converge every year to attend talks and workshops by the Angular team and community experts.JoinAttendXBluesky ReadWatchStock media provided by JUQBOXMUSIC/ Pond5
Think your university's perfectly curated Instagram feed is attracting Gen Z students? Think again. Employee advocacy experts Ben Hayes and Maria DeMario reveal why letting professors post typos and unpopular opinions on LinkedIn might be your best recruitment strategy yet. But here's the catch: if you're asking faculty to 'stick to brand guidelines,' you're missing the entire point. Discover why the messiest social media presence might be your competitive advantage in the age of AI.Guest Names:Maria Di Mario, Head of Editorial, Hubbub LabsBen Hayes, Senior Account & Community Manager, Hubbub Labs Guest Socials: Maria: https://www.linkedin.com/in/maria-di-mario/Ben: https://www.linkedin.com/in/benjaminhayes80/Guest Bios: Maria Di Mario is Head of Editorial at Hubbub Labs, a Barcelona-based marketing agency specialising in education. With more than 18 months leading the agency's editorial strategy, she shapes high-impact content for education organisations across international markets. Her work sits at the intersection of storytelling, strategy, and education. She develops thought leadership, long-form content, and campaign narratives that help institutions strengthen recruitment, build brand authority, and communicate complex ideas with clarity and nuance. Advising on brand voice, content frameworks and emerging challenges, she is particularly focused on issues of access, equity, and the shifting landscape of international student mobility. Beyond marketing, she advocates for creativity and sustainability, building a personal brand that challenges conventional narratives while elevating thoughtful and intentional work.Ben Hayes is the Senior Account and Community Manager at Hubbub Labs. Daily, he brings more than 20 years experience working in Marketing and Education, and uses this to help create and manage a variety of high impact campaigns for major brands in the education space. His work ensures that strategy, messaging, content and community work in harmony to not only drive results for education brands, but also help people access education to transform their lives. This year, in conjunction with Maria, he developed and launched an internal Employee Advocacy programme at Hubbub Labs and used this experience to lead a client programme. He's passionate about the connections, ROI and personal sense of accomplishment that comes from a well run Employee Advocate programme. - - - -Connect With Our Host:Safaniya Stevensonhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/safaniyastevenson/ About The Enrollify Podcast Network:Talking Tactics is a part of the Enrollify Podcast Network. If you like this podcast, chances are you'll like other Enrollify shows too! Enrollify is made possible by Element451 — The AI Workforce Platform for Higher Ed. Learn more at element451.com. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Kendall Breitman is the Community Manager at Riverside.fm and discusses her transition from political journalism to podcasting, emphasizing the importance of community engagement and storytelling. She highlights Riverside's tools, including the CO-creator (nicknamed Coco) for marketing materials and Magic Audio for audio enhancement. Riverside's new hosting feature integrates recording, editing, and publishing, simplifying workflows. Kendall also mentions the potential for in-person recording and the benefits of live streaming on platforms like YouTube and Twitch. She stresses the importance of community support and ease of use in podcasting, aiming to make content creation more accessible for all.If you would like to try out Riverside.fm - you can do so here and there may be a nice discount in there for you.Please sign up for the SOUNDING OFF Newsletter. All the things that went unsaid on the show.Also we added the Sound Off Podcast to the The Open Podcast Prefix Project (OP3) A free and open-source podcast prefix analytics service committed to open data and listener privacy. You can be a nosey parker by checking out our downloads here.Thanks to the following organizations for supporting the show:Nlogic - TV & Radio Audience Data SolutionsMegatrax - Licensed Music for your radio station or podcast production company.Podderapp: Where podcasters can get access to their advanced data dashboard here.