These are my links for January 9th through January 29th:

  • Twitter Ad Revenues to Soar This Year- eMarketer – Prediction of the online/social ad network in next year, which shows Twitter ads to grow from a low starting base to exceed the dying MySpace this year. Facebook remains the daddy of social advertising, with the lion's share of all spend for some time to come.
  • Top 10 Productivity Tools for Entrepreneurs – Nicely curated collection of online tools for social media, project management and client management for the budding start-up.
  • Why Is Chinese Web Design So Bad? – OK a linkbait headline, but this post from Think Vitamin talks about the different aesthetics and cultural differences as to why Chinese websites appear so '1995' and cluttered, rarely getting to the point quickly for its users. Having worked on a multi-lingual site recently, this insight is fascinating that its not just images and text but the whole navigation and approach which is distinctly different out east.
  • Filtering places – Another insightful post from Mr Pete Ashton from his The Future of Local series, this time looking at augmented reality and how layers of data align with our human instincts to filter, or add meta and meaning, to the world around us. A refreshingly human view of the potential of this curious and emerging mobile technology.
  • Seven Rules for Effective Social Networking For Artists – A good approach for independent artists to social networking, particularly disarming that the 'pin ups' of social success like Amanda Palmer should be treated with caution: establishing human relationships (and unpicking this if you're in a band) with fans is at the centre of a fan engagement approach – and being genuine.
  • How to Improve Engagement with your Webisodes – Useful diagrams and approaches for transmedia (previously known as cross platform) producers to improve engagement and blending secondary (non webisode) material and scheduling to enhance audience engagement.
  • Empowerment and Innovation – Great article from online community/social expert Pete Ashton on how blogging can (sometimes) increase the empowerment, knowledge and understanding of the blogger using example of Birmingham bloggers (disclaimer: many of these writers are old friends of mine!). Part of an excellent series of posts on 'The Future of Local' for the 'Talk About Local' project.
  • Number of global co-working spaces doubles – If, like me, you work from a range of home and client offices its refreshing to know that the amount of coworking spaces for nomadic and freelance workers has doubled from 2010 to 2011. Whilst I've often enjoyed the spontaneous encounters in co-working places many are still problematic: hard to make phone calls due to background noise, lack of easy to book private spaces etc. but no doubt competition will bring more variety to the market. Co-working Europe have a co-working conference this Nov and have published a list of European co-working spaces (no doubt incomplete – the two places I use TechHub in East London and Antenna in Nottingham both missing!) http://coworkingeu.wordpress.com/2010/10/12/more-than-140-coworking-spaces-in-europe-here-is-a-list/ (via Freelance Advisor and Dave Harte)
  • 20 minutes on Facebook – An analysis project showed what a typical 20 minutes of activity on Facebook contained, which was multiplied to show the impact of a year of data. 1 million links and 1.85 million status updates are shared in 20 minutes (doesn't seem like that much to me, far under the volume of Twitter)
  • 17 digital marketing trends for 2011, by Econsultancy CEO Ashley Friedlein – The last 2011 crystal ball gazing article – promise! This time a savvy UK digital marketing perspective from Econsultancy's Ashley Friedlin, including an expectation that social media is less about ROI and more something we have to do, user experience gets more touchy feely, and new ways of harnessing data.
  • Ten 10 Predictions for Digital in the Middle East, 2011 – Out in the middle east, interestingly the landscape of digital media has many similar challenges and predictions than in the west, perhaps overall reflecting UK trends from around 2008/9.
  • Internet Marketing: The 10 Biggest Mistakes Made by Artists and Creatives (and How to Fix Them) – Lateral Action's quirky but true round up of creative's internet marketing errors (including social media narcissim) equally applies to a lot of other small business sectors. Adding people without permission to your email list – keep those hands raised!
  • How Online Video Can Reach the Business Audience – More evidence to show that video is an extremely effective tool for business, with up to 65% of executive visiting a vendors website after watching a business video, and 45% puttng in a call. Compelling video definitely helps speed up the sales funnel.
  • UK’s Digital Music Boost Slowed In 2010 – In the week HMV announce the closure of 60 stores nationally, more bad news as it seems digital music sales have grown little and overall music sales are likely to have only retained in units and declined in overall turnover, when BPI's figures are announced in March.
  • Our Bets For Digital Media In 2011 – The excellent media and publishing journal paidContent:UK gaze through a crystal ball to see what's ahead for digital media in 2011 with predictions on the popularity of mobile check-ins, tablets and interactive tv.
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This week I have been immersed in a world of stories, or rather contemplating the methods of creating and telling a story and defining what are my own ‘catalogues of narrative’ for my latest online storytelling project which I’m currently developing.

