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Tell Everyone: Why We Share and Why It Matters Kindle Edition
Every day more than 500 million messages are sent on Twitter, 800 million people share four billion stories, links, photographs and videos on Facebook. Every minute, 100 hours of video is uploaded to YouTube. And the flow is ever-increasing. In this new era of media saturation, what do we mean by “the news”? Is “the most trusted name in news” today a veteran anchor on television or an undergraduate tweeting from Tahrir Square in Cairo?
The day before yesterday, news and information was scarce, coming from a few newspapers or broadcasters. Now, not only are we able to connect and collaborate to create our own media, but for the first time have access to a global audience. Together we can help to bring down governments or chasten international corporations. We can hasten the spread of gossip, rumour and lies. We can market our products more widely and efficiently than ever--if we take the trouble to discover why people share and to whom.
In this groundbreaking work, online news pioneer and social media maven Alfred Hermida examines how our ability to create and share news is shaping the information we receive and depend on to make informed decisions, from choosing politicians to doing business. Drawing on historical examples, real-world experiences and leading research, he equips us with the knowledge and insight to navigate successfully the social streams of information that shape how we view the world.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherDoubleday Canada
- Publication dateOct. 14 2014
- File size4108 KB
Product description
Review
"Insightful." —The Globe and Mail
"[Hermida is] wonderfully clear eyed about contemporary culture. . . . His lucid, energetic prose demonstrates his reportorial instincts. . . . As Hermida moves from topic to topic—politics, marketing, revolutions, labour unrest, etc.—he delivers many . . . thought-provoking insights." —The Globe and Mail
“This thoughtful and often amusing social history of social media shows how the abundance of information available today affects how we understand and give context to world events . . . [This] book succeeds by using real-life examples—from Tahrir Square to Anthony Weiner’s sexting mishap.” —Toronto Star
“Tell Everyone is an easy read with lots of takeaway . . . one of the first books to successfully explain the sharing logic of social media.” —Digital Journalism
"Hermida does a good job of presenting the happy side of social media and the effect it has on the world, while still acknowledging the drawbacks, imperfections, and misunderstandings of what has become a cultural norm. . . . Tell Everyone is an excellent read for anyone trying to make sense of the morphed landscape of technological advancement that we are all living in." —Vancouver Weekly
"Tell Everyone gives the reader the chance to inhabit what many think is a tantalising if largely unachievable environment—a world of reflection and context amid the chaos and opportunity of the constantly evolving media landscape. Hermida’s work highlights patterns of failure through the ages and clues about what behaviour stands the test of time. I found the book a very helpful guide to understanding the author’s main preoccupation of why we share and why it matters."
—David Walmsley, Editor-in-Chief, The Globe and Mail
"To share is human. This truth is so obvious that we routinely overlook it when caught up in competitive games and territorial defensiveness. But no one running a company, a team or a family stands a chance of success until they inspire and liberate our collaborative, communicative instincts. Hermida understands this and sees it in everything we do, make and build. The technology may be new but message is eternal: Information—like power—makes its greatest impact when it is shared." —Margaret Heffernan, author of A Bigger Prize: How We Can Do Better than the Competition
"In Tell Everyone Alfred Hermida explores the inverted news paradigm created by user-generated content and social media. His investigations give us critical insight into one of the most disrupted industries of the post internet era. A must read for anyone who cares about the way we now make and receive our news." —Michael Tippett, Director, New Products, Hootsuite Labs
"We all know social media has changed our world but Tell Everyone is the first serious attempt to analyze what that change really means. From street protests to relationships to news coverage and everything in between, Alfred Hermida's fascinating new book answers the question 'what have we created and are we better off for it?' #youwanttoreadthisbook." —Peter Mansbridge
"An insightful and compelling look at how the communication and the distribution of information has changed—now that practically everyone has their own forum to ‘broadcast’ at their fingertips." —Kirstine Stewart
“An excellent analysis of how social media is changing social and media dynamics.” —John Stackhouse, former editor-in-chief of The Globe and Mail
“A wide-ranging book about what to be aware of, as social media becomes an increasingly important tool in our work or life. It will be of interest to you if you’re wondering how social media specifically impacts entertainment, activism, politics, international crises, marketing or business.” —New Canadian Media
“A remarkable book characterized by smart insights, a lively narrative and impressive research.” —J-source.ca
"A lightning fast read still chock-full of important takeaways. Whether you’re in public relations, journalism or advertising, Hermida’s carefully researched tome will help open your eyes to the hazards and potential inherent in today’s social mediasphere—and maybe leave you reassessing your next tweet, to boot.” —Communications @ Syracuse University
About the Author
Alfred Hermida, PhD, is an award-winning author, online news pioneer and digital media scholar. He is an associate professor and director of the School of Journalism at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, where he focuses on digital journalism and social media. Recognized as one of Canada’s leading social media experts, Hermida is regularly featured in national and international news outlets. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including the 2015 National Business Book Award and the 2011 UBC President’s Award for Public Education Through Media. Hermida was a BBC journalist for 16 years, including four as a correspondent in North Africa and the Middle East.
