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Entries Categorised as 'social media'

McLaren F1: Real-Time Race Action

March 14th, 2010 · No Comments · SEO

In the past week there has been a lot of chat about Mclaren F1 and their newly designed and shot homepage that integrates in-race action – plaudits to Stink Digital’s Kristian Saliba (Designer) and Henry Mason (Film).

The amount of chat proves that their is real vigour and interest for what they have done, and not just from industry types providing a little mutual back-slappery, but across the entire web from race fans and web aficionados alike.

From my perspective, what I find interesting is the fact that this isn’t a site with the most amazing technology. It is a low-tech approach that takes what people love doing, such as barking about themselves on Twitter, and flips it on it’s head so that the entire Mercedes McLaren team can broadcast what they are doing, and you, as a race watcher, can feel like you are right down there in the thick of it, during the race.

As a race watcher I wonder to what extent the new rules of the 2010 F1 season have made it easier to open up, having taken the strategy out of the race with no more fuel stops, but overall this is the kind of thing that really enhances live action TV, and it is a shame there isn’t a consensus and more of the teams doing the same thing.

Real Time Headaches

For any F1 team divulging what is going on during the race, there is a fine line to be trodden between getting the thing in real-time, in sync with the TV broadcast, and giving away in-race secrets. I know from watching the last Formula 1 season that teams do analyse broadcasts and relay info about the race back to their team mates at the track to help better inform their race-making decisions.

That being said it is no mean feat to have set up this feed system, collecting data and passing it out to polling clients, and moreover, to keep it going for the benefit of the fans on a free-for-all basis.  This is definitely a great coup for brand McLaren.  There’s nothing quite like having it easy, I know from my own experience of working on the whole Nokia/From The Basement Dead Weather gig, and from talking about the whole JFK election campaign on Twitter, it’s a lot easier to run a campaign feed in a long drawn out process, or scheduled in advance, than it is in real-time, so it’s a unique first and great achievement for the tech team at McLaren.

Stream vs Blog

So why a Twitter-style feed?  The data stream style definitely better suits the data format, and people are used to it.  I love the way they essentially turned their site into a data monitor unit, providing that “in the pit” style.  But overall, the real advantage of the stream is that the content is light and easier to throw together.

One shouldn’t, however, under-estimate the benefit of the blogosphere, and no doubt McLaren will be tapping into that also.  The power of such interesting posts as the MOMA’s article detailing “blow-by-blow” the conservation of Claes Oldenburg’s Floor Cake, another “outsider looking in” style blog post, makes for amazing content too, and, perhaps of note and interest to us as content producers, massively did the rounds of the social sharing circuit, Twitter, Delicious, et al.  It’s definitely less easy to share real-time social media objects.

Each to their own I suppose, but I like the way McLaren has avoided jumping on the bandwagon, and done their own thing, and in a quality fashion to boot. Aggregating race data, using chat transcripts and tapping into the on-board telemetrics is definitely clever, and using their web site as the medium, rather than Twitter or any other messaging service is a strong choice.

Low-Tech & High Values

As mentioned already, the nicest thing about the overall sensation that is McLaren’s new in-race feedback is that it is low tech.  They have gone back-to-basics and done it well.  This totally disproves the theory you need to be at the cutting edge and doing everything with the latest and greatest.

I would like to think that by taking the decision to build a sure in plain old HTML, the execs at McLaren were actively walking an all-inclusive path.  One in which they realised the stream would be as useful to someone sitting on the couch at home, watching the race with their laptop in hand, as it would be to someone on an iPhone in the race stands.  It’s a logical decision, but not one that is always consciously taken, much to the chagrin of those excluded.

It reflects the fact that an all inclusive route, where content is the driving force, and the appeal of it, rather than the device, is a critical one, and one which can be taken, not to the producer’s detriment.  This ties in nicely with the drum I have been banging of late, advising a device agnostic route, and for those in a field where inclusiveness is key, it is best to develop web apps, rather than platform specific apps.

Anyhow, congrats to McLaren on a web site well built, and a project superbly executed. Let’s hope their first season of this new decade comes off as excellently too.

All Qype’d Up

January 9th, 2010 · No Comments · Personal

Whilst on a mission to get lunch yesterday at Malletti’s in Clerkenwell, I took note of their little We’re on Qype sticker in the window.  When married with the thought that a friend of mine had just registered his business on there, I decided to get signed up to Qype.

First port of call was to review my friend’s business, and that much I did, but this review game is addictive, and before I knew it 31 reviews and 2 days later I am a Qype Insider.

