Delayed report on two events

In a relunctant admission of poor timekeeping, I just wanted to share some thoughts on a couple of events I was lucky enough to attend last Thursday.

The first MeasurementCamp of 2009 kicked off at 10am, hosted by E-Consultancy. It was good to be back, having missed a couple, and it’s always great to get the chance to tackle hypothetical examples in a group and share ideas and methodologies.  Plus I got to sit next to BBC Working Lunch blog/social networking star Annie Mole… The only downside was the sheer number of people present meant introductions took a hefty chunk of time and left the case study discussion in a bit of a rush.

The other event was the Every Single One of Us Powwow, held at the ICA. It’s probably the most inspirational and exciting event I’ve ever attended – partly because it can be hard to grasp every aspect of ESOOU in words, partly because of the incomparable dynamo that is Jonathan MacDonald, and also because there was a real sense of purpose in the room.

It also meant I got to see, and occasional meet, some cool virtual people in the flesh, including WhatleyDude, Alfie Dennen, and the Herdmeister himself.

In all seriousness, pretty much any one of the people that spoke on the night would have been the highlight of most other events, so having them all in one room was pretty interesting.  As was a mid-presentation hug from Jonathan…

The site has more details, videos, slides, interviews and details on everything to do with esoou.

Tomorrow should be very interesting

Whilst today has been approaching epic fail status, (including my other blog, 140char.com having some kind of outage for 50% of visitors – including me), tomorrow has suddenly shaped up to be very interesting.

I’ve suddenly ended up with a breakfast date over soup with someone I’ve been trying to catch up with for ages.

Then there’s a good chance I might actually make MeasurementCamp for once…it’s always really interesting, and it has more of a focus on actually coming up with metrics (hence the name) that work for social media and marketing!

Then catching up on some of the plans for the day job at Bauer Media.

And then off to the very interesting EverySingleOneofUs event.

Considering some of the complications and illness-inspired delays that have already hit me (and my family) in 2009, it feels like tomorrow is the day it all kicks off.

MeasurementCamp – and Twitter

Wednesday saw the latest meeting of MeasurementCamp (Big thanks to @willmcinnes for setting it all up and @helenium for sorting out the venue at Dare Digital). It was a bit strange, as I made it to the inaugral event, and then missed the next three for various reasons. There were quite a few new faces in the room, which was good.

Unfortunately both my son and the train service conspired to make me rather late, but I was still able to get a fair bit from the format, which saw groups tackling one of four real world scenarios – it’s great to be applying our skills to something real rather than debating semantics (buzzwords rather than Web 3.0!) as often happens with social media geek gatherings.

And it was quite funny to see how many times Twitter was mentioned compared to just five months earlier – particular as I missed the chance to meet a lot of people, but I was already following everyone in the room except for one (now added!). I still managed to catch up with a couple of people, which was good – and I’m looking forward to the next one.

Keeping on the subject of Twitter, I had the pleasure of chatting to @amandita about microblogging in my first ever academic interview… She’s interviewing a veritable army of people, so I’m really looking forward to seeing the insights she draws out of it…

The only annoying thing was a though that occurred to me after I’d headed back to the train station, about the position Twitter occupies in my online persona – and why it’s probably the most realistic image of me. On other services it’s easier to slip into a certain subset of my identity – either consciously, or just through habit. But the constant and almost instantaneous nature of Twitter means it’s almost impossible to keep up an act unless it’s a real conscious decision – e.g. @amandachapel. And the fact it is a calculated work of artifice is comparatively obvious. The nature of the fake ExxonMobilCorp showed how suspicions could be raised.

Whereas I tend to be fairly serious using LinkedIn. And depending on the recipient, usually fairly serious in email. And Facebook for me is mainly around photos and events with friends, so I tend to be far more sarcastic then normal.

Like so:

My Serious to Comedy ratio

I’m intrigued to see whether other people think they’re more ‘real’ on Twitter, or whether they find themselves slipping into a persona, either consciously, or without even thinking about it.

Consumers and bosses…

Apologies for the slightly cryptic and unexplored post yesterday – a reminder that sometimes an idea needs a bit more fleshing out before clicking the Publish button!

What was foremost in my mind is something that is vitally important to my current role, and social media/community as a whole. And that’s the fact that, despite the growth in Web 2.0 technology, and adoption of community techniques – it isn’t half as widespread as you might assume from within the tech/blogging bubble. Plenty of people, even within the digital world, find it hard to see the reason for investing time in social networking and how it applies to them – and outside that area or department, it’s even more of a leap.

And what has come out of my work, attending valuable gatherings like Measurementcamp, and reading great blogs such as Web Strategy by Forrester Senior Analyst Jeremiah Owyang, or KD Paine’s PR Measurement blog, is that it’s the reporting, measurement, and justification of any community work is as vitally important as doing it in the first place.

And being able to show the measurable aspects of community/social media work, and explaining the direct and indirect effects on the bottom line is absolutely essential in changing the way companies think – particularly the larger, more institutional companies.

If you need a refreshing reminder about making things clearer for the rest of your company, and particularly more senior management, bosses, and CEOs, Avinash Kaushik has some good posts on Occam’s Razor which can feel like they pour a bit of cold water on the evangelical aspects of community and social media – but actually really help clarify the most useful methods of making things simple and effective – rather than relying on enthusiasm, buzzwords, and what it’s easy to assume is the inescapable logic of enagaging communities. Particularly this one, and this one!

I certainly don’t have all the answers – although the benefit of facing these challenges to varying extents in my day job means I’m slowly understanding more of the solutions – but what really interests me is how other people are tackling the challenges, what case studies people are willing to share, where people have found value, and what levels of commitment companies, particularly larger institutions, are actually committing to community engagement – is anyone finding the returns and solutions that make community pervasive through their company – or are large companies forever destined to limit it to experimenting via the fringes of what they do? And how much real effect does that have? And is technology – targeting adverts, engaging via Twitter etc, actually moving further ahead of where the biggest value is?

Personally, I think there’s a balance between using the tool of community marketing, and traditional digital and offline marketing. And that the trick is to be ahead of the mainstream by a small amount in order to establish and experiment in a space to ensure you’re on the right track before the crowds turn up – but what views have you got?

So are you in a large or small company? Or working as an individual?

Are you attempting to convince others – particularly management of the value of community and social media?

And are you targeting the early adopter communities right now? (e.g. Twitter, Plurk, Seesmic etc), or are you going with more mainstream efforts? (Facebook, Myspace, Digg, Stumbleupon).