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I dig this title better than community manager...the meaning is much more powerful!

Heath Row was really the original "community manager," wasn't he? While a lot of folks trying to pass themselves off as innovators in the field were still in short pants ... ;-)

@Lauren - the term manager so many times is a misnomer used in that context.

@Chris - when Fast Company declared 'Computing is Social' they knew what they were talking about. The team Alan and Bill put together was the who's who - they got it. Heath was a tremendous addition as he also took their Web site to the next level, one that is still unequaled today.

Valeria,

I'm happy to announce that the little project I've been working on just went live on my website. I wanted to give you many, MANY Thanks for your contribution!

Also, with this release, I'd like to think that I'm working my way towards becoming a Social Capitalist in my own right.

Thanks again for the content, both through the blog and on the piece itself.

It's always great to hear what Heath is up to. Thanks for the update. (His band is pretty good, too. Don't know if they are still playing together or not.)

Heyyyy…Heath is the man.

In the beginning I thought he might have been a made up character. You know - Heathrow asin…I don't have to explain, surely.

I was the coordinator of the Auckland cell of Company of Friends. The farthest outpost - New Zealand. Luckily I was creative director for the biggest brewer in the country - so we were able to offer plenty of hospitality to members. I picked up the reigns from a far more organised guy who's business responsibilities at Y&R had taken off. The group would wilt if no-one stepped up. I forgot the cardinal rule: Never volunteer. However I did become the (un)coordinator of the Auckland Cell. Heath did his best to support us. He was great - he is supportive and communicative. In the end I had no doubt he was real.

In the end our group slipped away. The Internet Bubble. The Enron thing. It all became too Americo-centric. I started my own magazine for us. But I tip my hat to Fast Company. It was sensational and influential.

Nice to catch up Heath…and you have BAND!

Valeria, I'm just now seeing your post -- thanks for using my words in such an accurate way.

While the band -- the Anchormen -- might be inactive (I had an act in New York called the Trylons for a spell, but we never played out), the _work_ continues.

Since I left Fast Company in 2005, I worked with Seth Godin to help launch Squidoo, and since 2006, I've done marketing research for DoubleClick -- now Google.

The Company of Friends -- social networking circa 1997 -- remains one of the more interesting and important things I've had a hand in. That's why it's so cool to see social media so widely spread these days -- and to see Fast Company reorganize its Web site around connection, communication, and collaboration.

David, I'd like you to mail me a copy of Idealog. Looks like a worthy project!

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