All together now event

April 14, 2008 – 12:24 pm

I’m looking forward to doing a speaking slot at the forthcoming ‘All Together now‘ event at Channel Four on May 1.

My bit is on how physical communities can be augmented by virtual communities, focusing on minority sports; pretty much as close to my core interests as you can get.

I’m going to consider a bit of theory and the importance of facilitation, then pull out some examples from groups support for less active people to the panoply of ways we interact in and around our local climbing centre in Bristol. Here’s the event blurb:

Over the course of the past three years the emergence of blogging, social networking services and platforms which showcase and share user generated content have transformed the possibilities of how we connect, converse and collaborate with one another.

’In the 20th Century, we were defined by what we owned, in the 21st Century we will be defined by what share and give away’ Charles Leadbeater, author of We Think

The potential for organisations and brands to harness these technologies and tools to engage with users, customers and their communities in radically new ways is becoming clear.

How can all those organisations working to promote active participation in sports and the brands that wish to sponsor their activates and campaigns work together to make the most of the unrivalled viral power and network effects of the web in the run up to 2012?

All Together Now will bring together leading social media developers and thinkers, sports governing bodies, communities’ sports organisations and some of our leading brands into a unique event to explore these opportunities.

Event site and booking here

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Skillswap report on project management

March 26, 2008 – 1:07 pm

Thank you PM Studio
(thanks for the space, Pervasive Media Studio!)

We had some good talks and discussion around the topic of ‘Project Management’ at last week’s Skillswap:

  • Joe Leech talked about being a small cog in many bigger systems: Presentation
  • Laura Francis talked about how she uses Agile
  • Fraser Stephens discussed the ‘what to’s of Prince2: Presentation
  • Eben Halford talked about Scrum: Presentation

Peter Ferne and the Jiva crew produced plenty of free drink and snacks; thanks all!

Skillswappers in PM Studio

Thanks for the excellent space, and good work to all attendees.

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Media Sandbox case study

March 13, 2008 – 2:53 pm

Media Sandbox crew
(Most of the Media Sandbox projects)

Introduction

This is high level case study about the blended facilitation work ongoing with the Media Sandbox commissioning scheme managed by iShed. Here is the descriptive blurb:

Bringing together leading technology, artistic and media talent, Media Sandbox is a new commissioning scheme to support South West companies/organisations to research emerging possibilities in digital media.

The theme for 2007/2008 is pervasive media. By supporting a community of research around this cutting-edge theme, Media Sandbox will encourage business growth, share knowledge with the wider sector and reinforce the reputation of Bristol and the South West as a centre for cutting-edge R&D.

Traditionally, this type of commissioning involves a call for bids, distribution of cash to successful bidders, some relatively private research and development, and a ’showcase’ event at the end where the bidders tell us a few things and say thanks for the cash.

We felt that this commissioning construct could do with some spring cleaning by introducing community-type thinking and free open source software. This case study is a stab at reporting that…

Read the rest of this entry »

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Interesting games lab

March 7, 2008 – 7:45 pm

iglab picture

Simon and the iglab collective in Bristol are running another night of games, gaming, game theory and other stuff like that down at the Pervasive Media lab on Tuesday 11 March. Anyone can come and all are welcome. :

This time it’s personal… thats not just hyperbole this month iglab has a theme. Personal relationships.

Recommended.

Event booking link

More on iglab

Simon’s been doing some serious head-scratching about Swarm theory and gaming as part of his Media Sandbox commission so he’s probably a good person to be running a game workshop too :)

I’m going through a bit of a lofi phase at the moment (just put in a proposal for an entirely physical conference intervention around pervasive group knowledge including post-it notes and bamboo poles) and am looking forward to the night’s lofi games as well as the techno-pervasive stuff, but all of it will be fun and and learning-oriented.

Here be a prediction: ’social networking’ and ‘gaming’ will become more prevelant as facilitation techniques in community development practice, but that’s another story.

Come and enjoy.