http://alfredhermida.com/
@Hermida
www.facebook.com/TellEveryoneBook
http://www.telleveryone.ca/
Product details
- ASIN : B00K4C3QTG
- Publisher : Doubleday Canada (Oct. 14 2014)
- Language : English
- File size : 4108 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 274 pages
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Alfred Hermida combines academic rigour with a journalist's sensibility on how to tell a compelling story. An award-winning digital media pioneer at the forefront of research into social media and new forms of storytelling, he is a professor at the School of Journalism, Writing, and Media at the University of British Columbia, Canada. His award-winning book, Tell Everyone: Why We Share and Why It Matters, delves deeply into how social media is reshaping the worlds of media, business and activism. Alfred has a distinguished journalistic pedigree, having honed his craft in telling stories with impact through 16 years at the BBC News, including four years as a correspondent in the Middle East.
Customer reviews
Top reviews from Canada
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- Reviewed in Canada on December 29, 2014Christmas present for son, he was pleased.
- Reviewed in Canada on October 17, 2014University of British Columbia professor and former BBC News online editor Alfred Hermida believes that, rather than an addiction to social media, we have an addiction to each other. His new book, "Tell Everyone," examines how we gather and disseminate information about our fellow humans in the digital age and concludes that Facebook, Twitter and the like have empowered a wide swath of ordinary people and turned them into citizen journalists and consumers. Hermida comes across as a digital utopian, naively avowing that social media has made it possible to wrest power from the hands of both the government and corporate elites pursuing their own venal ends.
To begin, he provides a cursory survey of the psychology underpinning the way people share information online: stories that make us happy are more likely to go viral than those that make us sad, though anger and disgust also turn out to be strong motivators for what gets liked, retweeted, and otherwise passed around.
Unfortunately, Hermida’s arguments read as one-sided and limited in their scope; the author cherry-picks examples and ignores anything that undermines his own agenda. He insists on the importance of social media in elevating voices on the ground during the Arab Spring uprisings in 2011, neglecting more recent findings that said influence was overstated. He quotes poet and fellow digital evangelist John Perry Barlow, who wrote that people online should be free to “express [their] beliefs, no matter how singular, without fear of being coerced into silence or conformity,” but ignores the damaging way in which herd mentality operates online. Furthermore, he disregards the dark side of social-media conversations, which at worst can drive a bullied teen like Amanda Todd to suicide, arguing instead that people adding to comment threads “are driven by a desire to nourish relationships with others.”
Oversimplification and a refusal to acknowledge opposing views ultimately render Hermida's analysis incomplete and unconvincing.
Top reviews from other countries
Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United States on May 23, 20205.0 out of 5 stars Worth the price for a psychology book.
Verified PurchaseThis is a book about WHY we share our thoughts. This applies to both on and offline. If you appreciate reading about human psychology, this is a must read.