Making things easy - Wood work for dummies?

I’m having a bit of fun with wood, I don’t have a whole lot of space… Like, no space really… So I wanted to share a list of smaller shop tools that make a big difference and don’t take up any room! The first one is a Bahco Cabinet Scraper

“A card scraper or cabinet scraper is a woodworking shaping and finishing tool. It is used to manually remove small amounts of material and excels in tricky grain areas where hand planes would cause tear out. Card scrapers are most suitable for working with hardwoods, and can be used instead of sandpaper” - Wiki

This is the tool in question…

Best thing about this simple tool, you can sharpen and use it over and over again… Take a look below

You can get your own here on Amazon - https://amzn.to/3C719Q3

Have you ever deleted an app to stop your browsing?

alt title: A social (media) experiment - Part Two of ?

24 hours without somewhere to ‘story’ stupid stuff. 24 hours without somewhere to share incidents of appreciation for tools I use, to support stuff I like… 24 hours and I think there’s maybe 10 people I missed seeing the regular updates from.

Maybe there’s another way?

Delete Instagram App

And for most regular people, with Instagram now allowing uploading from your desktop computer, or via apps like Later or Hootsuite, removing the app from your phone is a completely legit thing to do… That impulse to browse when you have 28 seconds spare is removed (after a while of not having the app on your phone)

But for me, that’s not possible… There are some things in social media land that you can only do via the app ( which I find utterly stupid in this day and age! just fully open up that api already)

So given the deadlock, where does that leave me?

…it leaves me painting the front gate! Another coat of natural white Dulux something-or-other on my crooked pickets (thanks, Lee)

A social (media) experiment

Last night I ‘turned off’ my Instagram account.

I manage social media accounts to pay the bills, I spend a lot of time online each day, part of that was managing my own social media. After some thought, there’s not really much point maintaining my own social media… I’m a 47 year old bloke that actively encourages his kids to stay well away from social media, lead by example, right?

The answer I’ve always given myself when I ask myself the question “Do you need to actively partake in your own social media to be an effective social media manager?” Is ‘Yes, absolutely’ but with social media management tools the way they are now, the ability to search content and be present without being present as myself has come a long way - I can effectively be online as my clients and not myself.

Well, that answer made sense in my head, so let’s see if it sticks.

I’m doing this to drag back some time for myself/my kids. My time is allocated in various sized chunks to my clients, that has never been a hard and fast line - it’s always been fluid and almost invariably much more than i’m contracted for… The management of content, looking for that content, looking for audience (with most social platforms putting the organic screws on so tight so they can sell advertising for mostly fake reach), looking for chatter and guiding that chatter… It all takes time. My time and my expertise at guiding those conversations is where my value is, but i’ve found it very hard to find the ‘off switch’ while doing that.

I guess working from home, well, not working from home as such, it’s not like I have anywhere else to work - my office is in my house, it’s a dedicated room. Working from home maybe means I’m not restricted by office-bound norms, e.g. it’s 10:32am and I’ve had one Zoom for a client’s bi-weekly round-up call, I’ve popped down and made myself breakfast just now, and I think I’ll grab a shower and perhaps try slot in a haircut… Those types of things aren’t conducive to a 9-5 environment, but that also means that if I need to, I just push my day out into the evening. I’m not really a sit and watch tv kind of guy, so I don’t mind shelving work during the day and getting it done at night - as long as it gets done. I’m rambling.

Long story short, I’m pulling back from the added distraction that is my personal social media, using that time elsewhere, focusing on client work when online and daydreaming about the small farm I want to buy…

Glad we had this chat, if you don’t see me online, that’s ok, I’ll be here and via email and likely Twitter

DIY Wooden chopping board

Also, here’s a chopping board I’m working on, more on it later, but I’ll say this, some of the timber in this piece is from an interesting place - more soon.

What's so special about YOUR post?

Nothing, but…

So, I tweeted that I’m running two video doorbells right now, one a Ring and one a NEST, err, Google, err… Nest? Whatever… And a friend* (*I say friend, but really I don’t know Ruth, but since #avocadogate I deem her a friend!) asked why my deliveries were so special, and I know she was toying with me, but I thought I might take a minute to a. add some context and b. spend five minutes winding down, just me and my dog, and pen a largely not-important blog post.

P.S… The Ring is on with double-sided tape! don’t @ me with “it ain’t straight!”

