About AJ Vaynerchuk

AJ Vaynerchuk is a 21 year old blogger who also dabbles in social media, marketing, and SEO. He spends most of his time on twitter (follow him!) and is excited for his internship at Revision3 this summer. If you'd like, learn more about AJ.

Archive: July 2008

New Threadless Purchase

I’m a sucker for black based shirts with loud colorful designs on top:

newshirt.jpg

Shave Your Head For Charity

* Yes I know all of these “shaves” are actually buzz-cuts.

AJ Vaynerchuk shaved his head for charity.

There is a new web 2.0 meme going around - shaving your head for charity.

It all started when Gary Vaynerchuk shaved his head and said he would donate $300 to charity if Kevin Rose would shave his head.

Kevin did it.

Then Kevin said he would donate $500 if me and Mark Trammell “shaved” our heads.

We did it. Eddie Codel did it too. Apparently Kent Nichols from ask a ninja manned up to Kevin’s challenge.

So far $1100 has been raised to charity, and I think there is more to come!

Explaining Twitter to Chamillionaire at Techcrunch August Capital 2008

If you don’t know who Chamillionaire is read this.

Simply, he’s the guy who sings/raps the popular song “Ridin‘” aka Ridin Dirty.

Last night at the Techcrunch August Capital 2008 party I, along with my buddy Matt Van Horn from Digg, had the opportunity to say a quick hi to Chamillionaire.

Chamillionaire at the Techcrunch party

Chamillionaire was a really nice guy who truly seemed interested in what the Web 2.0 space has to offer. Rather than having his PR team deal with social media, Chamillionaire felt as if it would be best if he truly learned the game. Displaying his knowledge early, he mentioned to Matt that he had seen the little digg buttons all over the place.

One way or another the conversation shifted to Twitter. Chamillionaire pleaded to us that he didn’t understand why Twitter was so popular. His main problem was the fact that he felt that 140 characters wasn’t enough. He wondered why people wouldn’t want to read more.

I explained to him that Twitter was the perfect balance between information / marketing / and networking/communication. 140 characters is the perfect amount to consume since most people don’t have the time to go beyond that. The analogy that hit home the best was the idea that rather than reading the whole book, it’s simple easier to read the spark notes. Chamillionaire responded with, “Spark notes for your life - that makes sense.” I went on to mention how Twitter keeps you connected to the people you want to stay connected with. I used the example of the party that night, and mentioned how Twitter helped me find the people I wanted to find when I wanted to find them.

After the 5 to 10 minute conversation ended Chamillionaire let me know that I was the first person to explain Twitter to him in a manner that made sense to him. He finally saw the value of using Twitter and understood why people actually use it.

Cool little moment for both me and Twitter. If you know any guys at Twitter be sure to pass it on to them, they might get a kick out of it :)

Also big thanks again to the Techcrunch team and August capital for the great party. Many thanks to Jessica Mah for the ride, and Mazy from Ustream for the ticket.

What is the Twitter Fail Whale?

Warning: This post is for people VERY new to Twitter. If you are a Twitter regular, skip this post!

The Twitter Fail Whale is a picture of a whale that you encounter when an error has occurred on Twitter. If you have never seen the fail whale, or do not know what I am talking about, here is a picture for you:

Fail Whale on Twitter

Rather than re-create the story, ReadWriteWeb has a wonderful article on the story of the Fail Whale.

You can also follow the fail whale on Twitter.

If you want to buy a Fail Whale t-shirt, kick it here

How Twitter Will Integrate Summize for Search

Twitter and Summize have officially come together. Going to summize.com will automatically redirect you to a Twitter branded search.twitter.com. Congrats to both Twitter and Summize for finding each other. From here, the big question is: how will Summize integrate inside of Twitter?

Here is the answer:

How Twitter and Summize will integrate

Source: Twitter Blog

What do you think? How can this be improved? Is the integration falling short?