Imedia brand summit

Top class presence from MRM Worldwide UK’s Clients and friends at the imedia brand summit this week. 360 times better than the Media 360 event, according to several Clients I met there. Matt Hopgood from the BBC, Peter Ward from WAYN, Anne Foster from NMA, Simon Shipley from Intel stepped up to the Digital Leadership panel moderated by yours truly. We discussed a wide ranging set of issues, and got top feedback from the audience of the UK’s leading brands. Woohoo. I’m still amazed at how much exciting stuff there is to do taking brands to market in the digital world. See my post on brand republic for more details.

imedia UK _Alastair_Duncan

Participation Painting - with Yoko Ono

At the tasting sessions with old friends this week - London’s first snowfall evening - I grab the opportunity to participate in Yoko Ono’s participation painting experience. She cuts out ‘I LOVE YOU’ in a piece of acrylic and lays that over a canvas. You add your bit, and after a while, she removes the acrylic leaving the words ‘I LOVE YOU’ painted on the canvas. Canvases from exhibitions around the world go to New York for the grand finale. It’s pretty cool and goes to show that participation is not just for postmodern marketers. She’s been doing it since 1966 apparently. After bagism, UGC is all you need.

Yoko Ono Painting
Alastair Duncan painting

Alastair Duncan painting Yoko Ono's painting

A Yoko Ono Painting at Riflemaker

Branding Utility is the answer. Seriously.

“An extraordinary, almost unimaginable sequence of events” says Mervyn King, Governor of the Bank of England commenting on the past weeks’ goings on in the global financial markets. Which do you prefer – the culture of blame, or the culture of coping? Weaker managers immediately point the finger at others, stronger managers move on and work out how to make things work, develop products people want, and build genuine underlying performance in their businesses.

In the FT today, the question is asked – is the MBA culture responsible? From the country that has chosen Sarah Palin as a legitimate candidate for president in waiting, one might question the decision making processes that got her there, and it’s too easy to look at the overt complexity built into the debt instruments that have brought the world’s capital markets to a state of chaos. A common characteristic of disaster management is taking things at face value. By ‘branding’ toxic assets as ‘debt instruments’ it’s easy not to look under the skin, do the due diligence, and frankly bullshit past the next quarter’s earnings to worry about the next crisis.

What can we learn from all this?  One point of view about branding is that it is only meaningful if supported by a set of values that a brand is credible in, performs to, stands for and stands by. For lots of products and services, this is hard to achieve, if the product doesn’t work, for example, or the service promise isn’t delivered. One enormous impact of the internet is enabling consumers to share issues about brands. These can be both negative and positive vibes. Brand owners now have to develop strategy and process internally and externally to manage this. And they are challenging their support networks (of branding consultants, PR people, agencies and technology partners) to help.

Ad people talk about campaigns, hitting the message home and how to unravel the narrative in linear way. Consumers don’t think about this at all. They tend to see ads in passing, remember some of them, and if the ad is strong enough, may even remember the name of the brand. This works well enough, but if the brand doesn’t have a set of values to stand for, by and for consumers to believe in, they won’t necessarily hand over cash for the stuff.

Everyone now likes the idea of branded utilities - virtual test driving, travel advice, holiday planners, Christmas planners and so on - as the necessary adjunct for consumers to build everyday experience of a brand in some way (beyond running in the shoes or actually eating the chocolate.)  If you’ve worked in the world of the web for a while, creating interactive experience and regular customer interaction, you might say – hang on, that’s what we’ve been doing for years, but suddenly it’s become branded.
That’s what happens when the ad people get involved. If we give it a name it’s easier to believe in. I sympathise with both sides, if sides is the right term to use. Having run both ad agency and web agency organisations, one gets privileged insight. The fact remains though, that unless there is genuine usefulness (either from entertainment value or information value) the measurement of such things will remain in the world of wooly. In the old world, if the brand doesn’t stand for anything, (or indeed, as much more likely in the regulatory environment we now operate in, can’t), the advertising itself had to deliver the substantiation. Think glamorous cigarette ads from the 80s. Ads for Fags on YouTube

In the branded utility world, you can’t just make it up. There has to be genuine interaction and exchange for consumers to see a benefit of spending, rather than wasting, time with the brand. This is where our creative and tech brains should be focused. If we get it right, and know how to get it done, there’s a new participation marketing nirvana to be had.

