These are my links for June 9th through June 17th:

  • Keynote: Three Ways Business Must Scale With Social Technologies – Jeremiah Owyang from Altimeter on how brand discussions are now 'off domain' and companies (this carries through from large to small I believe) need to consider how by linking together empowered customers, internal teams and technology you can scale to meet the rising challenges off managing customers in social media.
  • Google Analytics for Facebook Fan Pages – A cheeky tech way to get the power of Google Analytics from you Facebook fan page data by adding an image to your fan page. A great way to compere your site and social network data.
  • Google Caffeine jolts worldwide search machine – Google has now successfully rolled out the latest changes to it's search engine, known as 'Caffeine'. This now brings you fresher, faster jolts of content and news as websites are archived more quicky page by page, meaning content published could show up on search results within hours of not minutes. Great news for content producers reacting to timely news content, and a move towards the power of the real-time web.
  • Q&A: Chris Gorell Barnes on online video for brands – Chril Barnes from Adjust Your Set (great company name) on online video for brands – interesting idea about a 'holy grail' of linking mobile video with vouchers to bring people in-store, and using in-store video to enhance sales promotions. He claims online video can increase conversion by 100% and reduce product returns by 60%.
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Open data for an open government

The new coalition government has launched plans to ensure more data and information on government activities, particularly spending, is accountable and shareable online, announced in an open letter from David Cameron to all government departments. Within a few days of the COINS government spending database release, the press were able to report on the scale of government losses.

Not merely a knee-jerk reaction to the Freedom Of Information (FOI) requests following the MPs expenses scandal, this follows moves by the Labour government to use open innovation to benefit the public at large (and with it the government) in the provision of services.   It’s a win-win equation: the collective time and resources of web developers, data analysts and campaigners can make light (and cost-free) work of processing data and informing the government of key trends and issues, whilst citizens benefit from better accountability for issues that matter to them.

Good thinkers from the digital sector are partly to be praised: Tom Losemore (currently head of Channel 4’s 4iP innovation fund) introduced open data concepts in his consultation role to the Cabinet; he previously established They Work For You, a means for all citizen to communicate with and bring to account their member of parliament (I remember the site when it was Fax Your MP, in the days before MPs would accept email as a legal form of communication.  The wheels of democracy move slowly).

What e-democracy needs to succeed

E-Democracy is critical for the success of society and to ensure that politicians are acting in the interests of their citizens.  This can include anything from finding out the cost of the council tax bill for your new house to having your say about a major local or national issue.  The government’s central drive to ensure more services are delivered online ultimately benefits everyone, but only if Digital Champion Martha Lane Fox succeeds in her cause  to get the 25% of British adults currently ‘digitally excluded’ online, and those entering the digital world are given the digital literacy skills to seek work, do business and communicate with others online (doing fun stuff like social networking can contribute to this too).

So it’s a step into the brave new world of the digital economy where commerce and democracy walk hand-in-hand.  But reflecting on last month’s general election, I wonder how impeded we are by uptake and the ‘crap in / crap out’ problem of capturing good data and information.  I was excited by the prospect of the first web 2.0 UK election, where well adopted tools like Twitter and Facebook could influence the democratic processes.   If Twitter uses were a representation of the voter count, I’m sure Nick Clegg would have won a landslide election, seen by the televised Leaders Debate using online comments to trigger the sentiment and approval of voters.

Digital tools and the UK General Election 2010

As a voter I found it extremely hard to find useful information on candidates standing for election.  Various online tools such as betting odds comparison, local polls and the comments from my own networks gave me a sense of the mood.  Tools that allowed me to compare my preferences with party policies, see flyers others had uploaded, and videos voters had made when being door-stepped all allowed me to get a better sense of the prospective candidates than in previous elections (NB: I would link to these sites but many strangely now seem to be invisible or erased since the election).

My biggest issue?  The lack of quality ‘input’ from candidates.  In my consistuency only the outsider Liberal and Conversative candidates bothered to enter their data and responses into online questionaires, and not all candidates provided an email contact (including the drop-landed winning candidate Chris Leslie who won a landslide victory despite only being named as the candidate 2 weeks before election and doing no online campaigning whatsoever). On election night, I discovered from the Voter Power tool that my vote was only worth 0.084 of a ‘normal’ vote.

I saw no examples in my constituency of candidates blogging (although I know others who did) and only one whom I could make contact with by Facebook and Twitter (thanks @blueewan).  Finding out when ‘real world’ hustings was impossible (I presume these are promoted in the local paper few people read) and none took the initiative to host an online chat.

Getting politicians skilled for e-democracy

I would like to see a wholesale commitment from all political parties to educate their incumbent and prospective parliamentary members, and to trickle down inclusive, digital communication skills to all those involved in supporting the democratic processes.  It would be a simple step for all the major parties to set up a blogging tool centrally for all members which they should be obliged to update with their key activities at least once a month.

Equally having a presence on the two largest social networks (Facebook and Twitter) should be mandatory, at least during the campaigning period.  Forums to host online surgeries or hustings should be provided, particularly for voters unable to attend hustings (including house-bound elderly, parents and those working away from home).