Skip back a handful of years, I’d ordered a watch band for my oldest, he was maybe 8 or 9 at the time and had one of those tiny Garmin kids watches, anyways he’d destroyed the band and was excited to get the new band! “Dad, leave it in the mailbox so I can get it out!” sure thing kid… It arrived while he was at school, and I dutifully left it in the mailbox for him to take out when we arrived home… I have a large old steel mailbox, locks with a key, kinda tricky to get into unless you have the world’s slimmest hands, anyways, I’m gone maybe 25 minutes from when I left the package in the mailbox, to going to school, picking him up and heading home… In that time I’d told him “I think there’s a package in the mailbox for you!” he was SUPER EXCITED! (You can see where this is going, can’t you) Some scumbag had been down our street stealing mail at that very 25 minute time-slot! They had used a stick to wedge the package out. I was furious, not because it was an $11 watch band, but because of the lock on my boy’s face… I wanted blood (or at least an apology and the package back ya know) I actually went walking the streets looking for someone - I was quite cross.

Skip forward a day or two and the police had advised they could do zip, and fair play, they had nothing to go on - at all. But dear reader (Hi Ruth, you’ll likely be the only reader, but that’s just fine!) that’s not where the doorbell came from! That’s where my front and rear 4K Hikvision camera system came from! YOu know you see Crime Stoppers “Criminal Evidence Photos” and they look like a hand-drawn caricature of someone with no facial features? I wasn’t having that and had to put in a system that rendered each and every wrinkle.

That was great! Worked well, missed the people that hit my car AND my neighbour’s car, but did catch the guy that jumped the fence and smashed my elderly neighbour’s fence IN THE MIDDLE OF THE DAY (bright spark that bloke) The one thing it didn’t do though, as it’s mounted up quite high, is allow me to see who actually comes to the door.

Hikvision 4K Security Camera IR Nightvision Example

This is the Hikvision 4K POE Security Camera - At night. Not awful.

Yeah, so in the example above, someone comes in the gate and then I’ve no idea where they go after that… Not ideal!

The first camera I purchased, the Google Doorbell (AKA The NEST Doorbell) *The irony, it doesn’t work with Google Business Suite and so I had to setup a whole new gmail account and shift all my existing smart devices across to that new email… Really not ideal, but it’s fine… whatever…

Then I had the chance to review the Ring Doorbell 4 for my friend Kevin’s website, DRN and THAT is how I have come to have TWO smart(ish) doorbells on my front door…

I will remove one of them in about two weeks, I’m not 100% sure which just yet… Watch this space, or don’t, that’s ok too.

Five ways organic social media content can still help your business

Back to the lab again…

This ramble is more squarely aimed at small businesses or individuals that sell a product or service of some kind, I guess.

simon pollock sitting in his office, guitar, computer, tied up

Social media is a fickle beast, here, have some likes, right, that’s enough likes, pay us.

That’s what it feels like for the most part, especially for an old bloke (compared to the SMM crew these days…) The numbers grew relatively quickly back in 2010, organic content actually gathered some eyeballs and a healthy amount of conversions across to your website… Now, skip forward twelve years and organic content gets you frustration and very low ROI - but there are different ways you can STILL use organic content to garner audience and community.

  1. UGC or User Generated Content - it’s the simple play of identifying good content that’s made using your product or features your product and then re-sharing that content to your platforms to help promote your followers, but also help promote your product / service. *

  2. Content that helps solve a problem for your audience, coffee’s going to be $7 a cup at your local cafe, solve that with ‘how to make coffee at home’ videos and tips if you’re selling beans or pods?

  3. UGC doesn’t just provide some great (and some awful, lets be honest) content, but the act of contacting the creator and asking to share it - in most cases - can result in a stronger connection with your community. “This brand cares enough to share my stuff…” This comes with a caveat we’ll touch on after these points..

  4. Think about more than just page posts and Instagram posts - when you’re working on content, try to remember to create for stories/reels as well (I’m a big fan of the Hootsuite always updated image sizes for social thingy)

  5. If you do ALL of the above but don’t bother checking your Facebook page’s messages, don’t bother replying to comments, don’t actually use the platform for what it was built for - to be social with your audience - you might well take points one through four, print them out, roll them up and smoke them - that’s about the amount benefit you’ll get.

Point three above - your audience may well tag you (your brand) in posts, but that doesn’t automagically give you the right to use that content however you like. I’d say around 75% of the time, someone tagging you likely expects that you might share it at some point, but it’s better if you have some sort of system in place, something to cover you if things ‘go south’ - An example, I have a note in my bio “Tag us using blah blah so we can see and share your posts” now, this likely wouldn’t hold up in court, but it does help if issues ever arise… People create this content for themselves, we don’t own it, we merely ask to use it to help sell our products - remember that and be gracious and kind when people allow you use of their UGC content.

The flip side - trying to blackmail a brand that’s shared your post is a pretty scummy thing to do - especially if you’ve tagged them… What did you expect would happen? Why did you tag them? Slap your own face.

Time to take a deep breath, step away from your screen for a minute or two and soak in your surroundings. Here’s a picture of the old boat shed in Queenscliff to help you do that.

Leave me a comment below, follow me on Twitter or Instagram. (Instagram is more pics of my new pup, Coco, right now… sorry not sorry)