London

social media week london

“Instagram Your City” for Social Media Week! #InstagramYourCity

ldn

As part of the global festival that is Social Media Week, taking place in 14 cities this September including our very own capital, we’re asking you to represent London and capture it’s unique British beauty.

This contest will be taking place across all this September’s host cities, including Barcelona, Berlin, Bogota, Chicago, Doha, Glasgow, Hong Kong, Jeddah, London, Los Angeles, Torino, São Paulo, Seoul and Vancouver.

In the coming weeks, Social Media Week will launch the Instagram Your City website, which will pull together the best photos. One “Best-in-Show” picture will be selected from these. Once selected, the winning contestant will be given the opportunity to travel to any Social Media Week city of their choosing during the September 24th – 28th event.

“As we continue to add new Social Media Week cities and expand to more incredible parts of the world, we are looking to fulfill the adage of ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’,” said Toby Daniels, Founder & Executive Director of Social Media Week. “As a celebration of the uniqueness of all of our local cities, the Instagram Your City competition will provide a way to tell stories that cross cultural and geographic boundaries.

How Do I Get Involved?!

You can participate by submitting a picture you’ve taken using a smartphone device that captures the uniqueness and essence of one of the 14 host cities, adding a filter with an app like Instagram, Lightbox, StreamZoo or Hipstamatic, and then tagging the photo using #InstagramYourCity together with the name of their city.

We’d encourage you to share your entries on Twitter, along with the following: “Just submitted my entry to @SocialMediaWeek’s #InstagramYourCity for #London.”

The deadline for submissions is 30th June. If you have any questions or would like more information, please take a look at the press release.

Social Media Week September will take place September 24-28, powered by Nokia. For the latest news and updates and information about participating, how to register, speakers and event updates, visit Social Media Week London, follow SMWLDN on Twitter (@SMWLDN) or like us on Facebook (facebook.com/socialmediaweeklondon).

Photo (c) Lauren Cotton

Social Media Week Awards 2012: And the winners are…


SMWAwardWinners
Your votes are in, London!
 

After a mammoth Social Media Week for 2012, it’s time to reveal who youdubbed as this years best SMW Event and Speaker in London, as well as Social Media Personality and Campaign of the year! 

Thankyou to all who participated in voting, Chinwag is delighted to announce our category winners for the SMW Awards 2012, sponsored by 3 Monkeys.

The Category Winners are:

SMW London Event of the Week: The Future of Sharing

SMW London Speaker of the Week: Nathalie Nahai, The Web Psychologist (The Psychology of Online Influence)

Social Media Personality of 2011 (UK): Jon Davey, Social Media Directors

Social Campaign of the Year (since SMWLDN 2011): BrewDog Equity for Punks

(more…)

Watch the Google@SocialMediaWeek event online now!

Google@SocialMediaWeek

Google+ hosted their sellout Google@SocialMediaWeek event in London on Thursday 16th February 2012 at the SMWLDN 2012 Hub, sponsored by Google! (What a mouthful!)

If you weren’t one of the lucky one’s who managed to snap up a ticket, head to Chinwag.com where you can now watch the event online! Watch it now.

Hear the latest thinking on social media and our wider social worlds from Google experts, academics and advertisers.

Highlights include:

Robin Dunbar, Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology at Oxford University, talking why the internet won’t get you any more friends

Beth Foster, Senior Google+ Strategist at Google UK, demonstrating a live (and entertaining!) Google+ Hang Out

Two interesting case studies from Jerry Daykin, Social Media Community Manager at Cadbury and Emily Subden, Social Media Manager at Oxfam.

So if you missed out on attending the event physically at Social Media Week London – go on, treat yourself!

Photo (cc) Ravensbourne Social Media Week 2012

Missed #smwldn? Weep no more! Check out events on Livestream

Livestreaming of SMW events

Social Media Week London is officially done and dusted for 2012 – wow, what a week! 

Over 180 events took place in celebration of social media and over 15 000 digital lovers flocked to sessions all over Central London. 

Now, we realise that alot of amazing sessions clashed throughout SMWLDN and appreciate that one can’t be in 5 places at once! Thankfully, we had Kinura on board as the official SMWLDN Filming Partner to stream online several of the events that took place at the SMWLDN 2012 Hub. So, head to Livestream and catch up on some of those fabulous events you may have missed.

