Ask other Technomancers.  If you have a career goal, put it out there and get 
feedback.

  You can use social media to solicit feedback.

  I'd start first with asking in a forum that is less public and less 
impersonal than most social media.  These lists are a good place if you want to 
cut down the amount of disparagement and ignorant replies - but you'll be 
trading off against a lack of diversity.  We just don't have enough folks to 
cover every aspect of how you might achieve a particular career goal.

  If you are you a member of a professional organization (ACM, IEEE, or ???), 
they probably have some sort of limited membership social media opportunity.  
As a closed society, these tend to be more polite if, perhaps, less active.  
The same goes with school-based groups - I am a member of Zoomienation but I 
see very little traffic from the forums on there, such as Rock the Kill Chain.

  LinkedIn would be the first open social media I would use - get yourself a 
personal account, search for groups using keywords associated with your career 
goal, and then check out those groups.  Some are more active than others, in my 
experience.  I am a member of two groups associated with the Cyber Security 
Forum Initiative <http://www.csfi.us/> that are very active.  I'm also a member 
of the Smart Grid Executive Forum - which is less active.  I'm also a member of 
the Cyber Weapon Global Discussion - I hardly ever hear from it (it started as 
a discussion about Stuxnet and has basically petered out).  Once you find a 
group that fits your career goal, ask your question.

  If you're thinking about a career goal related to creating a startup, then 
try ycombinator's Hacker News <https://news.ycombinator.com/news>.

  If you ask about your career goal on /. or Ars, then you'll get a low signal 
to noise ratio but somewhere in the comments to your Ask Slashdot you're likely 
to find nuggets that tell you how realistic your goal may be.

  I'd avoid putting your question on your Facebook wall or Twitter feed unless 
you've only friended or followed/been followed by knowledgeable technomancers.

ObFriam: I wonder if anyone has ever done a study of social media forums to 
understand how they start, why they continue, and why they slowly die.  I seem 
to remember such a study being done about USENET, but I wonder if the same 
dynamics apply to LinkedIn, Yahoo lists, et cetera.  Would agent-based modeling 
apply?  What about complex systems modeling?

Ray Parks
Consilient Heuristician/IDART Program Manager
V: 505-844-4024  M: 505-238-9359  P: 505-951-6084
NIPR: [email protected]
SIPR: [email protected] (send NIPR reminder)
JWICS: [email protected] (send NIPR reminder)



On Nov 21, 2013, at 11:32 AM, Gillian Densmore wrote:

> Another day as my world oozes along.
> I'll make this  succinct for the benefit of the Technomancers on both lists. 
> 
> Greetings fellow Technomancers:
> Where and or how does one go about getting some notion of how realistic a 
> career goal is these days? 
> 
> ============================================================
> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
> Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
> to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com

Attachment: smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature

============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com

Reply via email to