social media connections are human connections


Terralever celebrating the Spirit of Enterprise Award, October 2009

Terralever celebrating the Spirit of Enterprise Award, October 2009

I spend my 9-to-5s with the great team of people that make up Terralever, an interactive marketing agency based out of Tempe, Arizona. Recently, the passing of one of our founding and managing partners quickly and dramatically altered life as we knew it. After a week passed and after the funerary services, as we returned to our daily tasks and project deliverables, I kept thinking about the company’s blog. How could we, how should we, go from our last post that announced Andy’s death to a new one covering user interface design or email marketing? What was that post in between, the one in which we, in front of the world, transition from loss to business as usual, knowing there really would be nothing usual about it?

I am touched that Terralever allowed me to author that post. And I am thankful for Courtney Crane, Marketing Manager for Terralever, and great friend to Andy, for helping me find the right words.

Originally posted to the Terralever blog on October 13, 2009:

Social Media Connections are Human Connections

As many of you know, Terralever recently suffered a great loss with the passing of Andy Richter, managing partner, colleague, friend, and mentor. We have mourned and we have laughed as we continue to remember great times spent with a man whose passion for living was infectious.

Shortly before we learned of Andy’s passing, I discovered that my friend and his wife were expecting a baby via a biweekly web comic. Life cycled within mere hours. As the day continued, and news of Andy’s passing spread, the outpouring of support, expressed through Twitter, Facebook, blogs, and personal emails, was overwhelming. The loss was not just our own, Andy’s family or those closest to him, but one felt throughout Phoenix and the greater entrepreneurial and internet marketing communities. Each post brought home with new meaning that which I already believed, that social media, however digital it may be, is still human.

Sons and daughters are born, cancerous diseases are fought, promotions are celebrated, wedding vows are exchanged, and losses are mourned. Life is shared as it happens.

News channels will continue to publish the latest headlines, brands to focus on building communities of impassioned evangelists, and retailers to announce their hot new sale. Indeed, our role as an interactive marketing agency is to help our clients navigate opportunities to best leverage their online activities. It is my hope that as we do so, we always remember that social media is where humans connect with one another in meaningful ways.

We cherish the knowledge, guidance and passion that Andy brought to us each day. We are thankful for the gracious support of the community since his passing. Both are inspiration for us as we move forward together.

*If you’d like to leave a comment, please feel free to do so here and/or on the original post on the Terralever blog.



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  1. #1 by Jeremy Vaught on October 30, 2009 - 6:20 pm

    All I wanna say is you’ve come a long way since I helped talk you into starting a blog. Good on ya! I would tell you that you needed to start building your online brand, and now look at you, you’ve built more than one! haha

    Perhaps I’m injecting myself too much into this. But on the surface, back in the day, … I remember.

    Keep up the great work, Heather.

  2. #2 by Ms. Herr on November 7, 2009 - 5:37 pm

    Thanks Jeremy. 🙂 You know, the third PodCamp AZ is just around the corner, which means we met a solid two years ago.

  3. #3 by Jeremy Vaught on November 7, 2009 - 6:33 pm

    I know!In fact, I thought about that last night at the Tedx Phoenix event when I saw you. My friend recognized you from the Terralever website, and it hit me that it had been two years. Which means it’s been about 1.5 years since I change my background on Twitter from the huge face I so vividly remember seeing on your screen. (and as I reread that, probably doesn’t read well for anyone but the two of us) 🙂

    There sure has been a lot of change in the last two years. wow.

  4. #4 by Ms. Herr on November 7, 2009 - 6:40 pm

    That’s alright, let ’em wonder. 🙂

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