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Enjoyed our podcast? Shoot us a text and let us know—because great conversations never end at the last word!This week on TezTalks Radio, host Brandon Langston is joined by Islam, Community Manager at Trilitech, for a thoughtful conversation about responsibility, judgment, and the emotional reality of working closely with people.Before entering the Tezos ecosystem, Islam seriously considered a career in medicine. That interest in care, responsibility, and human impact never disappeared. It simply found a different place to live. In this episode, we explore how those values translate into community work, where decisions matter, clarity is essential, and there is rarely a script to follow. Our guest is Islam, a community manager at Trilitech whose work sits at the intersection of people, communication, and responsibility across the Tezos ecosystem. In this episode, we explore:What drew Islam toward medicine and what stayed with him after choosing a different pathHow responsibility shows up in community roles without formal authorityThe parallels between medical clarity and careful communicationHow judgment is formed when rules alone are not enoughWhat community experiments reveal, even when they fall shortThe emotional weight of working closely with people at scaleLessons drawn from long-term loyalty and expectationWhat good engagement actually looks like from the community sideOne misconception about community-facing roles that causes the most frictionWhat Islam hopes his work contributes to over time, beyond metrics
Community Manager at Scoir, Sarah, shares her top pieces of advice for students heading into winter break. We cover 4 tips for seniors and 4 tips for underclassmen. Let's dive in!Follow us on Instagram!Learn more about Scoir
Barbara Dunkelman is here to chat about her incredible journey from being a fan to being the voice of Rooster Teeth's Yang Xiao Long on RWBY. She opens up about the company's unexpected closure, dealing with planning a wedding, and finding relief in a major life change. This deep-dive covers the pressure of chasing trends and the truth about self-worth outside of analytics. We also explore profound personal philosophies, including the 10% vs. 90% rule of reaction , the power of the "Main Character Complex", and the anxiety around personal choices. Barbara and Kati get candid about their shared decision to be childfree, battling societal pressure, and the freedom that comes with fully committing to a life without regret. Plus, learn about her new product line and her D&D podcast, Tales from the Stinky Dragon. My new book is available for pre-order! Why Do I Keep Doing This? https://geni.us/XoyLSQ Book Tour: https://katimorton.com/wdikdt-book-tour If you've ever felt stuck, this book is for you. I'd be so grateful for your support. Shopping with our sponsors helps support the show and allows us to continue bringing you these important conversations about mental health. Please check out this week's special offers: Aura Frames - use the promo code: KATI at https://auraframes.com/ for $35 off Carver Matte frames Fabletics - 80% off everything for new VIP sign-ups at https://www.fabletics.com/Kati One Skin - use the promo code: KATI for 15% off at https://www.oneskin.co/Kati ⏱️ Timestamps 00:01:32 Moving to Austin: Joining Rooster Teeth and the stressful work visa process. 00:04:14 The early days of RT: Starting as Community Manager when the company was tiny. 00:18:54 Barbara's Anxiety: Starting Always Open and her interest in mental health. 00:23:22 The 10/90 Rule: You have control over how you react to things. 00:25:04 The Main Character Complex: Why everyone is thinking about themselves, not you. 00:28:23 Therapy Search: The challenge of finding the right fit for counseling. 00:44:49 The Scariest Standard: How being exposed to "the best of the best" online affects self-image. 00:46:35 Phone Addiction: Strategies Barbara uses to put her phone in "timeout". 00:47:44 Choosing Childfree: Why Barbara decided against having kids and the pressure to procreate. 00:50:02 Ending the Regret Cycle: Making the decision and committing to it fully. 00:53:01 The "Selfish" Argument: Why choosing your own happiness isn't truly selfish. 01:04:11 The Next Chapter: Retaining the IP for Tales from the Stinky Dragon. 01:06:02 New Venture: Developing her own hair styling cream. 01:08:29 Intentional Travel: Living out their Childfree plans with a trip to Japan More Barbara! Tales from the Stinky Dragon https://www.youtube.com/@stinkydragonpod Barbara's Instagram https://www.instagram.com/bdunkelman All Good. No Worries https://www.instagram.com/allgood.noworries Don't forget to Like and Subscribe for more Ask Kati Anything episodes every week Ask Kati Anything ep. 291 | Your mental health podcast, with Kati Morton, LMFT MAIN YOUTUBE CHANNEL www.youtube.com/@Katimorton MY BOOKS Traumatized https://geni.us/Bfak0j Are u ok? https://geni.us/sva4iUY ONLINE THERAPY While I do not currently offer online therapy, our sponsor BetterHelp can connect you with a licensed, online therapist. Receive 10% off your first month at https://betterhelp.com/kati PARTNERSHIPS Nick Freeman | nick@biglittlemedia.co Disclaimer: The information provided in this video is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as medical or mental health advice. It should not be used to diagnose or treat any health problem or disease. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional for diagnosis and treatment. Viewing this content does not establish a therapist-client relationship. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
