jump to navigation

UK Mummy Bloggers Cumbria Fundraiser November 26, 2009

Posted by Matt Churchill in Blogging.
Tags: , , ,
add a comment

I was delighted to get an e-mail from Tasha Goddard on Monday, telling me about some fundraising she will be taking part in to raise money for the residents of Cumbria, so devestated by the recent floods.

Tasha, along with Bambino Goodies, Kat of Housewife Confidential fame and some other British Mummy Bloggers, will be running an auction the week of Monday November 30th – Sunday December 6th for various donated items.

If you want to get involved or donate something for auction, send an e-mail to cumbriafloodauction(@)googlemail(.)com and for more information you download the document prepared by Kat.

This is for a great cause and is yet another example of how online can work for the benefit of offline.

4% of consumers use Twitter or Facebook for Customer Service November 25, 2009

Posted by Matt Churchill in Social Media.
Tags: , , ,
add a comment

According to a survey released last week by Corizon, only 4% of British consumers use social media platforms to contact a company.

According to the poll of 2,127 consumers, asked what contact method they preferred:

Phone 75%
E-mail 70%
Web Self Service 43%
Letter 31%
Twitter/Facebook 4%
Fax 3%
SMS 3%

And when contact centre managers were asked what chennels they supported:

Phone 100%
E-mail 96%
Web Self Service 65%
SMS 27%
Twitter/Facebook 20%
IM 11%

This just goes to continue demonstrating that social media, however important it is as a customer service channel, is still the exception, rather than the norm for the majority of people in the UK.

It is important to remember Auntie Agnes on the end of the phone needs just as much support as young Matt who uses Twitter to communicate his brand related woes.

Spotify Available on Symbian – Nokia, Sony Ericsson and Samsung Users Rejoice! November 23, 2009

Posted by Matt Churchill in Music, Social Media.
Tags: , , ,
add a comment

Spotify is now available on Nokia, Sony Ericsson and Samsung handsets through Symbian, it was confirmed on the Swedish startup’s blog this morning.

Today’s release means that Spotify Mobile is now available on millions more phones, such as the Nokia 6220 Classic, E71 and 5800 XpressMusic models. The application will also run on some of the more popular Sony Ericsson and Samsung smartphones, such as the Samsung GT-I8910 Omnia HD and Sony Ericsson Satio. Symbian is our third launch for Spotify Mobile, along with previously released iPhone and Android versions.

To find out if your handset is supported, go to m.spotify.com from your mobile’s browser, or enter your mobile number on the Spotify Mobile page, or check on the Spotify Symbian page. As with the Android and iPhone apps, you’ll need to become a premium member to use it, at £9.99 a month.

Spotify has, with this release, officially hit the mainstream. The majority of handsets out there use Symbian, so this presents a masive leap forward in terms of potential users, and of course, revenue.

The UK Digital Economy Bill is a mistake November 23, 2009

Posted by Matt Churchill in Innovation, Technology.
Tags: , ,
11 comments

The UK Digital Economy Bill was unveiled on Friday and with it comes the promise of Internet disconnection if a user is found guilty of downloading lots of copyrighted material. Despite this not being a criminal offence, file-sharers would find their rights to have access to the Internet curtailed and civil proceedings heading their way.

Stephen Timms, The minister for Digital Britain, said:

“When a content rights holder identifies that somebody is doing things they shouldn’t be doing, their ISP will send them a letter telling them they shouldn’t be doing it. If that process proves to be insufficient, then we have the ability to put in place these technical measures. Among the technical measures, temporary account suspension is a possible temporary measure.”

The UK Pirate Party’s leader, Andrew Robinson, said (according to the Telegraph): “This is a major attack on free speech and human rights. All the benefits of filesharing have been ignored for the benefit of the record labels. Not only is it free advertising for the artist, but it is good for the cultural wealth of the country. No one is excluded from culture if it’s freely available.”

And this to me is the point, it is free culture, no-one should be denied that.

All this will do is force file-sharers to find other means of getting hold of content and drive them even further out of daylight under ground.

There will also be bandwidth capping and a daily download limit. Cracking.

I can’t help but feel that this won’t make it through parliament before the election however, and may indeed be swept under the carpet by the Tories should they come to power.

What the government want to do is to empower people and give them a public service, making broadband Internet a utility in the same vein as electricity or water. However, if I use too much electricity or water, do I get a letter telling me to stop and threatening disconnection? No.