Telling stories on the big screen

It started last Saturday with a screen writing workshop at The Art Organisation (a wonderfully informal community venue, perfect for this fun and interactive workshop) in Nottingham, organised by local screen writer Adrian Reynolds.  Adrian got us thinking about both the mechanics of writing for the visual medium of film, asking us to come up with concepts for films without words which differentiate film as a visual storytelling medium rather than the ‘talking heads’ of television drama.  We looked at narrative structures for film schematics like the hero’s journey.  The mechanics of this are nothing new: these story structures can be applied to everything from Greek legends to The Godfather.  I’m convinced my online story needs to consider these structures – even short form  fragmented content online has to consider the overall journey of the viewer. It would be interesting to see how I can overlay the format of a classic story onto something that plays out through a series of intertextual multimedia elements.

Storytelling for the web

On Wednesday I attended a workshop organised by Media Sauce on making money from multiplatform content.  There’s a good write-up by the aforementioned Adrian Reynolds on what we discussed around IP, content formats and the evolution of TV commerce.

I was pleased to be offered a multiplatform training grant from media skills training body Skillset, which has afforded me the time and expertise to deepen my knowledge of online content  – flexing both my business and creative muscles.  A workshop earlier this month with major interative drama producer Sean Coleman focused on interactive storytelling: I stumbled my way through a description of my drama which has a genre (comic mystery) and a technical platform (Facebook) but scant details yet on the narrative.

My approach is unusual: unlike most film-makers-turned-interactive producer, I come from a technical background as a web producer, en route years as a web writer and editor, via a degree in music and drama.  But ‘doing’ rather than ‘telling’ a story places me at a different part of the creative process at conception which is for me a wide unknown space.  At both workshops, my fellow television and film trainees told me: it’s all about the story. Have the story and you have something you can create from and sell. For interactive storytelling this still poses a challenge: but it’s about using the mechanics to play through compelling characters and story.

Telling winning stories for sales

Thursday was the end of a the Exponential training programme, a course I participated on last year, with gruelling business simulations, skills accrediting and epic report writing eventually qualifying me as the first person in the UK with a Diploma in Strategy Business Coaching.  

John Leach from Winning Pitch was an inspirational speaker: his plain-speaking and driven ‘get off your arse’ approach to business placed the ‘win’ as all about YOU: research shows that 70% of a relationship the client chooses with their consultant is down to your personal relationship: do they like you?  Can you get on?  That’s why personal branding is becoming so critically important across all businesses. John’s message a wake-up call for me, as I’ve focused so much energy in recent years on improving my technical skills and sector knowledge – which comes way down the list of why people buy from each other.

Passion is critical in telling your story: business is about fun, fame, fortune and the future.  Strategy is about your personal intention, and success is ascribed to 20% thinking (or strategy) and 80% doing.   John like to have a ‘rant’ about the big issues in his field: have a point of view, get your voice heard – I can’t think of any better way a business can do this than by starting a blog.

Pitching is another form of storytelling for the purpose of selling – what’s the message?  Why me?  Why now? What’s the relevance of what I do to the bigger picture?  Telling a new story is a critical factor for success: there is no traffic on the extra mile. Disney have a ‘cash extraction strategy’ but you part with your pictures-of-the-president with a smile, buying into their world.  Lucosade turned a drink for sickly children into a success product for aspiring sports stars – with a little celebrity storytelling via advertising.

John emphasised that despite being in the service business, as coaches we too can say ‘no’ to clients if the relationship doesn’t fit – selling isn’t just a one way process, and only good relationshipsyield good work. As a business, you need to build long-term gains, not just short-term wins.  I’m going to put John’s advice to the test with some ‘pitch training’ I’m doing on my new digital strategy next week.

Today’s marked the end of a small journey in my own career – in a transition to a novice to a newly qualified business coach.  I’m so proud my team from back in Oct 2008 won Exponential’s winning team award – plus I was shortlisted for most improved coach and outstanding achievement – something I’d never thought, as someone far less experienced, than my peers, I could achieve.  I’m grateful to John, Anne-Marie and the team at Exponential – not to mentioned the other coaches on the programme who’ve been a wealth of support with their experience, wisdom and generosity – for helping me through this mini ‘hero’s journey’ in my own journey.

