Archive for the 'dconstruct06' Category

New Media, New Engagement

Monday, October 30th, 2006

In a belated post I had the opportunity to attend this one off conference on the 12th of October. Organised by the CIPR Education & Skills Group this was a one day event looking at the strategic use of new media in Marketing, Communications and PR in Education.

I’d gone along as I was interested to experience the other side of web conferences compared to the bigger events I’ve attended this year like d.construct and @media. Being specifically about the education sector it was interesting to meet some of the other web/marketing teams and see what is happening at the ground level in terms of the ideas and innovations being used on web within education.

Colin Hughes of MD of Guardian Professional gave a good keynote looking at the importance of social networking as a communication tool and made some really good points about creating engaging content and opening up data/resources to encourage a more open and community based approach to marketing.

The Marketing/Web team team at The Manchester Metropolitan University then gave give two presentations about ‘Maximising online communities’ and ‘Communicating the experience’ which formed the basis of a more practical extended session looking at work that they had produced and some other examples from projects across the web.

Things they looked at which I found interesting included the rate my professor website which is a very web 2.0 concept where students can rate their tutors giving an interesting and honest account of the quality of education available across our many establishments.

They then moved on to look at universities using podcasting with the Brunel University podcasts being the best example. These podcasts were launched in September 2006 and are aimed at prospective students who are thinking about going to university and take the format of providing information like audio presentations guiding students through the application process. I thought that this was a really good use of podcasting, engaging students and making the application process more enjoyable and also more accessible to students by providing a quality audio alternative.

Next they looked at the use of blogging with university websites looking first at the Manchester Metropolitan website where they have introduced blogs into their International section. This seemed to give a really good overview of the College for international students providing a real view of University and experience of living in the city of Manchester.
Other examples of universities integrating blogging into there sites included the University of Glamorgan (academic research based blogs) and University College London which have a transition website to ‘help students find all that a first year undergraduate student needs to get started’. This is established by letting students have blogs talking about there honest first year experience at the university.

After a break for lunch the afternoon started with a session titled ‘Warwick Blogs: A case study’ by John Dale, Head of e-lab at The University of Warwick. This was probably the best example of the day for universities engaging with blogging and Warwick are definitely the leaders in this field at the moment.

John spoke about the positive impact of allowing a network of student blogs to exist within the university and looked at aspects like how blogs provides a strong search marketing tool and help give an authentic view of the institution. The statistics point to the success of Warwick blogs with (at the time of writing) 4304 blogs, 77248 entries, 174467 comments, and 102425 images on the site which considering this it is limited to Warwick students and staff seems very impressive. The one thing I did pick up from this though, marketing success/awards etc aside was actually the sense of fun and community that this project had created which I thought was excellent.

The next session was titled ‘Digital Natives – Podcasting for communicators’ and given by Dr Bill Ashraf, University of Bradford who spoke about using podcasting as part of e-learning which seemed to be a very useful tool for delivering course content. This was later followed up by a session on ‘Podcast Technology and Broadcast Media’ by Alan Greenberg (Head of Education and Podcasting for Apple Europe) which was more about practical issues regarding podcasting and the potential of using Apple server technology to implement this (ie. a sales pitch really!).

The last session of real interest on the day was by Tom Abbott, Online Content Editor at The University of Warwick who talked about the universities Warwick iCast project. This project is the creation of an internet video news service as part of the main university website and shows how Warwick have been looking at how they can incorporate this new technology into there communications strategy, really enhancing their ability to engage with there users. Again this site seems to be the first to move into this area and is well worth checking out.

Overall it was a really interesting day and brought home the reality that there is definitely a shift in education with the transition of websites from static information sources to those engaging with users/customers and providing a range of interactive services. This is both exciting and challenging for smaller institutions (like where I work) and businesses but I really believe that the growing ability to connect and engage more with users/customers will make this well worth the effort.

d.constructing

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006

Last friday I attended d.construct 2006 at the Corn Exchange in Brighton. It was a really good conference and answered many of my questions about API‘s as well as addressing the usefulness of the various services to designers/developers working in real business situations.

Without wanting to review everything that happened in fine detail my highlights of the day were the Jeremy Keith and Jeff Veen sessions:

Jeremy Keith’s – The Joy of API – simply looked at having fun with web services and what is actually possible. This was the most inspiring talk of the day and he also taked about Microformats with great enthusiasm – something I’ve already begun to implement on the sites I work on. I agree that it’s a real benefit to open your data up as much as possible using Microformats. Unfortunately I didn’t make the Microformats picnic though as the call of the Gormet Burger Kitchen was too hard to resist.

My other highlight of the day, Jeff Veen’s session about designing the complete user experience, really helped put everything else into context and looked at making sure that we still focus on user-centred design when working with API’s and creating mashups. This session is especially worth downloading when the the podcasts of the event are released.

Overall the event was really well run and everyone I spoke to was really friendly – Brighton was even really lovely and sunny, something that never happened during the entire month of August. If your a web designer or developer and havn’t been to d.construct yet I’d definetly recomend going next year simply because of value for money for the quality of presentation.

Finally there’s also a really good podcast largely focused this week on reviewing d.construct and interviewing some of the key speakers (especially covering Microformats) by Paul Boag on the excellent Boagworld podcast.

d.construct 2006

Tuesday, July 25th, 2006

I’m pleased to say I’m the proud owner of one dconstruct 2006 ticket. I believe they sold out in 36 hours so it will be great be there… especially as it’s in Brighton!