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Sally Duros

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Category: Chicago Sun-Times

Twitter’s Claire Diaz Ortiz on small business for good

I connect deeply with the mission of organizations like BALLE that promote the idea of building strong economies through local businesses.

That’s because to my mind there is no greater good than contributing to a great neighborhood shopping area or a vibrant, employed local community. To be sure, neighborhood businesses are learning they can easily extend their reach using social media like Facebook. But, still, to many smaller businesses, Twitter and its benefits remain a puzzle. To get some answers, I engaged Claire Diaz Ortiz, leader of social innovation at Twitter Inc. , in an email interview.

A confirmed do-gooder, Diaz Ortiz has earned 324,629 Twitter followers [and rising]. She writes about business, marketing, and being a force for good on her blog and is currently touring the world, promoting her book, Twitter for Good.

Q: ‘‘Be a Force for Good,’’ is the guiding principle of the service structure Twitter provides to non-profit organizations and causes. What advice can you offer to U.S. neighborhood businesses as they reframe themselves as forces for good?

Claire: Small businesses need to start thinking (if they aren’t already) about how they can help their customers. Ultimately, any enterprise (non-profit or for-profit) needs to cater to its constituents, and making sure that businesses are meeting customers where they are is essential. If you’re a small business, think of how you can provide support to your customers (via your products, or beyond them) in order to reframe the idea of how you seek to be a force for good in your community.

Q: How can the principles detailed in Twitter for Good (Target, Write, Engage, Explore, Track) help build a neighborhood one tweet at a time?

Claire: Twitter is a tool for businesses and organizations everywhere to better do their jobs of meeting the needs of their customers and supporters. The TWEET model shows anyone how to excel on Twitter to meet whatever goal your organization aims for. It’s about coming up with the specific goal for your Twitter activity (Target) and then implementing specific steps to reach (and Track) those aims.

Q: Can you give us a specific example of Twitter used to good effect in a US neighborhood?

Claire: Mark Horvath and his tireless effort helping the homeless populations throughout the US consistently prove some of the best examples of Twitter being used to uplift communities. Through new media and social media, @hardlynormal and @ invisiblepeople, Mark works to connect resources to those who need them most. He is a constant, on-the-ground voice and presence for not only meeting specific needs (this person needs this winter coat, for example) but for drawing attention to the important larger issue of homelessness, especially in times of recession.

Q: Many of our readers are smaller neighborhood businesses. It’s commonly said that small business is the bedrock of the U.S. Economy and strong neighborhood businesses are the bedrock of strong local communities. [I know this well from my local community development work here in Chicago’s under-served neighborhoods.] Given that, can you offer some thoughts for our readers about how they can learn to use Twitter to serve both their businesses and the greater good?

Claire: Again, running a small business is another way to help someone — well, really, to help a whole community. Small businesses provide support, services, or products that a community needs in a tangible, local way. Serving the community and making a profit are perfectly connected, and any small business (or large) operating ethically should feel confident that they are serving the “greater good” in their efforts when they try to meet the needs of their consumers.

Twitter is about relationships, and small businesses are built on the bedrock of (local) relationships. As such, social media and new media help local businesses to service their community more tangibly and consistently. If you’re a local business trying to figure out Twitter, think about the relationships you can be building, and it will make sense.

My conversation with Claire led to some thoughts on how to jump start TwitterThink and get it working for good!

You’re not just a café, you’re a gathering place where friends and family meet to catch up, relax and at times do business. Your clients come in to buy a cup of coffee or snack or maybe even lunch. What do you offer beyond the local doughnut chain to make your experience special and memorable and customized to them? That’s your Twitter stream.

You’re not only a grocer, but also a direct connection to good health and happy gatherings for the entire community. People come in your door thinking about recipes, quality of produce, brands and goodies! Most of all they think of the pleasures of feeding themselves and others as well as the time it takes. What information can you offer through your Twitter stream that touches this greater purpose?

You’re not only a dry cleaner, you also provide a fresh start to your client’s work day. You talk with your clients at the beginning and end of the day and they think of you every time they put on a fresh shirt or newly cleaned jacket. As a friend and service provider in their daily lives, what thoughts can you offer that connect them to a positive experience of your service?

You can catch Claire’s wisdom and that of others from Zynga, LinkedIn and Facebook for a fee at a special Social Media for Non-Profits event here in Chicago Sept. 27. Social Media for Nonprofits is a nationwide conference series with speakers from Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, Chicago’s very own Groupon, Zynga and Community Media Workshop.

Add it to the smorgasbord of free events being held here during Social Media Week Chicago, Sept. 19 – 23, sponsored by the Chicago Tribune and Zocalo Group. And then mix in some affordable 435 Digital classes.

Here’s to more social media smarts this fall!

Originally written for $35Digital.

