Posts Tagged digitalbritain
Concrete afterthoughts from the Creativity Gap discussion
Posted by stephencroome in Social Media & Marketing, Social Media in Birmingham on November 4th, 2009
Before I joined the Social Media course at BCU, I worked for a Digital Company as a SEO in London.
Two thoughts I had after todays talk about how Birmingham could stop talking and start doing:
1. Has anyone from BCC been to London to ask CEOs of Digi Companies what it would take to get them to move their businesses to Birmingham?
2. Is it time for a Digital Birmingham conference in London? The feedback would be enlightening
I believe Q1 would allow Brum to get narrow down the actual USP it could use as a hook to attract business and Q2 would allow Brum to start to Market itself to the rest of the UK
Econsultancy has organised days where you can go and sell yourself to Londons digital glitterati – these would provide exceptional reach at low cost
A 3rd, less related idea was that if Birmingham wants to develop Digital Business, it should dump the term Creative.
How digitally included is our digital inclusion champion?
Posted by Jon Hickman in General & News, Social Media for Social Good on September 1st, 2009
Several months ago successful entrepreneur Martha Lane Fox was “appointed the government’s first Champion for Digital Inclusion”. I can see some logic here: as the founder of LastMinute.com, Lane Fox was the poster child for internet business. She still carries that history with her and is known to the public as somebody who does the Internet well. In terms of digital inclusion she is, if not a household name, then at least a garden shed one (to paraphrase Eddie Izzard)
I happened to take a look at her website today, and was a little surprised by what I found. It’s a slick looking site, but it seems to lack some understanding of the digital world which Lane Fox is selling to the public. I find this a little worrying. There are two issues which I’d like to pick up on: technical problems and voice.
Technical Difficulties
We need to be clear that digital inclusion doesn’t equal getting people blogging. However, I think we all understand that blogging is part of the digital inclusion agenda. Blogging might be the tool that makes the digitally excluded want to join in with digital technology. It’s also a key activity in terms of shaping debates around digital participation, and indeed in shaping any other debates we might wish active citizens to take part in. I’d expect Lane Fox to be blogging a lot, yet marthalanefox.com is something of a demi-blog. Is it a diary of Lane Fox’s public appearances, a news page, or a blog? It’s not clear.
The site employs blogging language such as “read entire blogpost”, but comments are not available which diminishes the blog post to the status of a press release. My key disappointment with the website is the lack of RSS. I’d like to keep track of the Champion for Digital Inclusion’s thoughts, but I’m not likely to remember to come back regularly hoping for more: an option to subscribe to the site would seem to me to be an obviously desirable feature for this website.
Who’s Speaking Please?
Actually there is a feed for marthalanefox.com, if you know where to look (http://www.marthalanefox.com/rss). This brings me on to the second difficulty I have with the Champion’s web presence: the feed suggests that she’s not writing the blog posts herself. The feed shows that Martha has a team – Theo Park and Tim Van Damme – that are speaking on her behalf, authoring, or at least uploading, the blog entries for her. Park is Lane Fox’s “Executive Assistant” while Van Damme appears to be her web designer.
The message? You too can be a champion of the digital world, all you need is the budget to buy a web designer’s time. And an executive assistant.
Of course we know this isn’t true. You could just swing by a social media surgery and get free advice from an expert, who will get you blogging on wordpress in half hour (with RSS and comments enabled). Feel free to pop in to the next one, Martha.
Social Media Links for May 27th through August 6th
Posted by Jon Hickman in links on August 6th, 2009
Social Media Links for May 27th through August 6th:
- How Cellphones, Twitter and Facebook can make history: Ted talks Clay Shirky – Thanks to Delicious user Caffeinebomb for sending this in.
(http://delicious.com/caffeinebomb & http://twitter.com/caffeinebomb) - Australian Local Council starts using Birmingham’s social media surgeries | Be Vocal – The fantastic social media surgery concept, pioneered in Birmingham by Pete Ashton and developed by Nick Booth, is taken up in Australia.
- How Andrew Stott is setting Whitehall a-Twitter | Technology | The Guardian – Brief profile and interview with the man who is teaching politicians and civil servants how to engage with the public via social media tools (not just Twitter).
- Guardian on their influential readers – This is interesting. A presentation from The Guardian & Observer advertising sales team regarding influence within their readers. Now newspapers aren't just selling their readers as a demographic to advertisers: they're selling the network of their readership to brands.
- Timms takes over Digital Britain brief | Technology | guardian.co.uk – A new minister in the hot-seat to drive forward Digital Britain, the UK Government's strategy and vision for the digital economy, and the required infrastructure and skills development that will make this possible.
- twopointouch | Surrender! Foucault and Twitter – A brief overview of how we might apply Foucault's ideas to social media, with some useful links to further reading.
Recent Comments