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skillswap project management

March 7, 2008 – 7:39 pm

Joe Leech and I are convening March’s Skillswap in the Pervasive Media Lab. It’s called ‘Project manage this!’, and is about project management. I was a project manager once; there wasn’t enough human in it for me and way too much detail, but I remain deeply impressed by a good intelligent emotionally sensitive (but not wiffling) project manager.

We’ve got a good range of PM types to kick off conversations, and, as usual, attendees are expected to bring their brains, experiences and other stuff like that. Huge thanks to the Pervasive Media lab crew for the venue.

Here details:

Bristol Skillswap: Wednesday 19 March 2008
Title: Project manage this!
What:
Project Management tips and tricks
Who:
Joe Leech, Laura Francis, Fraser Stephens (and more)
What’s happening:
Our three presenters will stand up and give us some background and stories from their experience with project management tools and stuff like that in different sectors. Then we will talk about it.

 Group page with information on it

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Ideas for a troubled economy

March 3, 2008 – 1:58 pm

Richard Sedley and his Customer Engagement Unit team are publishing a timely new book called: “Winners and Losers in a troubled economy”. Here is some blurb:

With all the talk and early signs of an economic downturn the pressure on businesses to prove ROI on their marketing activities is greater than at any other point in the last twenty years. This changing climate will dictate not only where budgets will go but which companies will win and which will lose…

It will be on sale in printed form from 11th March, but it is a free download from the Winners and Losers website while stocks last. If you can get to the event on 11th March, I recommend it (details on the site) as well as the book.

I was going to write a short piece for it, but things didn’t end up that way, so here was the gist of what it was going to be:

Ed’s top tips:

1. Use Open Source software or free products wherever possible (not neccesarily with organisational single sign-on for example, but how about openid?
2. Use Open Source models and ideas reported elsewhere
3. Learn your lessons wisely and share the findings from your work with others freely
4. Embed the learning and resources in your organisation

This is how I work wherever possible. Most of my findings and lessons learnt from last year with CILIP, Amnesty, Media Sandbox (case study out next week) and others are available for nothing.

Some call it idealistic, but that’s fine by me. I don’t believe that ‘Knowledge in a box’ has much value, and that business plans built on hoarding IP are really sustainable any more. If you stuff knowledge in a box and hide it, you get a Schrodinger effect (quantuum knowledge anyone?).

It is better to share it, learn from it, converse around it and build upon it. See more on this from Miguel’s excellent analysis, or Verna Allee’s brilliant book The Future of Knowledge, which presents a variety of examples of how to share your product knowledge with your consumers in order to drive its development forward.

This approach has new assessment frameworks, sure, but these can be handled with approaches like Outcome mapping, currently used in the Development domain, which are far more participative and pragmatic than any of the other assessment models I have seen, much more suited to the basic fact that business is complex, and highly suitable to online community stuff.

If you want some uplifting thoughts on this subject I recommend reading Charles Leadbeater’s new book “We think: The power of mass creativity” (Thanks David), and combining those thoughts with those from the book “Enough” (Thanks Toby). That’s what I’m going to hint at at a couple of conferences this week.

I recently read some bits from ‘We think’ out loud to some strangers on the train it was so good, and thought I would share one here (I think I’m going to have to add a quotes category to this blog):

Markets trade products; communities breed knowledge. Ideas do not live in the minds of individuals but through a constant circulation as gifts. In the century to come well being will come to depend less on what we own and consume and more on what we can share with others and create together, especially as consumption becomes increasingly constrained by environmental concerns that mean we have to live more within collectively binding limits

This points firmly towards the original Cluetrain directions about the incoming integration of markets and communities through conversation and sharing.

Good work all!

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Happiness located in Bristol

February 26, 2008 – 5:41 pm

Sunrise 10 February
Bristol dawn, 10/02/06

I will soon be publishing a case study about my work with the ‘Media Sandbox‘; the new commissioning scheme run by iShed based on a communal open innovation model supported by (basically) free social software tools and structured using blended facilitation techniques. We ran the launch event in November 2007 and are now in the ‘open innovation’ phase.

