Archive for March, 2009

Rubber Double

Kirk Hullis - March 31st, 2009

I just came back to my desk to find a card and a gift from Team Rubber. The occasion is my Rubberversary, 2 years since I came to work for the company. As busy as I am right now- just wanted to say a) thanks for the gift and card and b) how 2 years has flown by; working with a great bunch on fun work is how I stay looking so youthful and spry;-p

NextGen Roadshow Bristol

Andy Parkhouse - March 31st, 2009

I’m in Watershed at the NextGen Broadband Roadshow

Summary so far:

Fibre to every home please. There’s no Plan B if we want serious connectivity. Why do we want serious connectivity?
- economic benefit
- social fabric, inclusion, education, community (”not pink and fluffy ‘community’, but the places we all live and work”)
- competition: other countries are doing this now
- new things we don’t know exist yet, but will invent

How to do this? Either:
- a £30bn top-down project involving government and large private business (telecommunication businesses), for which THERE IS NO EFFECTIVE BUSINESS CASE, plus, having been involved as a small player in big telco projects, the thought of doing this top-down is worrying.
- or ground-up: local businesses and organisations organising demand and creating local business cases. More appealing; we need to do all the work locally, but we get what we need, not the mismatched love-child of Whitehall policy and blue-chip telco sales ability.

Low on blogging juice…this event being covered much better here:
http://www.connectingbristol.org/category/bristol/
Also on Twitter (for the raw take): http://search.twitter.com/search?q=%23cbnnga

Lego…Social Media Heroes

Andy Parkhouse - March 31st, 2009

Lego using social media well again: this is the launch video for a new Lego train (Emerald Night).

Lego trains have a very engaged and die-hard fan base – a true community, sharing things online and meeting in the real world.

The Emerald Night set is a premium-priced toy for children and adult fans of Lego; it was designed with fan input, has been tracked on blogs and forums for the last few months, and was launched at real-world fan events.

Interesting.

Team Rubber are 8!

Matt Golding - March 29th, 2009

On Thursday we celebrated Team Rubber being 8 years old! Thanks to everyone – friends we’ve worked and played with over the last 8 years – for coming to help us celebrate in a great gathering at Luna in Clifton, Bristol. Here are some pics. (For more check my Flickr page here).

Claire & Emma looking glam

 

Templeton Hoes it down...
Team Pitkin arrive

DJ Bentleg rocks the floor

Talking aMap with The Drum

Adam Abu-Nab - March 25th, 2009

Chris has tried his hand at journalism and written a marvellous feature for The Drum magazine. You can read it in full here.

Inovative viral marketing

Tim Wintle - March 24th, 2009

I just got sent an interesting request from a friend of mine – he’s applying for a job and as part of the application process he’s been asked to film a job interview talking about the company, put it on YouTube, and drive traffic to it to see who can get the most views.

The result is that thousands of people will be getting emails from friends asking them to watch a video of one of their  friends recommending the company (great way to mix viral marketing and word of mouth!)

You can seem my friend Alex telling the worst joke ever here. (it’s worth it – it’s about dwarfs)

We can’t hide it – gender test

Tim Wintle - March 24th, 2009

Just found the gender genie – a web app that tries to determine if the author of a passage of text is male or female.

It seems to work very well – it worked out that Adam was male from his last post, that Helen was female from this post, and that Ben was male from this post.

On the other hand, it did say that Michaela was Male from this post – so it’s not perfect.

Lego Ice Cubes

Helen Bentley - March 24th, 2009

851502 0000 xx 12 1 Lego Ice Cubes

Linky here

A perfect summer accessory. Although insert unhappy smiley face here, its not available in the UK…..

Ebay here I come…..

Why people share stuff and that meme thing

Adam Abu-Nab - March 23rd, 2009

I’d like to highlight some useful Henry Jenkins research (via whatconsumesme). Rather than tackling tedious definitions of ‘viral’, Henry explains the various motives behind why people spread media:

- They are doing so because the brand expresses something about themselves or their community.

- They are doing so because the brand message serves some valued social function.

- They are doing so because the entertainment content gives expressive form to some deeply held perception or feeling about the world.

- They are doing so because individual responses to such content helps them determine who does or does not belong in their community.

