Friday, April 23, 2010

Trash and ticks: It's all in an Earth Day

In honor of the 40th anniversary of Earth Day, the Lilja team picked up 12 bags of trash yesterday around our office.


We worked nearly all the way around this little gem of a pond this year, realizing in the process it's fed by natural springs. The water was gin clear, as my Dad would have said. So it was satisfying work to beautify such a wonderful place (the Lilja office is in the left-hand corner).

Because we are close by a major highway, we find some unusual things, from construction debris and signage to abandoned clothing and remnants of fast food packaging. Most of what we find is plastic – bottle caps, tops for cups, etc. Each of us picked up cigarette butts before finally giving up. That work was endless and disheartening. Alex kept count and reached 1,000.

Among our most unusual finds: A rusted out button for the “29th ANNUAL WOODTICK RACES.” We experienced a few of our own: Alex ended up pulling off 30 ticks, Kadee, 5, Alicia 4, Mary & Mike, 0.

- Mary Lilja

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Richard Murphy makes a business case for “greening your grounds"

On this, the 40th anniversary of Earth Day, the main argument for “going green” is often because it is simply the right thing to do. While acting on a moral imperative is easy enough for the individual, businesses typically look at the bottom line before making an investment in going green.

Richard Murphy, president and CEO of Murphy Warehouse Company – a Lilja client – makes the case that going green can save businesses money, and the best way to do so is to make changes not just inside your facility, but outside.

In a column titled “The business case for greening your grounds” published today on MinnPost.com, Richard describes the green investment his company has made installing a stormwater system and native prairies at their Minneapolis headquarters. How much has Murphy saved, you ask? $500,000 in costs so far – with their largest cost savings still to come!

If you are interested in learning more about what Murphy has done to “go green,” visit the company’s YouTube Channel.

Happy Earth Day!

-- Alex Cook

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

GameInformer.com Nominated for Best Games-Related Site in the 14th Annual Webby Awards




With all the talk about the intersection of the traditional news media and the Internet on Lilja Ink recently, exciting news came out this week that long-term Lilja Inc. client, Game Informer magazine, is among the nominees in this year’s 14th Annual Webby Awards.

GameInformer.com has been nominated for Best Games-Related Site.

The Webby Awards is the leading international award honoring excellence on the Internet – think the Oscars of the Internet.

Apart from my own professional interest in this news, I am a big fan of Game Informer and the website, which offers a well-designed, intuitive online experience. But more important, I enjoy the fact that the website welcomes gamers, like myself, to join the action and review/discuss gaming alongside the magazine editors.

As a nominee, GameInformer.com also is eligible to win a Webby People’s Voice Award, which is voted online by the global Web community. You can help by voting for Game Informer here.

Congratulations, Game Informer!

-- Alex Cook

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Chasing Tails: The Most Ironic Blog Entry Ever

How many times have you heard: Social media is EXPLODING and it’s only a matter of time before it takes over traditional media.

Well yes, social media has grown rapidly as people discover new tools for sharing information and keeping in touch. As newsrooms everywhere shrink, right along with their readership, people are turning to these new tools as a news source.

But consider these stats recently released by Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism:
• American legacy outlets like newspapers and broadcast accounted for 80% of all items linked to stories on blogs.
• Three outlets alone provided two-thirds of bloggers’ linked news articles: The New York Times, CNN and BBC.
• The favorite subject matter for Tweets on Twitter? Twitter itself, which accounted for 10% of all top stories. Apple products garnered 8% of top stories, Facebook received 7%, and Windows 7 got 5%.

Interestingly, the study also noted that many blogs were rooted in providing opinions, not facts, a la talk-radio.

My point (and I do have one): Social media is great. It lets everyone have a voice and democratizes our national conversation on all matter of topics. But by in large, bloggers are not doing the investigative work and fact checking of reporters at traditional media.

If you’d like an example of this in practice, please hit your refresh button and blink.

-- Alicia DeMatteo