"First Sergeant (Res.) Yehuda Lapian is a dedicated IDF combat veteran who served over 179 days on the front lines in Gaza and Lebanon during the ongoing war. A former Knesset advisor strengthening Israel-U.S. ties, Yehuda now serves as Community Manager for the Peace of Mind program, supporting IDF veterans' mental health and civilian transition. Passionate about equal IDF conscription and veteran rights, he's a vocal advocate on TV and at demonstrations. An avid ice swimmer and proud Israeli, Yehuda shares inspiring stories of resilience, faith, and brotherhood from the battlefield."Support Us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/cryforzionFollow Yehuda Lapian here:Website: https://peaceofmind.org.il/home-english/Instagram: @ylapian06#Podcast #Israel #BreakingIsraelNews #DoronKeidar #TheDoronKeidarPodcast #yehudalapian #warrior #peaceofmind #pts #ptsd
Holiday scammers are working overtime this year. Antonio Lara, local Chase Community manager, talks about how combat scams.
C'est le grand retour de Community Manager. Après quelques mois qui ont permis à Guillaume et Vincent de faire un tas de trucs sans intérêt, les voici donc à nouveau réunis pour le meilleur et le pire dans le petit studio de Pierre-Yves et Sylvain, chacun devant son micro, les mâchoires un peu rouillées mais l'esprit vif et prêts à nous instruire et nous surprendre. Mais sont-ils encore au niveau ? Musiques : Le chien dans la vitrine - Line Renaud, I Wanna Be Your Dog – The Stooges, Who Let The Dogs Out - Baha Men, Universal (musique type Ford Boyard)Extraits Youtube : Le prof du web (générique), Youtube – DEVENIR UN CHIOT, ZOO PHILIE, LIBERTÉ, SANTÉ MENTAL, PUPPY PLAY - Bailey balance son TEM, Youtube - Puppy Play: mes chiens sont des humains (DOCUMENTAIRE) Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Hoy, jueves 13 de noviembre de 2025, episodio 1894, te cuento por qué muchos negocios terminan perdiendo el control de sus cuentas y cómo evitarlo organizando correctamente tus activos en Meta Business Suite. No es paranoia: es gestión profesional
Thanks for watching The Higher Self.If today's episode spoke to you, here are the next steps to go deeper:
Hear that? That's the sound of STEM careers taking off. Meet CoDrone EDU from Robolink — the drone made for classrooms and competitions and the sponsor for this episode. It's safe, durable, and fixable — with no FAA license or assembly required to fly and help every student feel more confident in a tech-driven world. Students fly CoDrone EDU three ways: manually, coded with Blockly, or coded with Python. See how over 7 thousand schools have proven you CAN have drones in classrooms, buzz and all, at www.robolink.com Ever wondered how to get a drone club off the ground—without crashing it on day one? In this episode, we're joined by Frankie Baker, former classroom teacher turned Community Manager at Robolink, to break down the big wins (and mistakes) teachers make when bringing drones into their schools. From fixable, flyable classroom drones to career-ready skills and whale snot (yes, really), we're covering everything you didn't know you needed to know about drones in education. Whether you're drone-curious or halfway to competition day, this episode will give you the real talk, the how-tos, and a few good laughs. In This Episode, You'll Learn: The real reason most teachers fail at starting a drone club Why drones aren't just toys—and how they build real-world skills A $250 drone that doesn't need an FAA license? Yep. Free curriculum + PD that makes drone clubs teacher-friendly Student-led learning in action: from Earth Day bees to conference presenters Why Frankie's Twitter handle is "BaconEdTech" A food segment featuring sourdough gone wrong and pan de muerto done right Gabriel's Sourdough Pan De Muerto Recipe Connect With Gabriel Carrillo EdTech Bites Website: https://edtechbites.com EdTech Bites On Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/edtechbites.bsky.social EdTech Bites Instagram: https://instagram.com/edtechbites EdTech Bites X: https://twitter.com/edtechbites EdTech Bites Facebook Page: https://facebook.com/edtechbites EdTech Bites On TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@edtechbites EdTech Bites YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@edtechbites About Frankie Baker A self-proclaimed "hype girl of all the things," Frankie is committed to empowering teachers to confidently integrate