Are we sitting comfortably?  The Story event, Conway Hall

I  rounded off this epic week with The Story, an event at Conway Hall organised by Matt Locke (who’s ‘day job’ is head of education commissioning at Channel 4, thus the wonderfully diverse and high level speaker list) all about the art of relaxing and enjoying a good story.  The diversity of stories told today was immense: from “Harrison Fraud”, the tale of a tested business relationship told out by forged faxes and letters from Harrison Ford by Tim Wright, considerations of graphic novel telling by Sydney Padua and Livity’s  inspiring tale of Jody McIntyre, a wheelchair using MC, blogger and political activist whose only story includes a journey up Mountt Picchu and student union lock-ins, with his tag line ‘that’s just how I roll’. Neither patronising of what a ‘brave hero’ Jody was, his story was inspiring  as a great person achieving great things against the odds – classic stuff of legends.

Intriguingly, these mix of stories – superb, average and surreal– in many genres and tastes, gained such differing responses from the audience – we all had our best and worst, and these radically differed.  I personally loved Aleks Krotoski’s  slide show of the ‘hidden story’ of the making of her current BBC2 documentary The Virtual Revolution, showing the exciting journey, and frustration of ‘making telly’ when you’re passionate about the subject – others I spoke to thought this was ego-centric self-promotion.  The highlight for some was experimental theatre storyteller Tim Etchells of Forced Entertainment telling monologues of expletive ridden visions of celebrity hell where leading Hollywood ladies thrust Oscar’s up their arse.  I found it an indulgent, misogynistic mix of Naked Lunch cliches and uncomfortably awful stand-up comedy.

The story was starting to unfold: many voices, many styles, many messages make a good story.  But as I learned in a storytelling course at university, the story comes alive through the art of telling – it’s all about communicating the meaning and passion to others in a very personal one to many conversation.  Which comes back to my ‘day job’ of digital strategy and particularly social media marketing, enabling a big action through interlinking many stories and conversations.

Today the story continues, I’m indulging in one of my (many) unconventional interests – telling stories through games.  I’ll be participating in a futuristic group story for 40 people set in a dystopian future, creating our own social stories within the bigger picture – again, not unlike the message vs medium forms of social marketing.  Some would call this a cutting edge form of interactive drama.  We know it’s a great way to have fun.

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These are my links for October 29th from 12:20 to 12:52:

  • Story – the conference – Mat Locke, the commissioner at Channel 4 education, is organising an 'unconference' on storytelling in spring 2010 (just for fun not as a C4 thing) to join together people from a range of disciplines to look at new ways of storytelling. All those in say 'aye'…
  • Finding Funding for your Creative Project – The founder of Gigbeth music festival and all round music education guru Clare Edwards gives her top tips on seeking funding – it's actually not that different to working with clients: getting to know funders and understanding their needs, raise awareness before you ask for cash, but overall to have a kick-ass project you believe in. Although Clare's advice is geared towards the arts and cultural sector, there's quite a few lessons here that are applicable to those seeking public funding in the business and digital sector.
  • 10 ways to measure social media success – As social media increasingly acts as a hybrid between marketing, PR and customer service, this intelligent piece by Econsultancy looks at ways of measuring success and return on investment – with some useful advice on matching the 'hard' numbers (e.g. page views) with metrics around retention and engagement.
  • Social media: the best and worst of 2009 – Tech Crunch's round up of the good (Obama, Zappos, Skittles) and bad (Habitat, Ryanair and – strangely again – Skittles) uses of social media in 2009. Sadly only big brands are making headlines here, which furthers my research into music showing that its mainly 'old' and 'big' media that get rich and noticed online.
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These are my links for October 9th from 08:54 to 09:27:

  • Techniques for Segmenting Content Across Media – More on transmedia storytelling and taking audiences from journeys between platforms, self-contained narrative or cross-platform narrative, including the example of the Mitsubishi seewhathappens.com advert in two parts – one TV, the cliffhanger of the advert resolved by going online.
  • Lance Weiler: When The Audience Takes Control – Indie cross-media filmmaker Lance Weiler interview fans of gaming and films and discusses ways of building audience buy-in and interaction into the content creation process. Also a list of useful resources and tools to encourage dialogue with audiences.
  • Alternative Reality Game Stats – Transmedia expert Christy Dena gives a summary of all the major Alternative Reality Games to date, with stats on participants, production budget and links to interesting review and articles.
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