Here’s a hot list for you to muse over:

Monday 13th February 2012

Mind the Gap: Avoiding a Social Media Skills Crisis hosted by Chinwag

Supercharging your Facebook Marketing hosted by Constant Contact

Social Celebrities hosted by Liberty824

Tuesday 14th February 2012

Social Business in Action hosted by Edelman

Family Circles: Parents, Children and Marketers hosted by Chinwag

Ogilvy Keynote: The Insiduous Plot to Socialise the Enterprise hosted by Ogilvy

Sex, Love and Social Media hosted by Chinwag

Wednesday 15th February 2012

Never Mind the Buzz – Getting to the Real Value of Social for Enterainment Brands hosted by Doco

Social Media: Teenage of the Species hosted by Chinwag

Me! Me! Me! The Battle for Attention: Brands, Publishers and Social Networks hosted by Chinwag

The Nokia Innovation Lab hosted by Nokia

The DNA of a Company: How Social Media is Impacting Business Models hosted by Media Sauce & Creative Industries KTN

Reaching the 7 Billion: Using Mobile to Create Global Social Engagement hosted by Edelman

Talking Telly hosted by Liberty824

Thursday 16th February 2012

The Future of Sharing supported by Nokia, hosted by Beyond

Email and Social Media: The New Rules of Engagement hosted by Constant Contact

The Psychology of Online Influence hosted by Chinwag

Social Media, the Olympics and BBC – Preparing for London 2012 hosted by BBC

Friday 17th February 2012

The Social Consumer: Digital Detox hosted by Mintel

Inside the Firewall: The Social Business Revolution supported by Nokia, hosted by Chinwag

How Attention Scales on the Web hosted by iCrossing

Sit back, relax and enjoy!

Picture (cc) Ravensbourne SMW

Highlights which got us all going a-Twitter #SMWLDN

With over 180 events in London alone last week and over 15,000 registrations not including the people enjoying all the action on Livestream, it was a serious hit!

Don’t forget that eleven other cites were simultaneously taking part in Social Media Week 2012, although London being our amazing city made the most noise on Twitter throughout the week according to Brandwatch with 29% of the global buzz and over 50000+ Tweets, with New York close behind.

Day One

On Monday causing a stir was Twitter, the Butterfly effect and the future of Journalism with Andrew Walker, founder of Tweetminster; Paul Lewis, Special Projects Editor at the Guardian; Anna Doble, Senior Online Producer at Channel4 News; Steve Butterworth, founder of Flumes Media Limited; and Titia Ketelaar, UK correspondent at NRC Handelsblad. Paul Sawers from The Next Web brings you all the highlights.

We also had the official VIP launch party kindly hosted by SNR Denton in their London office with a stunning view of the City of London. Check out the interview with Daphne Chui, also known as #CanManSG at the party.

Day Two

Tuesday was a day to celebrate or not, with Saint Valentine getting hot with social at Sex, Love & Social Media with the hilarious Kate Matlock, a digital strategist at Ketchum Pleon; Emily Dubberley Freelance author, journalist and marketeer, chaired by Mel Kirk Head of Blogger Engagement, at Jam, who was armed with pink cupcakes.

The Ogilvy Keynote: The Insidious Plot to Socialise The Enterprise and The Global Keynote with leading legal expert Mark Stephens CBE, Freedom of Tweet: Censorship, Governments, Marketers & The Law interviewed by Kathryn Corrick. Check out the extras with Mark Stephens CBE. The Next Web also bring their take on the Global Keynote.

Day Three

Wednesday kicked off with Socialising TV at Channel 4 which looked at how Channel4 are keeping ahead of the game. Read all about event from one of our fab Ravensbourne Media Volunteers.

The fight for Attention was also on with Me! Me! Me! The Battle for Attention: Brands, Publishers and Social Media with Dom Dwight, Conversation Manager, Yorkshire Tea; Tom Messett, Global Editor in Chief – Social Media, Nokia; Leo Ryan, 360 Influence Strategy Director, Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide, charied by Tim Bradshaw, Digital Media Correspondent, Financial Times.

Yorkshire Tea’s very own Little Urn was also serving a proper Yorkshire brew outside this year’s London Hub, The Design Council. Social Media: Teenage of the Species  got London tweeting with Dr Barbie Clarke, Manging Director, Family Kids and Youth; Mark Hindle, Communications Manager, Nokia; Chris Ward, CEO Blur Dot World, chaired by Maurice Wheeler, Planning Director and Founder, Doco.

Sweet Retweets, with lots of practical interactive sessions also recieved some mass love on the Twitter.