technology and foster student voice, choice, and agency in every classroom. With a strong focus on AI in education, robotics, and coding, she helps bridge the gap between tech and curriculum—making it approachable and meaningful for all learners. Frankie thrives on learning through collaboration and loves growing her network through communities, tools, and events that push the boundaries of what's possible in education. Connect With Frankie Frankie On X: https://x.com/baconedtech Frankie On Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/baconedtech/ Frankie On LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/frankie-baker-9001636a/ Robolink Website: https://www.robolink.com Robolink On Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/robolinkinc/ Robolink On YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@robolinkinc
Thanks for watching The Higher Self.If today's episode spoke to you, here are the next steps to go deeper:
Episode SummaryIn this episode of Player Driven, Greg talks with Keith Pape, founder of YellowPike Media, about how to build authentic, lasting connections between studios, players, and communities. Keith shares how YellowPike became known as a gaming marketing agency that thrives on creativity, bold experiential campaigns, and a passion for games.From Times Square takeovers for Metal Gear to guiding indie studios on their first hires, YellowPike Media focuses on doing the right thing—for clients, communities, and players. If you're interested in game marketing strategies, community management, or how agencies partner with developers and publishers, this episode is packed with insights.Key Takeaways All-In Culture – Why YellowPike Media avoids rigid roles and builds campaigns through collaboration across trailers, influencers, events, and content. Community Managers as Essential Hires – How strong community leads shape player trust and often grow into producers, biz dev, or operations. Experiential Marketing Done Right – Lessons from live activations like the Metal Gear Solid Times Square campaign, and how to turn moments into long-tail content.About YellowPike MediaFounded by Keith Pape, YellowPike Media is a creative gaming marketing agency built by lifelong gamers. With over a decade of experience, the agency has worked with top publishers and indie studios to deliver standout campaigns across influencers, community, live events, and storytelling. Their philosophy is simple: do the right thing, and long-term success follows.Connect with Keith and YellowPike Media: Twitter/X: @YPM_agency Instagram: @YPM_agency Threads / Bluesky: @YPM_agencyLinks & Resources Explore more episodes of Player Driven, the podcast about the business of games: playerdriven.io Subscribe on YouTube, Spotify, or Apple Podcasts
In this two-part episode, we explore the evolving role of artificial intelligence in enterprise networking—not just as a buzzword, but as a powerful tool for transformation. Cisco experts: Joe Clarke, Distinguished Engineer; Kareem Iskander, Principal Engineer and Technical Advocacy Lead; and Hank Preston, Distinguished Architect, join host Matt Saunders, Community Manager for the Cisco Learning Network, is joined by three. Together, they dive into how AI is reshaping network automation, operations, and the skills needed to thrive in this new era. The conversation covers foundational definitions of AI, the rise of agentic AI, and practical strategies for network engineers—whether you're writing scripts or not—to leverage AI as a tool for efficiency and insight. AMA with Kareem on the Cisco Learning Network: https://learningnetwork.cisco.com/s/question/0D5Kd0000BkfcuLKQQ/ask-me-anything-ai
In this episode of What's New at CFI on FinPod, we're introducing the CFI AI Tutor, a powerful learning assistant designed to provide instant, contextual help to every learner.Join Meeyeon as she sits down with Sebastian Taylor and Stephen Moerane to dive into the core features of this innovative tool.This episode covers:Why AI Tutor? The motivation behind building a 24/7 support tool is to provide instant answers, complementing CFI's in-depth video courses.Smarter Than ChatGPT: Learn what makes the CFI AI Tutor a hyper-specialized tool that provides contextualized answers based on the specific lesson you're watching, your career, and your industry.Impact on Your Learning: We discuss how the AI Tutor can help you practice concepts, clarify questions, and ultimately improve your performance in end-of-course assessments and certifications.Real-World Learner Feedback: Hear from our Community Manager, Stephen, on how learners are already using the AI Tutor to link complex concepts and get support on their journey.Whether you're working on a course exercise or simply want to test your understanding, the CFI AI Tutor is there to help you every step of the way.