Future of Web Apps

I recently attend the Future of Web Apps (FOWA) expo in London and came away quite inspired by some of ‘the’ entrepreneurs in the industry including FaceBook’s Mark Zuckerberg and Diggnation’s Kevin Rose. It’s difficult to sum up all the interesting things from the two days so I’ll just have a stab at what I recall as being of particular interest. Video highlights from FOWA can be viewed here: http://events.carsonified.com/fowa/2008/london/content

Much of the focus for many of the sessions was on social networking apps, but also on making your apps more social by turning users into contributors. Ben Huh of www.icanhascheezburger.com (lolcats for those in the know - I didn’t know!) spoke of how to ease users from being just an occasional browser to a contributor.

On the technology front I found Objective-J and Capuccino interesting as a new framework for developing apps without html and CSS and the new frameworks from Yahoo for making your web apps mobile, simply and efficiently. Also the new Adobe AIR runtime for making web apps for your desktop was fairly highly promoted. A ‘Dragons Den’ style competition was added to the line up for day two, whereby the top three entries from the previous day were given 60 seconds to sell their idea for an Adobe AIR app. The winner received 5k from Adobe to produce their app.

An issue that was mentioned by most speakers was the Global Financial Crisis (GFC as it was penned by one), but it isn’t all doom and gloom, some of the speakers were old enough to have been through a recession before and reminded us that technology has kept moving forward and in order to keep our jobs now we need to keep innovating, working hard and trying to be a little more efficient and streamlined. However, with the GFC in mind, many speakers spoke of the improvements in open source technologies and how this will be a way to cut costs, even for enterprise organisations.

But I think the most inspiring part of the FOWA was that as a developer if you build apps you love then there is a good chance others will love them too, no matter how skint they are!

Strawberry Share

Strawberry Fair, Cambridge This summer I went to the Strawberry Fair. It’s a free performing arts festival that takes place every year in the first week of June on Midsummer Common in Cambridge. I didn’t see any strawberries but under a blanket of herbal smoke I did see painted people, eat vegetable curry, hear world music and search in vain for the toilets.

Whilst there I took a photo with my mobile phone and shared it on Flickr. Flickr is an image and video hosting website and online community platform. Founded in 2004, it is one of the earliest Web 2.0 applications. Pretty soon the photo had been viewed 4 times (not including you) – which is pretty good by my standards.

A month later I was contacted via Flickr by Emma Williams, Managing Editor of Schmap. Schmap is a publisher of user-customisable digital travel guides and widgets and Emma asked for permission to use my photo in the newly released fifth edition of their Cambridge Guide. The photos you upload to Flickr are yours by default and may not be used by others without your explicit say so. Naturally flattered, I said yes and was recently sent the link to the Schmap guide entry with my photo on it. Fame!
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Fast living, ever giving, cool fizzing schadenfreude

This week’s Economist carries a short article entitled ‘Catchy slogans that catch banks out’. This pokes fun at company tag lines which must have seemed like a good idea at the time but now seem the opposite. In less than 400 words, the writer manages to name-check 20 or more tag lines - respect. Don’t dream it. Read it: Ad nauseam : Because they’re worthless.

Uplifting design

I’ve seen a few pictures of lift buttons recently. They often crop up in presentations on good design – usually as examples of bad design. It’s an every day interface and great to highlight why good interaction design makes such a difference.

I present the lift here at MRM which I think stands well amongst the worst of them.

It’s a touch sensitive panel with no moving parts – you just press the floor number you want to go to.

But there is no tactile feedback! – nothing moves to indicate you are pressing a button. When you press a button, something should move! (By default, web browsers will render a button with this behaviour – obviously you can’t feel it but you will see the button depress when you click – don’t change this, it is saying ‘button’)

You do get a beep and the floor number is displayed - I’m not saying it’s unusable, although what a minus sign and decimal point are doing there is a mystery.

