00:07:19 Thomas Crawford: I am on a computer without video or a mic. I can watch and hear but can't talk. Thus I am watching/listening only. I don't want you to think I'm being rude. 00:20:25 Thomas Crawford: Tom Crawford, Virginia Tech Geography, I've not shared research in things other than academic journals or conferences. 00:20:39 Thomas Crawford: I don't have a mic or camera. 00:31:04 Thomas Crawford: I'm trying to figure out. I have no social media accounts or presence (not even FB). 00:31:45 Emily Fekete (she/her): It's definitely a good question! Hang tight, Lisa will provide some suggestions and then we can discuss further at the end. 00:34:44 Thomas Crawford: Correction, I do have LinkedIn but never really use or curate it. 00:44:55 Lisa Schamess she/her/hers: Great question, Thomas. If you already have LinkedIn, that is a great place to start. I do not feel like it has to be a matter of multiple platforms or going everywhere, if you use the one really well. 00:45:48 Lisa Schamess she/her/hers: That said, the advantage of multiple could be, you write a piece on LinkedIn and then can also share it on Twitter and/or FB. The FB audience tends to be known friends unless you set your settings to all-public; Twitter is public by default. 00:46:33 Lisa Schamess she/her/hers: Another side of this is, instead of having to create content, you are there just to share good things. So, for example, sharing interesting news via Twitter 00:47:31 Lisa Schamess she/her/hers: It takes patience to build a good following on Twitter. At the end of the day, maybe you would prefer to write on LinkedIn and share the link by email to like-minded colleagues to ask them to share it on other platforms. 01:10:15 Thomas Crawford: I'm fine to wrap up. Thank you all so much. This gives me something to start with. Checking out now. :) 01:10:52 Paul McDaniel: Thank you!