Posted on September 16, 2011Categories 435Digital, Chicago Sun-Times

NYT on predatory loan modifications

The New York Times had a story today about the loan sharks that are trolling the ranks of folks seeking relief from resetting mortgage interest rates. Don’t take the bait!

Not if you hear it on the radio, read it in a newspaper ad or see it dancing across a web page.

Instead, call the City of Chicago 311 number and tell them that you are looking for assistance with a mortgage reset, or visit Neighborhood Housing Services, whose Home Ownership Preservation Initiative (HOPI) is a free service.

Contact NHS

Central Office/Neighborhood Lending Services
1279 N. Milwaukee Avenue
5th Floor
Chicago, IL 60622
773-329-4010 phone
773-329-4120 fax

NHS Redevelopment Corporation
11001 S. Michigan Ave.
Chicago, IL 60628
773-568-1020 phone
773-928-0241 fax

Auburn Gresham/Englewood
449 W. 79th Street
Chicago, IL 60620
773-488-2004 phone
773-488-2126 fax

Back of the Yards/Garfield Boulevard
1823 W. 47th Street
2nd Floor
Chicago, IL 60609
773-579-0032 phone
773-579-0848 fax

Chicago Lawn/Gage Park
2609 W. 63rd Street
Chicago, IL 60629
773-434-9632 phone
773-434-9872 fax

NHS of the Fox Valley
300 Douglas Avenue
Elgin, IL 60120

847-695-0399 phone
847-695-7011 fax

NHS of the Fox Valley
163 E. Chicago Street
Elgin, Illinois 60120
847-695-0399 phone
fax

NHS of the Fox Valley

phone
fax

North Lawndale
3555 W. Ogden Avenue
Chicago, IL 60623
773-522-4637 phone
773-522-4890 fax

Roseland
11001 S. Michigan Avenue
Chicago, IL 60628
773-568-1020 phone
773-568-9831 fax

South Chicago
9108 S. Brandon
Chicago, IL 60617
773-734-9181 phone
773-734-9221 fax

West Englewood
449 W. 79th Street
Chicago, IL 60620
773-488-2004 phone
773-488-2126 fax

West Humboldt Park
3601 W. Chicago Avenue
Chicago, IL 60651
773-533-5570 phone
773-533-5571 fax

Posted on November 24, 2008April 22, 2021Categories Bylines, Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago’s place in the world of bubbles

Visit this blog if you want to better understand Chicago’s place in this current real estate market, the health of Chicago
neighborhoods and an urban green lifestyle . Those were our specialties at the Sun-Times Real Estate section while I was the editor, and I plan to write a bit about that here.

If you’d like to learn where Chicago stands in the data from mortgage insurance central — the PMI Group — and hear from Chicago real estate players about where we are heading, download the Sun-Times Jan. 18 cover story here.
no-place-like-home.PDF
1-18-jump.PDF

Continue reading Chicago’s place in the world of bubbles

Posted on February 15, 2008April 22, 2021Categories Bylines, Chicago Sun-Times

How the pinch grew Christmas

By Sally Duros
Chicago Sun-Times December 21, 2007

It’s time to celebrate the end of the era of the Grinch, that crabby green fellow who lives in an isolated cave above the warmhearted community of Whoville, aiming to spoil the Who’s festivities.

He bears a resemblance to some real estate speculators. Only a heart two sizes too small could take delight in making money off the land and structures that define a place while sacrificing the intrinsic value of home and community that give that place its identity and form our emotional bond to it.

That’s not to say that change is bad, or development is wrong. But it takes a neighborhood to grow a home — and that’s a fact.

If you don’t believe me, ask me old dad — who will be 87 come the new year and still lives in the century-old house in Rogers Park he has lived in for 50 years of his life.

Although my dad’s house is certainly not the fanciest house on the block, my dad is the kind of neighbor you want in your Chicago neighborhood. He relishes clearing the ice and snow from his walk, and he can’t wait to rake. He’s not into fancy landscaping and statuary, but he likes a birdbath or two, and you can bet he plants a mean peony, and looks forward every Thanksgiving to the hardy rust- colored mums that bloom near the fence and the neighbor’s driveway.

It takes a neighborhood to grow a home, and that was proved last autumn when a mean wind blew into town and took down two large dead branches from the tree my dad had planted on the front lawn 45 years ago when my sister was born. Just a week earlier, we called the city to cut down the branches, but my dad’s not the kind of guy to push back against a recalcitrant city worker. The guy from Forestry said he was working overtime. “What do want me to do?” he asked, shrugging.

So when the big wind came, it blew the branches down and they crashed to the ground, tearing a big hole in the old-fashioned Sears chain-link fence, the kind with steel posts anchoring the corners and at regular intervals with long rolls of steel links stretched from post to post.

It took my dad several days to saw the big branches into manageable pieces and clear the timber debris from his fence and make a large but tidy pile of hard wood on his front lawn. He and my brother had done most of the labor by the time the city workers came to lend a hand.