In the evening The First ever Unruly Social Video Film Festival went live at Rich Mix in London’s East End. Find out more about the exclusive event on the Unruly blog.

Day Four

With nearly 50 events, it was the busiest day of the week. A full day session was had at the Arts Theatre with Making Social Part of Your DNA. The Future of Sharing supported by Nokia which launched some exciting research, covered with a slick infographic here on Mashable.

The Psychology of Online Influence #SMWpsychology had presentations from Nathalie Nahai, The Web Psychologist and David Stillwell, Cambridge Personality Research. It recieved the highest number of views on Livestream with over 500 views and trended on Twitter in London!

After lunch Google@SocialMediaWeek wowed us with the latest thinking on social media and our wider social worlds from academics and advertisers, with Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology at Oxford University, Robin Dunbar leading, the only man with a number named after him! #SMWGoogle trended in London on Twitter. Sweets were also enjoyed in the Google + sweet shop!

The BBC talked Social Media and The Olympics hosted by BBC’s Director of London 2012, Roger Mosey with three Olympic Champions and Lewis Wiltshire, BBC’s Digital Olympics Editor & Social Media Editor. Watch Social Media, the Olympics & BBC – Preparing for London 2012 here.

The evening finished with lashings of red wine at the official closing party at The Penthouse and the launch of the Official Social Media Week Awards.

Day Five

The last day of the week, all built on this year’s theme Empowering Change Through Collaboartion saw the much talked about The Story at The Conway Hall and Inside The Firewall: The Social Business Revolution supported by Nokia with Adrian Cockle, Head of Online, WWF UK; Euan Semple, Leading Consultant on Social Business; Anirban Saha, Global Head of Social Innovation and Intelligence, Nokia; Simon Morris, Director of EMEA Marketing, Adobe, Chaired by Will McInnes Managing Director, Nixon McInnes.

A special thank you to Ravensborne University for their pictures. You can see all the pictures here on Chinwag’s Flickr.

This blog was originally posted on Chinwag.

Guest Blog Post: Can social customer service lead to loving your bank? The first direct Future of Banking debate

The first direct Future of Banking: Social Customer Service event brought together key figures from the Financial Services and social business industries on Valentine’s day to discuss the changing face of customer service in a socially-enabled world.  At HSBC HQ, perhaps not the most romantic of Valentine’s settings, 6 panellists, chaired by Liz Lumley of Finextra, covered customer trust, relationships, engagement and even love.

The debate began with customer appetite for a social relationship with their bank– as Zopa’s Giles Andrews succinctly put it ’the evidence that people want social customer service is that they use it’. Zopa’s transparent approach to customer service is fundamental to their business, evidenced through Zopa Talk; a forum where customers support customers. Zopa’s approach to answering customer queries on public channels is the more open, the better – showing the organisation has nothing to hide. Giles also commented that his customers and staff are often happier using social channels like Twitter for simple issues, due to the short-form question and answer format.

Open, Adult Conversations

First direct’s Natalie Cowan and HSBC’s Lauren Anthony reiterated openness and humanity as key factors in social customer service – if the problem is simple enough to be solved in the open, and the customer services person has the right information to do it, then they should be empowered to solve the problem there and then on the customer’s chosen channel, communicating ‘adult-to-adult’ to establish trust. JP Rangaswami, Chief Scientist at Salesforce agreed, and furthered the argument for using social channels to solve issues: customers can often feel “tied in” and frustrated when they’re waiting on the phone for a customer services representative – whereas on an asynchronous platform like Twitter, customers are free to do other things while their issue is being dealt with by their bank.

Breaking Down Silos 

Natalie outlined first direct’s approach to training their staff to solve customer issues – their goal is to ensure that the customer has only one person handling their query, rather than frustrating callers by passing them through multiple agents with no information sharing. Empowering individuals across the organisation to deliver great customer service like this involves breaking down some of the traditional siloes in corporate structure and information sharing practices, a key theme in the report produced by Social Business consultancy It’s Open on behalf of first direct (see “the rise of the social customer”, the report on which the debate is based).

Fairness for all Customers

There were some great questions from the audience – Annie Shaw (@CashQuestions) asked if delivering customer service quickly through social channels marginalises customers who don’t use those channels – for instance older people who don’t use Twitter.  JP replied that empowering the teams inside an organisation with access to the information to solve the customers’ issues means they can effectively service across any channel. Lauren confirmed that this is HSBC’s vision – to create seamless multi-channel customer service across the organisation. No-one should be denied quality of service, and investment into service channels should be balanced according to customer demand.

