Collaborate is a growing platform. As a leader of my local section, I am promoting it's use among our membership.
Today we hosted a section event which incorporated elements of the Collaborate and it is now memorialized here:
https://collaborate.asce.org/blogs/chad-morrison1/2020/10/20/critical-thinking-in-constructionEvents created in Collaborate can be shared via facebook & linkedin. The permalink above can be shared freely across all platforms.
Why should engineers choose Collaborate over Linkedin?
- It is a member benefit (parts are viewable to the public during the pandemic)
- users on collaborate are ASCE members in good standing
- posts are moderated by peers and reviewed as needed by an editorial board to maintain the code of conduct
- features such as direct mail with other members, event landing pages, blogs, libraries, and calendars - It is a hub for ASCE activity
- building your network, being an ASCE member is just the starting point of what you have in common with another user
To give a fair shake to Linkedin
Why should engineers choose Linkedin over Collaborate?
- to actively or passively job search or recruit
- to reach others who are in related industries or professions
Share your Collaborate content on Linkedin. Those who click on it will be able to: view it, login and view it, or encounter a restricted access message. The solution to removing the restricted access is becoming an active member of ASCE. Hopefully, that encourages membership, rather than stifling it... but it is up to us as users to make the content appealing so that it is encouraging! Making Collaborate more visible on Linkedin will encourage users to participate. Collaborate is a vibrant and diverse platform, if it continues to be a welcoming community with a trusted knowledge base, it will continue to grow. We all share that responsibility as users.
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Chad Morrison P.E., M.ASCE
Professional Engineer
Greenville RI
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Original Message:
Sent: 10-18-2020 01:26 PM
From: Reza Mokarram Aydenloo
Subject: Linkedin or Asce collaborate, which of them is better for ASCE member ?
Dear friends a question has been on my mind for some time.
If a challenge is raised on the ASCE collaborate site and at the same time the same challenge is raised as a post on LinkedIn.
We will see that the contributors to that post on LinkedIn are much more than the ASCE Collaborate site.
I looked a little closer and realized that most of the participants are also members of ASCE.
What do you think is the reason?
What should we do if we, as members of ASCE, intend to use this site as a reference for other engineers?
How can we introduce ASCE more to the engineering community?
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Reza Mokarramaydenlou, Ph.D., C.Eng, P.E., S.E., M.ASCE
Structural Engineering and Seismic rehabilitation Consultant
Author of the book in Elsevier
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