However, it is very difficult for blind people to use. Each number does have corresponding brail underneath it (you might just be able to make them out in the picture), so that’s all OK then, however think about it for a second. There is no tactile feedback – and its touch sensitive. I’ve tried using it with my eyes closed and before you’ve even worked out the shape of the panel you’ve selected every floor and hit the alarm a few times.

A brief mention of the ‘lift call’ button on each floor. Touch sensitive, no sound and only a small, red light to indicate the lift knows to come and get you. There’s absolutely nothing else to indicate the lift is on its way and it’s a pain to use for everyone, impossible to use for some.

It doesn’t have to be like that, and for web design it’s our job to make sure it’s not like that.

Think about one of those dials above the lift entrance with an arrow pointing to the floor that the lift is on, a push button to call it and a ‘ding’ to say it’s on its way and another to say it has arrived. That would be better wouldn’t it?

We’ve all learnt to put up with the lift here and if it does anything well it’s to remind us of why good design is so important and how bad design sucks. We can’t change the lift buttons, but we can design good interaction with the things we do build – otherwise we’ll annoy all the people who use them every day.

Barrett homes in on innovation

Craig Barrett talks about innovation

Couldn’t resist the headline. I was privileged enough tonight to meet with Craig Barrett, Chairman of the Board of Intel Corporation at a private event in Oxford. As some of you know, as well as being passionate about innovation in marketing, I have a personal interest in the education system in the UK. We discussed (for a few moments anyhow :) some of the challenges the nation faces encouraging greater support for Maths and Science as the foundation for engineering studies in University.

As it happens, there is a shortage of teachers in these subjects in the UK right now. This isn’t good if we want to compete in a world where education is so prized in the new competing economies. Britain needs this talent strand to be nurtured into cohorts of bright and capable inventors and innovators, and for there to be a support ecosystem that helps their ideas to become businesses.

It’s quite well known that the UK is near the top of the list for invention, but not very high up on nurturing invention and manufacturing that turn ideas into product into customers’ hands. As we work with Intel in bringing innovation to bear in its marketing activities, it’s encouraging to hear words of wisdom from the company’s founder himself.

Some tips from the talk for budding innovators.
1) Learn about problem solving. If you have the ability to solve problems, with good process of thought, evidence assessment and insight into why things are happening, you stand a chance. If you can’t get under the skin of the problem, you can’t solve it.
2) Do you work with the facts? Many corporations tend to evolve anecdotes into facts. Anecdotes have an agenda. Facts tend not to.
3) Never stop asking why. If you don’t get behind the face value of a situation, you can’t ever have more than a face value opinion.
4) Finally, support the three principles that enable innovation on a national scale –

Education – without smart people there is no economic action, ideas – without smart ideas there is no innovation - and the right environment – without help, innovation rarely flourishes.

An inspiring evening for everyone, and very nice to be back in Oxford too. Now about that business idea - how about a widget on my phone that tells me if the trains from Oxford to Paddington are on time?

Present participle

I can resist everything except temptation.
Oscar Wilde (1854 - 1900)

A nice young man at Kings Cross station gives me three plastic wallets full of discount vouchers for the Guardian and Observer. I immediately start buying the Guardian every day – at 40p off, why not? I can stop any time I want to.

Whilst queuing at W H Smiths, paper under arm, I succumb to an offer to buy a bar of Cadbury Dairy Milk Cranberry and Granola *and* a bar of Dairy Milk Apricot Crumble Crunch for just £1. ‘You can get a bar for nothing out on the concourse’ says a nice young man in the queue behind me. I ask him how he knows and he points to the legend on his Cadbury-purple sweatshirt: ‘Ask me for a free bar of Dairy Milk Cranberry and Granola or Apricot Crumble Crunch today!’ I buy my paper and follow him out onto the concourse where he meets up with his companions next to a purple pallet truck. I ask him for a free bar and he gives me three of each flavour. Result! (Delicious too – especially if accompanied by a banana.)

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Market Leaguer

MRM Worldwide UK is top five agency

MRM Worldwide UK is top five agency

New Media Age top 100 agencies list for 2008 is released. And we are ranked 5th in scale in top marketing focused digital agencies. Not too bad really. Congrats to everyone at Bankside. And commiserations to everyone else.