No Surprises Approach

Questions of customer data protection and privacy came into play, fielded by Bridget Treacy of Huntons – the panel agreed that being approached by a brand in a conversation in a public space can be quite ‘creepy’, but Bridget’s rule of thumb on how to approach this as a brand was ‘no surprises’ for the customer – they need to feel trust that their data is being protected and their privacy being upheld – they should not be surprised by their bank’s actions in the social space.

JP outlined that the right to be forgotten will lead to more and more complex data sharing questions and legislation as social business progresses – citing examples of photosharing  when the image includes more than one person – currently the rights around tagging don’t fully protect that individuals right to remain anonymous.

Customer – Centric Approach 

JP’s future vision of social business is that customers will give their data as an emblem of trust in the relationship, and that enterprises must respect this, learning more about each customer’s preferences, engaging them over time in dialogue which deepens the connection. His long-term vision is that eventually, truly customer-centric services will be available, where multiple providers will work together to produce a unified dashboard (for example – all investments) for the customer.

Return on Investment 

When asked the inevitable ROI (Return on Investment) question on using social media to deliver customer service – JP framed his answer with ‘what is the ROI of a water cooler? Or restrooms? ’ – companies make these investments without working out a direct return. Often it is a small group of early adopters within an enterprise who increase productivity by using new technologies to solve problems, then that practice is rolled out across the organisation.

What about Love?

The final audience question, and right on theme for Valentine’s day, belonged to Kirsty Weston from Emankina – “Can the banking industry use social media to help regain consumer love?” Natalie responded that first direct, with their reputation for great conversations with customers, regularly interact with customers who ‘love’ their bank. The panel agreed that it’s only a few brands that garner this affection – it’s a combination of trust and brand engagement. first direct empowers their biggest asset, their customers, to create and innovate through new products and services (see first direct lab as an example of this open approach). When customers feel the bank is listening and responding to their needs, social connection can turn into love.

Further Reading 

For further information on the debate, why not check out the edited footage from the event, hear the full audio of the debate, take a look at the twitter stream, or read the full report, commissioned by first direct, into the rise of the social customer.

Written by Amanda Brown, Head of PR at first direct.

Guest Blog Post: Social@Ogilvy, Launch Party on The London Eye

This blog post about Social@Ogilvy is brought to you by DeadSoci.al as part of Social Media Week London 2012.

On Monday I attended Social Media Week’s ‘Opening Reception’ hosted by Chinwag. It was a good chance to meet some of the fellow startups who are attending SXSW this year.

Towards the end of the evening I met Ogilvy’s Leo Ryan and we spoke about DeadSocial and Ogilvy’s new venture Social@Ogilvy. Before leaving Leo very kindly handed me a red envelop! In the envelop was an invitation to attend the Social@Ogilvy launch party on the London Eye….

On Wednesday I arrived at the London eye just before 5.45pm and was quickly moved into the pod for ‘startups’. There was a nice mix of startups and businesses in our pod ranging from Twitter to Psonor.

Champagne & Sushi was served from the second we stepped onto the London Eye to the moment we left. The conversation was of the highest standard and the entire event was a great experience.

I would like to thank everyone at Ogilvy for inviting me to the event and wish Social@Ogilvy every success.

This blog was originally posted on Chinwag, thanks to DeadSoci.al.

Guest Blog Post: 5 Ways to Break the Ice with Social Media

This is a guest blog post from Bernie Mitchell, part of the team behind Making Social Part of Your DNA

It used to be that you had to wait until the morning of your conference or class to meet the other attendees. Now, thanks to social media, you make introductions and connect with people right after registration.

Here are some ways to get people talking about the event ahead of time, so that conversations are already off and running the moment your event starts.

1. Create a unique Twitter hashtag and promote retweeting – of course!

When attendees hit the venue for Bernie’s social media event, they’ll already be acquainted with one another, thanks to social media.

However, people don’t just RT on demand. Get in tune with them by creating content that will enhance their experience or start a conversation. Start following the #eventprofs hashtag for ideas and inspiration.

2. Record video interviews or a podcast and write blog posts.

In the run up to all of our events, we insist speakers do one of these pieces. Good speakers see this chance to engage with the audience beforehand, and therefore create even more of a connection on presentation day. This is less work than it seems; most of this can be done on a smart phone and posted right away.