If candidates want an example of someone making it work, look to Tom Watson, the MP who blogs, Twitters and show real interest in the public at large, drawing more people into the political process.  Voters too should consider how candidates respond to online situations: do you want your MP to be someone who never answers emails or makes it as difficult as possible to fulfill their obligations to you?

E-democracy isn’t just about releasing financial data and giving us the ability to make a Freedom Of Information request.  It’s about ensuring we all have a voice to be heard and listened to; better digital communications skills are vital to this cause.

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These are my links for May 31st through June 6th:

  • Well, what is a good digital music strategy ? Part 2 – Social Networks – Virginie Berger with some useful advice and stats on the potential for promoting music on social networks, and some tips to be more successful (like apparently adding 'video' to your video title is a winning tactic).
  • Public Enemy’s New Sellaband Target – Fan funding – getting your 'fans' to pre-pay for your material to fund its production costs – is a great new innovation in the music industry (I recently fan-funded the new Thomas Truax album and received my pre-release download of it today), but this reflection on the difficulties established group Public Enemy have had meeting their targets suggests fan funding may not yet be a mature enough funding mechanism to replace the role (particularly in sales and marketing) of the music industry.
  • The State of Online Video – A new report from the Pew survey of American life showing 7/10 adults are watching video online, with a large rise in humourous, eduactional, TV and film and political videos, with an increase in user-created content.
  • Experiments in delinkification – Nicholas Carr, academic and author of 'Is Google Making Us Stupid?', on why hyperlinking in text may be a distraction from the idea you are conveying, and an experiment with putting links after the text like footnotes in a book. I agree partly with this idea, but actually there's another issue (that newspapers and even some credible online publications like Mashable) that hyperlinking encourages users to leave your site rather than 'stickiness' of moving to elsewhere on your site. It's an interesting balance that needs to be struck between providing context and value to what you write, and making sure the hyperlink doesn't detract from either the flow of your idea or the user journey on your website.
  • Content is everything, so just do it – This is something that has bothered me for a while: the 'signal vs noise' ratio that we all have to be producing LOTS of content (status updates, links on Twitter, blog articles) in the drive for attention and search engine indexes. Of course this is a nonsense, you should write what is good, when you can (I ususally recommend to clients some sort of minimum commitment per month of types of content e.g. status updates, video, news article depending on the needs they identify). Ideas are good, volume is bad.
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These are my links for May 29th from 18:05 to 21:31:

  • iPlayer Makes TV More Social, Without Re-Inventing The Social Network Wheel – Two articles this week show the close entwining of TV and web as two supporting media: BBC's iPlayer is becoming more social, allowing viewers to connect with friends and live chat. Meanwhile, ITV are signalling the arrival of the world cup with more focus on 'two screen' TV (web supporting TV) experiences: http://paidcontent.co.uk/article/419-itv-formalising-twin-screen-strategy-first-stop-world-cup/
  • Stop The Presses: ‘Sunset’ For Print In Five Years, FT Sees – In the week the iPad hits the UK shops, forecasters are nodding to the end of the print press and distribution chain, as readers and mobile devices signal the end of tree-based media. Business-to-business publications (like the Financial Times) are likely to be the first to fall, with the timescale estimates ranging from 5-30 years. If you're working in B2B markets – are you ready for an online only content and marketing landscape?
  • Reputation Management and Social Media: How people monitor their identity and search for others online – According to new Pew Internet research, more young adults in USA are concerned with their online reputation, behaviours include increase searching of their own and their friends names online, and removing tags of themselves from online content.
  • Six Spaces of social media – An old (2007) but interesting means of categorising social spaces rather than by type or platform but purpose, like 'secret spaces' and 'publishing spaces'. A good way of thinking about user behaviours within the social platform you are working in.
  • Cloud computing is the new way to do business – A good 101 intro to cloud computing with this short video news features from the BBC.
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These are my links for May 22nd through May 26th:

  • Digital strategy is tool every business can use to maximise endeavour – Here's a little interview with me from this week's Evening Post, Nottingham, business section, talking about my work in digital strategy and also a bit about my work with the CreativeNottingham.com project.
  • Q&A: Gerd Leonhard on why social media beats search – Gerd Leonhard, a very smart chap and the author of 'Future of Music Manifesto' (a big source for my recent study of independent music) on why social media will eventually overtake search, and engagement other reputation management, and why paywalls don't work.
  • Guest comment: When TV met the internet – the perfect love-child – Tom Laidlaw from Videojug on the impact of online video, which has 10x the response rate of other online media.
  • Augmented reality: 10 real world examples from the superbrands – Augmented reality is not just science fiction: both iconic and inventive global brands are starting to experiment in ways real products can interact with computers and screens to engage with their product. In most cases it involves connect a printed icon with your webcam (and additional software) so this is a long way from being a mainstream game changer, but a trend savvy marketers will want to investigate. I particularly like the beer that tells you if it's at the right temperature to drink.
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