Posts Tagged coffee
Reading Club: The Creativity Gap
Posted by Paul Hadley in General & News on October 28th, 2009
Reading: The Creativity Gap. Auth: James Heartfield
http://www.heartfield.org/Creativity_Gap.pdf
In preparation for The Big Debate, and as part of the Social Media as Culture module, this week the BCU MA Social Media students will be reading this piece, and hosting a public discussion on Wednesday 4th November, from 9-11am.
The venue will be:
30 Church Street
Birmingham
B3 2NP
The discussion is open forum with public invitation.
Please do come and join us.
UPDATES:
Here is an audio recording of Charles Leadbeater’s speech, taken at The Big Debate, some of which is perhaps relevant to our discussion-
Here is the audio recording of our reading club, part 1-
…and here is the audio from part 2-
Are you being served?
Posted by Jon Hickman in Social Media & Marketing on August 13th, 2009

Local coffee, for local people
The strangest thing happened to me today. Urban Coffee, a new coffee shop found out I was off for a coffee in Birmingham City Centre and asked me to come to their shop instead of my usual place. A bit of Twitter based banter later, I was there enjoying a free croissant, beautiful coffee and more good banter.
I wouldn’t normally take the time to write up a social media marketing case study. The fact that I am leads me to the main point I want to make: Urban Coffee have used social media to take me from an unaware prospect to a brand ambassador in about ten minutes. How did they do that? Well there’s three parts to the story really.
Part 1 – The functional part
It all came about because they saw me tweet my dissatisfaction with my usual coffee shop:
Anyone in Brum for crap food, average coffee and good wifi at Coffee Lounge this lunchtime?
They followed it up, saying:
@jonhickman you should come over to Urban Coffee, great cakes, great coffee and free wifi
As simple as that. They listened, they answered. Well it’s not really that simple. I don’t just do what people tell me afterall.
Part 2 – The networking part
What made this a compelling offer rather than a corporate spam was the fact that two nice people I know – Neil & Jamie – Tweeted me to recommend I try Urban Coffee out. Suddenly my network is making a recommendation to me. I’m now near to buying in to this brand.
Part 3 – The experience part
For some reason I decided to be cheeky and request a free cake in return for my custom. This led to a lighthearted banter on Twitter ending with the offer of a free cake:
@jonhickman You have to come in and say “The weather is good for the time of year” to receive your free food
Let’s face it, it would be rude to knock back that sort of offer, so I was on my way to the coffee shop. I walked past my normal place, arranged to meet Neil & Jamie there for lunch, and my other friends were now chatting with Urban Coffee’s owner Simon too.
By this stage I had a feeling for what I was going to find at the coffee shop: a warm welcome, an independent spirit, a relaxing place where I could work and chat, and nice people. Luckily the shop followed through on these Twitter based expectations.
I was warmly greeted, the space is light and airy, the WiFi strong, and they have good stout tables, big enough to get four coworkers and their laptops around (they have plenty of plug sockets upstairs too). The coffee was great, the banter was there, and of course, my cake was free.

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