In this episode, I dive into the essential topic of delegating key tasks to a membership community manager.I walk you through the specific responsibilities that have made the biggest impact for us, and why freeing up your time is so crucial as your membership grows.I also share helpful advice for anyone considering hiring their first community manager, plus tips on how to get started if you're unsure what tasks to pass on.If you're looking to take your member experience—and your own sanity—to the next level, this episode is for you!In this episode:What key tasks should you delegate to a community manager in a membership business?How does a community manager enhance the experience for new and existing members?What role can a community manager play in keeping engagement high and answering member questions?What's the best way to start when hiring a community manager, and how do you tailor the role to your membership's specific needs?Key Quotes & Takeaways:"You can't be the rock star and the roadie. Your time, your attention is best spent on the things that only you can do. Things that are centered around really harnessing your expertise and turning it into content, turning it into coaching, turning it into opportunities to give your community access to you. That's going to take up enough of your time. And that's just the stuff where you're working in the business.""(The role of a community manager) is much more about being almost a concierge of sorts, about suggesting that other people join the conversation, about pointing them to other resources or even tagging myself, you know, if it's something that we know that I need to chime in on them going in there and tagging me to kind of bump it up my priority list." "If you know that you want to level up things with your member onboarding, but you just don't have the capacity for it, then these are some key things that your community manager could bring to the table."Thank You For ListeningWe really appreciate you choosing to listen to us and for supporting the podcast. We would be eternally grateful if you would consider taking a minute or two to leave an honest review and rating for the show. They're extremely helpful when it comes to reaching our audience and we read each and every one personally!Finally, don't forget to subscribe to the podcast to make sure that you never miss an episode.
Are you interested in committing to a goal? Have you been struggling to get back to the gym? Then this is the episode for you to dive into. I talk with MK Stahl. She is a multi-location Fit Body Boot Camp owner, and Community Manager for the franchise. She is a mom, and a wife and is passionate about helping others live their best life on their own terms. She is an expert at balancing motherhood and business ownership. MK prides herself on helping others move outside of their comfort zone, at the gym, and in all areas of life! We discuss the balance of owning a business and being a mother. MK also shares her experiences helping people reach their goals. We really take some time to discuss consistency, motivation, accountability and how those factors work together for a successful life. Questions I asked: · Can you tell us about yourself? · How do you manage everything in your life? · Can you tell us how you find the right people to help you? · Why is communication so important to a business? · Do you still teach classes? · Why is it so hard to keep a positive mindset? · How did you build your community culture? · How do you keep from being too salesy? · What daily habits do you have in business? · Did your husband leave FitBody Boot Camps? · What's your favorite quote? · Where can people find you online? Topics Discussed: · Balancing work and motherhood. · Finding support. · Accountability. · Consistency. · Starting a business. Quotes from the show: · “Delegating has been my #1 focus right now.” Mary Katherine Stahl @SisterhoodSweat · “Have consistency in your schedule for team meetings every week.” Mary Katherine Stahl @SisterhoodSweat · “We have people leave it at the door when they come to the studio.” Mary Katherine Stahl @SisterhoodSweat · “We're known for the level of accountability we give to our members.” Mary Katherine Stahl @SisterhoodSweat How you can stay in touch with MK: · Website · Twitter · Facebook · Instagram · LinkedIn How you can stay in touch with Linda: Website Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube SoundCloud "Proud Sponsors of the Sisterhood of S.W.E.A.T" Essential Formulas
Side Quests is back and this episode's host is marketer, producer, community manager, podcaster, content creator and Watcher, Jenny Windom! The game she is talking about today is 1000xRESIST by Sunset Visitor and Fellow Traveller. You can also find her work here and here! We have a Patreon! Gain access to episode shout outs, bonus podcasts, reviews, early downloads of regular episodes, an exclusive rss feed and more! Click here! You can find the show on Bluesky, Instagram and YouTube! Please rate and review us on Apple Podcasts! Rate us on Spotify! Wanna join the Certain POV Discord? Click here!