One of the tools we are using is an open mailing list which is there to help the projects at the core of the community share their work, research questions and findings, problems and other stuff with a wide open audience and vice versa.

We are deliberately not ‘actively facilitating’ the list or the comments on the research journals on the site in order to gain as natural an idea of what tool is good for what, and what people like to use, and what type of interaction different people like. A report will be forthcoming later in the year about all this stuff, but in the meantime, a brilliant list occurrence occurred:

Frog enjoying cider
Wall artwork at Duke of York pub

One of the projects’ members, Dan Course from Thought Pie is working on a thingie which helps people pass ‘happy packages’ to eachother around the city, so is naturally interested in where people feel happy around the city. Very sensibly, he asked the mailing list the following question:

“Hey Media Sandbox, We’re thinking of locations around Bristol where you’d feel a sense of Happiness for being there, I’ve got a few but would really like to hear what makes you happy….These are mine:

Top of Cabot’s Tower, just made it up the steps and the view!
Middle of the downs, must be doing something pro-active
Top of Park Street, just cycled up it
Suspension Bridge, too nice
Asda’s CD rack, I’m gunna buy some new music
M32 sign on the M4 West, I’m nearly home!

It could be anywhere and anything! Also, I know somethings are a very personal happiness but would love to hear those you feel fine to share…”

The response was really very touching so I’ve copied it below. Asides to being an interesting research point, potential future meeting locations for the group, classic example of brilliant mailing list use, this was a coming together of people living around Bristol who simply wanted to share things they like about the region so I thought I would copy it here.

Here are the lists’ replies to date:

Read the rest of this entry »

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Strategic planning for group spaces

February 15, 2008 – 2:59 pm

Here are some high level thoughts outlining things you might do when planning for a new community or ‘common purpose networking tool’ (thanks Ben), or group space, or network enabler, and how you might go about doing it in such a way as to get the most benefit for all actors in the system.

I show the pictures about facilitation and moderation below to all clients (and anyone else who will listen) as the older I get, the more importance I associate with planning where neccesary. This post is largely based on the top of the triangles in the diagrams below; the strategy stuff. I chose a triangle to try to explain it because it seemed the most suitable. Possibly a spiral; whatever is the best visualisation technique, the most important thing is that strategy must come first.

Each client sees different things which I find fascinating; however, the core elements remain the same, which I hope I’ve captured here. As usual, I’m not saying this is the whole and secret truth delivered from a cloudy mountain top in stone tablets to a chap with a big beard in sandals - things like that are contextually tied, date instantly, break easily and are prone to hording by those who horde things and want power. And the elements continue to evolve every day.

Why do you do it?

Without a clear strategy you have no shared understanding, identity or language, no goals, nor purpose, no research questions, no desirable outcomes or KPIs, etc. etc. and all manner of excitment can ensue. Most problems I have had facilitating can probably be traced back to mis-understandings or mis-communications around the core point of the gig.

Whether you are preparing for a highly formal CoP environment or a wild-west bandy-legged open innnovation network, put time into the strategy bit. Plan where you can plan - even (perhaps especially) where you have your fingers crossed for that all hallowed ’serendipitous emergence’.

What do you do and how do you do it?

It’s all about groundwork and foundations at the beginning. Start with your questions. What are you up to? What is it that you want? What does the sponsor organisation want? What will the participants want? Read the rest of this entry »

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What are facilitation and moderation

February 15, 2008 – 1:55 pm

A quick addendum about facilitation and moderation on online spaces before a longer post about strategy.

Pete and Dan group the mind map
Pete Ferne and Dan Dixon grouping a mindmap at The Media Sandbox community launch event. Are they facilitating, moderating, re-purposing, or nothing at all?

Facilitation:

Is largely around helping people connect, share, and learn together; disrupting the walls that keep them apart, understanding the purpose behind their interactions and assisting them achieve this in the longer term.

Knowing who they are and how they interact, and not dragging them into communal contexts they would naturally shy away from or drive others wild with rage.

Understanding where the knowledge lies in the network and how to approach it.