3. Collect attendee Twitter handles and reach out individually.

This can be labor-intensive but I argue it’s worth the effort. With a smaller event, making that micro connection before will be the on-line equivalent of opening the door personally.
We try and get a few people introduced online beforehand; this is much more elegant that broadcasting, “come to our event!” If people are meeting someone recommended you have instantly created value for them.

4. Do an online icebreaker.

Ask a question of people and get them talking. Perhaps it’s a unique fill-in-the-blank tweet, such as my favorite person to follow on Twitter is @______, my favorite thing about London is ______, my favorite blog is ________. Use these for their nametags at the event, while retweeting answers as they come in to get the discussion and introductions started.

5. Be prepared for the day.

Let people know the hashtag beforehand! We are posting a blog with info such as which Flickr group people can post to, which hashtag to use and who to follow for the day. At a crew level we will have relevant content pre-posted to be published at certain times throughout the day. We are even making an on-line magazine every hour using @getflockler. People love to share their stuff and see it as part of an online collection!

Do you have other unique social media ideas? Let us know on Facebook or Twitter!

London Media Partner Announcement: Newspepper

We’re really excited to announce Newspepper as an Official London Media Partner.

Newspepper is a global online media platform producing content for the Internet. Their unique model of training students and graduates in media ensure they get paid, on the job experience and their clients receive high quality, low cost media services. Clients include Facebook, BBC, The Telegraph, Channel4 and PayPal. Please quote: ‘SMW12′ for 10% off their Half-day Event Report service (Event lasting up to 4 hours) T&Cs apply.

Sponsored Blog Post: StartUp Britain talk Social

At StartUp Britain, we use social media every day; it’s an incredibly effective tool to help us celebrate, inspire and accelerate enterprise in the UK, and we are delighted to be a Partner of Social Media Week.

However, championing social media is quickly becoming the norm, and these are easy words to say. But what impact does social media really have for today’s businesses? And how does it really act as a catalyst for change?

We went straight to the people who know, the small and growing businesses we talk to every day.

Ben Goldsmith manages the social media channels for ClubWorkspace. He has attended numerous StartUp Britain events and tweeted prolifically through all of them (thanks Ben!). He is very active in the social media space and feels that social media impacts businesses in two core areas: competition and accountability.

On competition, Ben argues:

“Twitter allows small businesses to compete on a level with the larger, established names. Skilful Twitter users gain exposure by currying favour with key influencers and earning well-positioned mentions and ReTweets. Mentions and RTs give your business something paid-advertising doesn’t: a ‘recommendation’. Prospective customers will be more receptive to a key influencer’s confirmation of your quality, rather than your own.”

Nicola Cunningham, reaped the benefits of one such recommendation: “I was a Theo Paphitis SBS winner which generated media interest I could only dream of. This helped me get my name out there far more easily than any other way I could, as I can’t afford to advertise.”

Martin Hansen, agrees that social media is an effective and competitive medium to generate exposure: “[it] enables us to spend money on the message not the media publisher; it gives us equality and an audience from day one.”

Ben also considers social media to have a huge impact on a business’s accountability: “Large brands – and small ones – can be shot down in a second. If a product user is urged to complain, they have the upper hand. Gone are the days of customers complaining in private – Twitter levels the playing field. If brands have to be more accountable, then surely they will be driven to be better? You’d hope so.”

James Taylor, agreed that social media allows consumers to speak directly with big brands. However, he also highlights its effectiveness from a B2B perspective: “It is now easier for businesses to connect and collaborate with other organisations, which would be difficult without the democratic medium of social media.”

Finally, StartUp Black Country Champion, Gary Lennon, couldn’t praise the benefits of social media enough: “it has revolutionized my business and my entrepreneurial activity, and is the primary marketing tool to build new and reinforce existing working relationships. Twitter is like smiling at someone, Facebook can be the window for others to take a look, and LinkedIn is the reason people want to connect.”

These testaments (and a straw poll of the SUB team!) indicate that social media is now integral to our working lives; it isn’t just a place to share your favourite breakfast cereal or stalk your favourite boy band anymore (though these things do, presumably, still happen).

The comments above are just a handful of the positive stories we’ve heard in our first ten months, in which social media has played a vital role in empowering change. Make sure you don’t miss out on yours! There are some great events running in Social Media Week that will be useful for startups and growing businesses, you can see the full list here.

If you don’t already, please follow StartUp Britain on Twitter or like us on Facebook, and look out for our competition during Social Media Week!

Lorna Bladen, Head of Marketing & Communications for www.startupbritain.org

 

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