Blogging Boot Camp Saturday September 24

Blogging Boot CampOn Saturday, September 24, Jeff Bennett and I are co-teaching a Blogging Boot Camp at High Tech Maui. We’ve combined elements from our past blogging workshops with some new material to present a real world approach to blogging from soup to nuts. Should be fun. Hope you’ll join us.

Topics include:

  • Introduction to Blogging
    • Why blog
    • Etiquette
    • Website = Blog
    • Do’s and Don’t’s
    • Blog software options (WordPress, Posterous, Tumblr, Blogger, Typepad, Drupal…)
    • Hosting your own blog vs free blogging services
  • Blogging Workflow
    • Basic blog post
    • Photography blogs
    • Video blogs
    • Organizing, categorizing, tags, sticky posts, featured posts, etc.
  • Content Ideas
    • Coming up with ideas to blog about
    • Based on nuts of bolts of business
    • Photos, videos
    • Constantly answering questions (FAQ)
  • Timing
    • Rhythm, consistency
    • Posting times
    • Responding to comments, commenting on other blogs
    • Types of comments
  • Measurements and Metrics
    • Google Analytics
    • Feedburner
    • WordPress stats
    • SEO
  • Autoposting
    • Strategy
    • Posterous
    • Networked Blogs
    • Facebooks
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn
  • Basic of setting up a blog in WordPress

This workshop will consist of presentation material as well as hands-on time to assist participants with their existing blogs or setting up a new blog. We’ll also go through some exercises to help students brainstorm practical ideas they can apply to their own blogs.

Laptops are welcome but not mandatory. (This is not a follow-along workshop.)

Date: Saturday, September 24, 2011

Time: 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.

Location: Malcolm Center, 1305 Holopono St., Suite 1, Kihei

Cost: $65

Seating limited to 30

Register Online!

Originally posted at Kaiscapes ->

Tastings Of Archipelago

I had a great time shooting photos at Tastings Of Archipelago event night before last, hosted by Dania Katz of Edible Hawaiian Islands and my client Rick Cowan at his Archipelago Maui showroom. The event was a fundraiser for the Lahainaluna Agricultural Department Youth At Risk program. Great people, great venue, great cause and amazing food.

Tastings Of Archipelago

See all the photos at my social media site ->

Taking Risks Can Lead To Success

In this video, my friend Roxanne Darling interviews Charlene Kauhane (of Kauhane Inc.) and Kelii Brown of the Maui Visitors Bureau over at the Ulupalakua Ranch during our Malama Maui tour last month. Part of the discussion involves social media and how taking risks can lead to great things.




Originally posted on Kaiscapes Internet Consulting.

The Business Lessons Of Lavender

Aliʻi Kula Lavender
Before my social media consulting practice, I had a photography business in Maui. One of my first clients in that business was Ali‘i Kula Lavender. A good friend of mine sent some email to co-founder Lani Weigert asking permission to take some casual photographs of the farm. Lani agreed, and asked if she knew anyone who might be interested in shooting professional photographs for their marketing campaign. My friend recommended me, I met with Lani and a collaboration was born.

Aliʻi Kula LavenderI’ve been to the farm dozens of times over the years, as a professional and otherwise, and to this day, there’s a feeling that envelopes me when I get out of the car and look around. Not being an overly spiritual person, it takes a lot to awaken that part of me. You don’t get to be a successful photographer if you can’t tap that part of yourself, and I’d learned to do it over time, but it takes effort. This place makes it easy. Some of my best work came from here, even though it was commercial photography for the most part. All it took was listening to what the place had to say.

It wasn’t until later, after I’d been working with the company for a while, that I found out about its spiritual beginnings. I had the honor of having some of my photographs included among others in a book they released called The Maui Book of Lavender. Reading the last chapter in my signed copy, I learned that the original partners, Ali‘i Chang, Lani Weigert and Mars Simpson, founded the business on four basic principles.

Mists of Haleakala irrigates the lavender.Make The Most of What You Have
Water is scarce in Kula, and farming traditional crops is a struggle from year to year. Ali‘i chose a drought-resistant crop; something that could be irrigated by the mists forming over the slopes of Haleakalā for the most part, and that was one of the keys to success.

Lavender Herb TeaCollaborate and Everybody Wins
Growing a business without money or expertise to create lavender products was a huge challenge. By collaborating with home-based businesses around them, the owners were able to create the assets they needed for success, and everyone ended up getting more business than they could have imagined.

Market to the Local Community
The events of September 11, 2001 brought tourism to a standstill, and times were tough in Hawai‘i. They began inviting members of the local senior community for tours, gaining their trust and enthusiasm over time. In a culture where the younger generations are taught to obey their elders, word spread, and a groundswell following brought more than 3000 visitors by the next year. Today, even though they have a considerable amount of tourist traffic, a large percentage of their business comes from a loyal local community.

Aliʻi Kula LavenderOperate with Aloha
When sightseeing companies wanted to bring their big tour buses to the farm, they refused, even though this would have brought in a lot more business. In the quiet, rural community of Kula, large tour buses would have been disruptive to their neighbors.

Even at the cost of the extra business, they wouldn’t stray from a value system based around the Hawaiian word Kuleana—being responsible and honest.

Aliʻi Kula LavenderThey are the sponsors of a grassroots movement called Sustainable Aloha that advocates socially responsible practices such as buying locally grown food and products from locally owned businesses, and being less reliant on imports from other parts of the world for the sustenance of the local communities.

In a former life, I was a part of several large businesses in the corporate world. Many would have benefited from the principles that Ali‘i Kula Lavender were founded upon. They continue to flourish not only as a popular destination for tourists and locals alike, but as a company whose culinary, bath and body, and aromatherapy products embody a lifestyle of luxury and comfort, made possible by people who care about their community, and a small, unassuming, drought-resistant purple flower.

Read more about Ali‘i Kula Lavender:
The Lavender Story
Grown On Maui Bus Tour

Ch-Ch-Changes

I’m in the process of compartmentalizing my photography business onto its own site — peterliuphoto.com — and repurposing kaiscapes.com for other pursuits. Add it to your bookmarks. More on the “other pursuits” later. Watch this space. You recall I’ve been staring at my navel a lot and working on tangents that involve the photography and art. Well, things are ch-ch-changing.

Email stays the same for now… send some, will ya!

Aloha…