Knowing the people: when to bring in an extrovert, or when to refer to an introvert (yes I know that is a wide generalisation). Knowing when the big picture stuff is good and when to focus and produce detailed stuff, and who is good at that too. And while I’m on the whole personality and behaviour thing (more on that soon), having a feel for which tool, or which community outcome, different participants will be attracted to.

Moderation:

Is the coalface end end of the model. From member logins, to moving threads, via editing comments (be careful you then become a ’secondary publisher’ and thus own the words legally). You can pre-moderate conversations, or post-moderate them. I say post-moderate, and only when someone complains with good reason. Do not let rules and moderation processes get in the way of knowledge creation through firey conversations; this is a careful balance and can kill good mailing lists and other spaces.

When issues arise, ‘moderation’ is the set of communications and processes thing that deals with them.

Either a problem needs to be escalated through pre-existing organisational processes, or new community based ones. It all needs to be transparent.

When it has to be done, doing it elegantly. If you want some practice, throw a party and then find yourself having to physically push a leery mate (who is only wearing one shoe for some reason) out of your front door at 6am and be decent about it at the same time.

Is best done on the back of communally and transparently discussed rules and processes which you should have done in the preparation phase of the group. That way the rules are owned by the community who had a chance to get involved in them, and understand that they are there for the best general purpose.

Thus when the moderator is being publicly and loudly compared to Attilla the Hun or the baby eating bishop of Bath and Wells by your outgoing resident nutter who everyone quietly wishes would push off but is a bit scared of, or doesn’t want to put their heads above the parapet) or being referred to the universal declaration of human rights, or free speech, or some other external declaration of something the nutter refers to, everyone knows what the rules are, how they came into being, and why the nutter is being stuffed, reasonably, out the door.

Never nice. If you are a facilitator who likes the fringes, it may be someone you really like. And it’s only really necessary in centralised controlled spaces, but it can happen very rarely, so have your groundwork up your sleeve.

Don’t believe that ‘the community will self-police’ and thus not bother set up proper processes. I hear this from people and think ‘hmm nice, but the wrong advice’. You don’t want to scare people setting up community spaces, but as Miguel introduced me to, ‘believe in Allah but tie your camel’.
In my experience in both worlds, when someone goes off on one and loses the plot, people rarely self-police. They hope someone will handle it. Why else do we have a police force? There’s always one person who tackles the issue. I have seen this in trains, libraries, squats, festivals, street corners, shops.

Why people don’t approach trouble makers is another question: are they afraid of the tribulation that that might entail or do they not want to be disliked? Either way, someone has to do it. So do it with spirit and heart and love, and with the utilitarian perspective of the group at large at the front of your mind.

It won’t happen often, I promise.

Somewhere in between lie the editorial skills of coaxing conversations out of people, re-purposing, summarising, bashing out newsletters, and otherwise helping the community digest and share its findings.

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Online community survey

February 7, 2008 – 10:15 am

ROI for ‘communities’ is going to appear on our horizons for proper this year. We will have the debate from the sponsors asking if it’s worth it, and another one about which way around it should be - ie: ROI for whom? The sponsors, or the participants. Likewise there is much talk about the ROI of ’social media’, and all of the projects I am working on have measurement built into them at the strategy level. Woohoo.

The Online Community Report crowd are doing a survey on this, so please have a read, fill it in, and pass it on.

Survey link here:Blurb follows. The more responses the better:

Dear Online Community Friend,

I’m writing to invite you to participate in a survey about the return on
investment for online community activities. We’re contacting people
that are knowledgeable about this topic. Those that fill out the survey
(which should take about 15 minutes) will get back from us the final
report containing compiled, anonymous results.

We chose this topic because we know that many organizations are actively
trying to determine the ROI for their online community activities. There
are very few resources on this topic, save experts like you.

If you are interested in this topic, please fill out the survey at:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=s7BgAJMtaUfLT1UP2rj4cw_3d_3d

Feel free to forward this note to others that might be interested. We’d
like folks to complete the survey by COB this Friday, 2/8, if possible.

Thanks for your participation and best regards,

Bill Johnston
Director, Community & Research
Forum One Communications

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