What Labour could propose is a state run broadband provider with these terms, offering competitive rates against other Internet providers, and then see how many people sign up.

Stuff I’ve Shared On Twitter This Week 22.11.09 November 22, 2009

Posted by Matt Churchill in Stuff I've Shared On Twitter.
Tags: ,
1 comment so far

Social media makes the traditional PR hierarchy obsolete November 20, 2009

Posted by Matt Churchill in Social Media.
Tags: , ,
12 comments

PR is a very hierarchical industry. There is set chain of command where the role you do changes according to your position, which is the same in pretty much all jobs.

At the bottom end you have the Account Executives who do the majority of the outreach and engagement, stamp licking and envelope posting, and day to day odd jobs that make an account run smoothy.

You then have varying degress of Account Manager. They do a small proportion of the outreach and engagement, and tend to focus their time on making sure the tactics that are getting the account to run well, are work effectively.

There will then be an Account Director who is responsible for developing the right strategy which will lead into choosing the most appropriate tactics. Likelihood is that they will do very little outreach at all. [UPDATE: thanks for the typo spot Mike!]

It goes on, but in essence, the higher up the food chain you go, the less actual PR you do, and the more time you spend writing documents about how PR should be done and looking to bring in new business.

To me, social media makes this way of working, unworkable. Social media is more skills based.

I might only be an Account Executive, but I have a fundamental understanding of the way that Twitter works, for example, and I will have a good idea of what the right tactics will be to make a Twitter campaign effective.

Or, I might be an Account Director who’s built up a credibility within the blogosphere , yet now in my new role I find that I can’t connect with these people in the same way as I used to.

I think we need to shift away from this approach to a specialist-led way of working, and the more conversations I have with my peers and colleagues about this, the more I think we should act upon it.

If you have an individual within a team who is a natural networker, and knows how the community they’re about to interact with works, let them get involved with planning the tactical approach and then handle that engagement.

If you have someone who is great with numbers, but not so good with people, get them involved with the management side of things and help them to develop their strategic thinking.

There may be a member of the team who’s into all the new tools and technologies – get them playing around with them, learning how they work and become a vital part of the entire planning process.

I see job titles as a way of categorising people into how much they’re getting paid and how important they are. To me, it doesn’t matter how important you are if you don’t understand how micro-communities on Twitter come together and then disappear in a matter of hours. It also doesn’t matter to me if you’re the finest networker in the land but you couldn’t plan a 6 month campaign for toffee.

Each person is an individual and has their own individual strengths. The current system of controlling what level PR pros is at is false and doesn’t truly reflect their worth to their team. By all means, a structure should be in place, but a structure where individuals with different skills are utilised and brought in to add expertise or experience.

The current model isn’t getting the best out of the people within it.

B-Uncut Online Gallery November 18, 2009

Posted by Matt Churchill in Reviews.
Tags: , , ,
5 comments


Lolly very kindly invited me to the launch event of B-Uncut,an online gallery cum art community which showcases work by artists from all over the world, providing them with a platform to sell their work, AND, make money, connecting them with the picture loving public.

Sadly I couldn’t make it to the launch, but I was enthused by what she’d told me. I am, after all, all in on getting art (of any nature) out in the public domain by any means necessary.

The aim of B-Uncut is to ‘re-define’ the art world. A noble and challenging cause. 945 artists have so far signed up, and more are joining each day, uploading their work into an online ’studio space’ in front of 80,000 eyeballs every month.

And of those eyeballs, stimulation comes from a whopping 945 artists, whose material is available in the B-Uncut store. Lolly very kindly allowed me to pilfer my favourite piece as an intro – the image you see above you is untitled by Sandra Wray (you know I love Howard Hodgkin and Damien Hirst so the choice was obvious).

The marketing bumpf tells me: “our artists keep 80% of the total amount of the pieces they sell, whilst the remaining 20% help us run our website, blog and do things like put on events.”

Nice. I wish the music industry was as forgiving.

The website itself is very easy to use and I really enjoyed navigating the various artists’ work, which always helps when working out what you want to adorn your walls!

Each week a new artist is selected to have their work featured on the B-Uncut homepage, a great way to get noticed.

I think this project is great, and if their projected numbers are met (they want 10,000 artists by 2013) they will have proven that whilst art is wanted by not affordable, nobody will trouble the artists for their wares – make the medium accessible and all of sudden you create your own demand. I like that, and of course the best part is that the artists keep the majority of the cash that passes through B-Uncut’s hands. Genius.