AI is finding its way into almost every corner of customer service, but is it really what customers want? According to Kinsta's recent survey, the answer is overwhelmingly no. An incredible 93 percent of respondents said they would rather speak to a human than an AI chatbot when they need support. Nearly half even said they would cancel a service if it relied solely on AI-driven support. In this episode, Roger Williams, Community Manager at Kinsta, breaks down the story behind those numbers and explains why his team continues to invest heavily in human-first support. Kinsta has built its reputation on 24/7 access to real engineers who understand the complexities of WordPress hosting, resulting in a 98 percent customer satisfaction score and consistently high ratings on platforms like G2 and Trustpilot. Roger shares how Kinsta blends human expertise with AI tools in a way that enhances, rather than replaces, the customer experience. He talks about the role empathy plays in building trust, the importance of empowering support staff to own conversations, and why support should be viewed as an opportunity to strengthen relationships rather than just a cost to be reduced. We also discuss the growing perception that AI in support is more about saving money than improving service, how business leaders can avoid falling into that trap, and what the future of open web hosting could look like as AI capabilities mature. Whether you are in tech leadership, run a customer-facing team, or simply value a good support experience, this conversation offers insights that go beyond the AI hype and focus on what truly matters to customers.
Join us on Spawn on Me as we sit down with the incredible Victoria Tran to uncover her latest must‑read—and learn how community management is evolving in 2025. Victoria breaks it all down with insight and practical wisdom. Whether you're building niche communities, hosting IRL meetups, or craving authentic connection in a digital world dizzied by automation—this interview is the compass you didn't know you needed. Tap in to discover the future of community building, one conversation at a time
This week on Marni on the Move, I'm joined by professional runner and COROS team member, Charlie Sweeney. Fresh off a 19th-place finish at the 2025 Boston Marathon—with a personal best time of 2:12:00—Charlie gives us a behind-the-scenes look at what it really takes to compete at the elite level while holding down a full-time job in the endurance sports tech world. We talk about how he got into running, what pushed him to go pro, who's coaching him, and how he manages a training load of over 130 miles per week. We also dive into the gear he trusts, including the shoes he races in and how COROS plays a role in his training and recovery. Whether you're training for your next race, dreaming of the pro path, or just love a good deep dive into endurance performance—this episode is full of insights and inspiration. CONNECT Charkie Sweeny on Instagram Marni On The Move Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, or YouTube` Marni Salup on Instagram and Playlist on Spotify SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER Sign up for our monthly newsletter, Do What Moves You, for Marni on the Move updates, exclusive offers, invites to events, and exciting news! SUPPORT THE PODCAST Leave us a five stars and a review on Apple, it's easy, scroll through the episode list on your podcast app, click on five stars, click on leave a review, and share what you love about the conversations you're listening to. Tell your friends the episodes you are listening to on your social. Share a screen shot of the episode in your stories, tag us, we will tag you back! Subscribe, like and comment on our YouTube Channel, MarniOnTheMovePodcast