On this it’s also worth talking about emotional currency. We spread media in seconds via Twitter or email and we mustn’t forget that we often do so for the selfish reason of how something makes us immediately feel. Dosh Dosh wrote an interesting article back in July which in some depth discussed the emotional reasons behind spreading media, be it joy, sadness, anger, fear and disgust. The truth is the ‘key’ to spreadable media falls in murky depths, somewhere between combining emotional engagement, an individual’s perceptual/communal reasoning for spreading media and brand messaging. The further we move away from the idea that spreadable media is “dancing kittens on boobies” the better. It comes from a lot of people falsely believing spreadable media cannot operate in niches. It’s growing out of teenage bedrooms and the potential advertising has to be a positive force in the world in enabling worthwhile conversations is being realised.

Another problematic myth is a held perception that meme is integral to viral, so where does it fall into all of this? Debunking the idea that content should be internet memetic, Jenkins adds:

“Talking about memes and viral media places an emphasis on the replication of the original idea, which fails to consider the everyday reality of communication — that ideas get transformed, repurposed, or distorted as they pass from hand to hand, a process which has been accelerated as we move into network culture.”

A very useful addition to existing remix culture discussions.

Jenkins also talks about the “human agency” in cultures, inherently describing them as something we collectively create. Letting people mess with your content builds brand culture, giving people a stake in its spread and ensures its sustainable awesomeness. Ad-vacate to advocate.

SXSW: Championing Social Media

Adam Abu-Nab - March 22nd, 2009

I wanted to pick out some thoughts from one panel at SXSW concerning ROI in social media campaigns, otherwise seen pinging around the blogosphere:

“My Boss Doesn’t Get It: Championing Social Media To The Man

We all know that social media is the best thing since sliced bread, right? Then why is it so hard to explain the value of social media to people who don’t get it? Join our panelists, who have successfully championed social media initiatives, for a discussion of what works and what doesn’t when it comes to selling social media to your boss or clients. This panel is sponsored by Small World Lab.”

Panelists:

Miles Sims VP of Product Mgmt,   Small World Labs

Peter Kim Sr Partner,   Dachis Corporation

Michael Wilson Founder/CEO,   Small World Labs

Rebecca Caroe Sales & Business Dev Expert,   CreativeAgencySecrets.com

Christian Caldwell Web Interaction and Usability Specialist,   Small World Labs/American Heart Association

(info taken from the SXSW site)

It was interesting to hear Christian Caldwell note that reach is the most important metric whilst stressing there are no standard measurements of ROI in social media – they must be formulated around your individual company. I must admit that I did come out a little dissapointed as I was perhaps wrongly looking for more examples in practice of how the panelists succesfully negotiated the ROI issue for a particular social media channel. Yet esteemed ex-Forrester analyst Peter Kim is right when he notes that ROI is based on too many assumptions and from the marketer’s point of view it remains a formulaic science.

It comes down to the continuing fragmentation of social media driving too much complexity. The number of media channels available to marketers, agencies and consumers keep on growing and then the platforms you may have established some measurement for evolve (one example might be Facebook – conversations have now shifted to status updates). Proliferation of choice offers marketers new opportunities, such as social networks, mobile, and branded entertainment, yet each of these has its own success metrics and dynamics, making comparison and the calculation of ROI near impossible.

However, the panel did offer tips for a succesful social media campaign:

- Plan

- Measure and report results to ensure acknowledgement

- Build culture and seed it

- Articulate the metrics to set expectation

- Define what you plan to achieve up front

Some more SXSW reflections from blogs afar:

- Peter Kim, Reflections on SXSW ‘09

- Nathan McDonald, SXSW Interactive Highlights
- Jackie Huba, 18 cool things at SXSW
- Rachel Happe, SXSW ‘09 retrospective
- Alora Chistiakoff, Highlights from SXSW 2009
- Mack Collier, SXSW Recap – The Sessions
- Jeff Beckham, SXSW Scorecard
- Aaron Strout, Overheard: I Survived SXSW ‘09 and Lived To Talk About It
- Marc Berry, 2,584 words on SXSW Interactive 2009
- Mike Stopford, SXSW Interactive 2009 – Reflections