Sunday, October 21, 2012

Dear SXSWi: Thanks for the faint hope

This Friday email made my weekend:
On Monday, October 15, we announced approximately 450 accepted sessions via the SXSW website (http://sxsw.com/interactive/talks/programming). Unfortunately, your proposal was not part of this announcement.

That said, we like your proposal a lot, it is one of about 200 proposals that we are still considering. However, at this point, we have a limited number of open speaking slots for the 2013 event, so this last round of decision-making is very difficult.
Slim chance ahoy! Thanks to everyone who voted for my proposal!

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Some great multi-screen content strategy links

Tonight Kim Lawless overcame the ambient noise of a lively student bar and managed to demystify multi-screen content strategy with style to spare. A few links for anyone interested in learning more:


Slideshare presentation - Content Strategy for the Multi-screen world

Monday, October 08, 2012

Toronto content strategy meetup in convenient poster form

Only 9 days until Kim Lawless explains multi-screen content at the October 18 Toronto Content Strategy Meetup.

Here's a little poster to celebrate!


Friday, September 28, 2012

Right About Being Wrong About Being Right

"Remember: when people tell you something’s wrong or doesn’t work for them, they are almost always right. When they tell you exactly what they think is wrong and how to fix it, they are almost always wrong."
-- Neil Gaiman


 

Monday, September 17, 2012

The Story Behind My Content Strategy


So I wrote this piece about the importance of story-telling and narrative for MarketingProfs a few weeks ago. Not to brag, humblebrag or underbrag, but the article was well received, and thousands of people ended up reading and/or enjoying it. I found this quite gratifying, because the piece felt like a successful blend of my interests as a cultural journalist and some of my perspectives on content strategy. 


Since the fall of 2009 I’ve been working hard to determine the best way to combine my decade+ of experience in print journalism with my work in the digital space. In the interests of saving time, here is a non-narrative, bulleted list version of recent events:
  •       Copywriting for digital advertising agencies (Fall 2009)
  •       Joining the Toronto Content Strategy Meetup (Summer 2010)
  •       Enrolling in the CFC’s Interactive Art and Entertainment Program (Sept 2010 to Feb 2011)
  •       Finding a job in content marketing at Sequentia Environics (Feb 2011)
  •       Staying up all night for the launch of tweet2hold during Nuit Blanche (Oct 2011)
  •       Finding a job as a Digital Content Strategist at Nurun (Feb 2012)
  •       Taking over as organizer of the Toronto Content Strategy Meetup (Spring 2012)
  •       Giving my first talk at NXNE Interactive about physidigital objects (June 2012)
Which is my way of explaining why I’m ready, eager and excited about the opportunity to be teaching Digital Content Strategy Demystified this fall through the U of T’s School of Continuing Studies.

If you’re interested in the course, @reply me via Twitter.








Sunday, September 09, 2012

Demystify Content Strategy through my UofT SCS course


Hello! Are you interested in content strategy? Are you interested in learning what content strategy really means? Are you enjoying this series of provocative questions about content strategy?



If you answered yes to some or all of these questions, consider taking my UofT SCS course Digital Content Strategy Demystified.” It’s an 8-week course that begins on Wednesday, October 3. It will be guest speaker driven – that means I’m hoping to have at least 6 guest speakers come in and discuss various aspects of the discipline of content strategy. As a bonus, the classroom is equipped with a ginormous smart screen – basically a giant touchscreen television connected to the Internet that provides unlimited opportunities for interactive learning and discussion.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

SXSWi is Dead

Just kidding. Please vote for my panel about Creating Great Analog Souvenirs for a Digital Era.


Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Physidigital Life is a Beach -- So Don't Forget to Make a Few Digital Souvenirs


It says physidigital.com. My sand calligraphy is rusty.

Please vote for my SXSWi proposal entitled "Creating Great Analog Souvenirs for a Digital Era." I promise to you that I will not be arguing that the future of interactive involves writing URLs in beaches.




Monday, August 13, 2012

Consider my SXSWi 2013 Proposal -- Creating Great Analog Souvenirs for a Digital Era


Given that my recent talk about the physical-digital trend at June’s NXNEi was not only super fun but super popular (I received an 8.4/10 overall score!) I decided to pitch an updated version to SXSW interactive.

If you’re at all familiar with SXSWi, you’ll know about the PanelPicker. One of the criteria for speaker selection is the number of votes your idea receives. I have until the end of August to convince as many people as possible to vote for (that is, +1) my SXSWi panel entitled “Creating Great Analog Souvenirs for a Digital Era.”



Rather than simply nag and harass my Twitter followers and Facebook friends, I’ve decided to combine the necessity of self-promotion with witty visual explanations of what an analog souvenir (aka physidigital object) actually is. Which should help explain the photograph above.

Here’s a teaser from my SXSWi proposal:
The online and offline worlds are now melting together thanks to smartphones and social media. But as our life shifts into the cloud, we’re starting to realize that 0s and 1s lack the tangibility and permanence of paper and film. Significant emotional moments are easy to lose or forget in the online ether, which helps explain why artists and brands are trying to create analog souvenirs of our increasingly digital lives. 
If you’re so inclined, please vote for me.




At the very least, enjoy the next three weeks worth of serious and goofy experimentation with analog souvenirs.

Further reading:


- NXNEi article about the digital backlash