And the Winner of the Facebook Contest is...

I'm very excited to announce that the winner of the SchneiderB Facebook contest is Andrew Davis!

Background

And the Winner to the Facebook Contest is...Andrew is the Head of Middle School at Crystal Springs Upland School in Hillsborough, CA. He also has a blog called TGIAM (Thank Goodness It's Almost Monday) where he writes about Middle School education as it relates to parents (and educators.) He has an interesting background and I encourage you read more about him on his blog's About Page.

Project

Andrew has chosen to use his 2 hours of consulting to help identify the next steps to move my TGIAM from a single author blog to a multi-author blog and multi-media platform. He would also like to extend the reach of TGIAM beyond CSUS parents.

I'm really excited to help Andrew with this project and think the work we do together will benefit any school as they think about launching a blog or making the blog they currently have better!

Accountability

Andrew has agreed to transparency through this process and I might even be able to get him to write a post or two sharing his experiences and lessons learned. We will share this process with you in hopes of holding us accountable.

Feedback

In order to get the process rolling I would like to ask a favor that will take 10 minutes.

1. Navigate to Andrew's blog – Thanks Goodness It's Almost Monday

2. Spend 5 minutes surfing around TGIAM.

3. Spend another 5 minutes sharing your initial reactions, thoughts, likes, and dislikes using the form below:

[gravityform id=”4″ name=”TGIAM” title=”false” description=”false”]

 

 

About the author 

Brendan Schneider

Hey, I’m Brendan, and this is my blog. After 28 years working in private, independent schools in mostly admissions, enrollment, marketing, communications, and fundraising roles, I decided to make SchneiderB Media my full-time job, where I help schools get more inquiries through my Fractional Digital Marketer program. I also started the MarCom Society, a membership created expressly to help, support, and train marketing and communications professionals at schools.