For what it is worth, I am not sure Qype does anything quite amazing enough to beat out an already crowded market place of Trusted Places, Google Local Business Center and others, but there is no denying it’s kinda fun!  And whether you write long or short reviews, it doesn’t really matter, they all add to the stock pile of understanding about the bricks and mortar businesses around us.  As they say local knowledge is invaluable.

For those interested in what I have to say about places in Shoreditch, Clerkenwell, Chelsea and beyond to the USA,  feel free to check out my profile on Qype and sign up yourself if you like.

On the Campaign Trail with JFK

January 6th, 2010 · 1 Comment · SEO

I absolutely love this idea.  The JFK Library is running a Twitter stream that documents the day-to-day of John F. Kennedy’s 1960 presidential campaign.  the project brings a slice of American history back into the present day and allows people – who knows the exact target audience – to tap into and feel part of it once again.

Whether you are interested in history or studying it in class, interested in the kind of events that would surround AMC’s series Mad Men or even just interested in the United States and/or political processes, the JFK Twitter stream has something for everyone. It’s not going to teach readers every last detail but it might prompt and inform people’s understanding at least, which can only be a good thing.

The campaign stream covers everything from the mundane “American Airlines flight to New York” to the more interesting “Universal Newsreel: JFK Announces Candidacy for President” with links to archive content on YouTube and other sites. So how do they accomplish the project?

Bringing History to Life

Well besides the content of their own archives at the JFK library, with scheduled tweets, the process of building the a stream is made super simple because it doesn’t need to be built in real-time.  Scheduled tweets allow you to build a plan of attack and add to and enhance the list of tweets with additional material, links or otherwise as you go.

Twitter doesn’t provide as much of a rich time line that you could achieve with any multimedia project, but it provides a simple and more complete way to accomplish the project using social media products that people in the here-and-now consume and understand easily, an important aspect of reaching out as quickly and as easily as possible.

Spreading the Word

Trans-media is a great way to tap into resources on many different levels and this certainly does that.  Whether promoting history or the present day, Twitter, in conjunction with other social media, sites, and archive resources brings things to life in imaginative ways.

The campaign is a great way to spread word of the JFK library and everything it has to offer and certainly helps fulfill its remit.  As I said, I love the idea and am looking forward to receiving the tweets and learning about a part of history that I know little about; and for those interested you can follow ‘JFK’ via the Twitter username @JFK_1960.

Photo from TellMeWhat on Flickr.

Apparently Mark Coughlan is Not Having a Webinar …

January 5th, 2010 · No Comments · SEO

This is the oddest thing I have seen yet on Twitter.  Some guy whose account username (not account I might hasten to add) has been hijacked for the purpose of sending around some perfunctory message about spreading messages, and the thing is going like wildfire.  What does that tell you and me?

The Soup Metric – A Great Way To Measure Social Networks

December 30th, 2009 · 1 Comment · Opinion, SEO

Campbell's Soup Can Street ArtIn her post Soup Metrics, Tara Hunt discusses the propensity of those in your various social and business networks online that would be inclined to bring you soup if you were single, ill and unable to fend for yourself.

Notwithstanding the basic fact that some might be on another continent, she reasons that it is those same people who would bring you soup when ill are likely to be career changing, and whom, though they may not know you intimately would stand your ground, fight your corner and bend over backwards for you.

In a world of social media streams and feeds that see you inundated with complete guff on a second-by-second and day-by-day basis its easy to looks sight of real connections and to feel completely overwhelmed, even more so when you look at the unread items in your RSS inbox and it totals 7376!

Tara Hunt’s Soup Metric really brings all the hype around social media back down to earth, and highlights the oft-mentioned fact that people and businesses with any form of social media presence should generate communications of substance and real connections with colleagues, counterparts, unknowns, clients and whomever else you end up tweeting to, status updating to, or just plain ol’ communicating with.

Sure there will always be those who use a new medium as a market stall, shouting loud and hawking their wares but amongst the drowning shout of their yells, you will find meaningful contacts and it is only with the effort, time and energy that you will foster stronger and decent strands to your network. As the old saying goes, you can count your best friends on one hand, and though with social networking you ‘might’ need 10 extra hands, how many would actually bring you soup?  And of course, above and beyond that, how many would you take soup to?

Thanks to Tara for the insightful post, and for those of you interested in Tara Hunt’s work and ideas about the power of social networks, you should check out her book The Whuffie Factor: Using The Power of Social Networks to Build Your Business.