But, still, he had a fence to be mended.

It’s not one of those fancy iron fences, but it supports the shrubs and for years it worked fine to keep the kids from running pell-mell through the yard and trampling the flower beds chasing after 16-inch softballs.

My dad, of course, wouldn’t pay anyone to fix it. He’s one of those fiercely independent homeowners who takes great pride in his ability to repair any problem with his house.

So he bought a new top pole for the wire to set against, and he went to work trying to re-align the crossed-wire with the corner post. Before he was through, two passersby, the block’s friendliest dog walker and two neighbors had lent a hand.

They stood huddled with my dad at the corner post, scratching their heads, puzzling the navigational dimensions of the problem, and then finally took charge of the pliers, holding the wire tight and straight so my dad could use both hands to screw the bolts and rebuild that corner of the fence.

The downing of the tree-branches turned out to be quite the neighborhood event.

And the fence mending in its modest, Chicago neighborhood way took on some of the positive characteristics of an old-fashioned barn-raising.

And that’s how it is in my dad’s neighborhood. People are always pitching in to lend a hand. That’s one of the benefits of settling into a place and getting to know well the people who live there.

That’s a big benefit of letting the neighborhood grow your home.

It’s a fact some of us might have forgotten during the hot speculative market in Chicago real estate of the past few years, when some Grinches among us were buying and selling homes simply to drive up prices.

This is not to say that everyone should live this way. But it is to say, that if you find yourself living in the house you are in for a while longer than you thought it might have unexpected benefits.

The next perennial holiday favorite could very well be “How the Pinch grew Christmas.”

Please pass the roast beast!

Posted on December 21, 2007April 22, 2021Categories Chicago Sun-TimesTags Grinch, real estate, real estate bubble, Rogers Park

Elizabeth Warren: Why talking about credit card debt is taboo

By Sally Duros
Real Estate Editor, Chicago Sun-Times
September 28, 2007

‘People would rather talk about their dysfunctional sex lives than reveal publicly their financial state.”

Ain’t that the truth.

That quote comes from Elizabeth Warren, a law professor at Harvard University and t Continue reading Elizabeth Warren: Why talking about credit card debt is taboo

Posted on September 28, 2007Categories Chicago Sun-TimesTags consumer advocacy, consumer protection, credit card debt, credit cards, Elizabeth Warren, real estate bubble, subprime lending, The Great Recession, The New Normal

Woody Guthrie lives here; This land was made for you and me

Inspired by Bill Moyers piece in January 2012, I resurrect this article from 2007, during my time as Chicago Sun-Times Real Estate Editor.  Six years later, what I sensed then has been proven to be true. 

Lessons on Democracy from Woody Guthrie | BillMoyers.comBILL MOYERS: I’m Bill Moyers. And welcome to BillMoyers.com. Join us over the next few weeks, because on the air and on this website, we’ll be talking a lot about “winner-take-all” politics and how economic inequality – that vast gap between the top and everyone else – is not the result of market forces.

Embedly Powered

via Billmoyers

By Sally Duros, Real Estate Editor, Chicago Sun-Times

Published Chicago Sun-Times, August 2007

Woody Guthrie is the patron saint of this real estate section.

That means this land was made for you and me. All readers are
welcome here. Everyone –not just home buyers or home sellers, not
just Realtors or builders, not just public relations execs or
marketers, not just homeowners.

We ask all of you — especially renters and newcomers — to pull up
a chair and make this section home. That’s because, like Woody
Guthrie, we intend to bring tales of truth, fairness and justice to
these pages, while having some fun and elevating your spirit, too,
We like singing a pleasant tune.

Real estate is a market. It’s an investment. It’s a house, town
house, condo or rental apartment. It’s the biggest purchase and the
largest sale most of us will ever engage in.

But it is so very much more than that.

Real estate is the rich ground that roots us all to Chicago.
Whether we rent or own — we can’t make a go at life unless we have
a proper place to live.

Real estate is a deep subject that goes to the very core of what it
means to be an American and a Chicagoan. It thrives on legend, myth
and illusion as well as commerce, dealmaking and common sense. As
proud Chicagoans, we measure our quality of life not by whether we
own, but by where we live and our connection to the neighborhood
around us.

In this section, we explore all the controversial facets of Chicago
real estate — from affordability to lending to taxes to fraud —
and the context that informs those facets.

That means we won’t back down from exploring hot-button issues like
the regulatory environment surrounding our home purchases and the
laws that affect the quality of our home lives. Our modest goal is
to cover these issues in a non-politicized, applied way, and in a
manner useful to you. We will have succeeded if we make your life a
bit easier.

Posted on April 6, 2007Categories Chicago Sun-TimesTags Bill Moyers, homes, real estate, real estate bubble, woody guthrie
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