Barbie and the Geek

March 11th, 2010
barbie

Computer Engineer Barbie, unveiled at Toy Fair early this year to the gasps and exclamations of the media and the online community as Barbie (now well into her 50s) embarks on a new career following the results of a democratic ‘voters poll’.

In case you’ve missed the early previews, Barbie will now come complete with binary-themed clothing, pink netbook, stylish pink spectacles and a fetching bluetooth ear piece. (How come she isn’t on a mac?)

But I’m not quite sure how I feel about Computer Engineer Barbie. I know many women working in the industry through our links with Girl Geek Dinners and BarCamps, have attended events where talk about shoes and tech sit side by side, but most of them don’t wear pink or have hair quite so quaffed. So, as a member of the geek squad, do i fell patronised?

Let’s be honest, Barbie is hardly a role model that we can all live upto? If Computer Engineer Barbie was full size, she’d stand out like a sore thumb at a geek event … but then wouldn’t she anywhere? From Vet Barbie to Astronaut Barbie – those blond locks and impressive vital statistics would leave most normal people feeling like they were in the presence of a supernatural goddess.

But despite appearences, to me Barbie has never been just about the way she looks. Barbie is an ambassador for women, crashing though glass ceilings and breaking down gender barriers and egnighting a spark of possibility in the imagination of youngsters.

So, I’m welcoming Barbie, not because of the way she looks – but because if there’s a chance that a child playing with the doll might start to open their mind to a world of new opportunities then whatever she’s wearing, she’s part of the gang.

For that reason alone, my 3 year old niece will be getting one for Christmas – but please, don’t tell her!

Social Media Revolution

January 26th, 2010

What we’re watching . . . .

Just picked this up via @guy_fraser on Twitter. It’s one of the best put together Social Media presentations I’ve seen in a while.

For more about Socialnomics check out their site.

MANCUNIANS, MOUSTACHES AND MOVEMBER

October 30th, 2009
movemberpilots

Fancy growing a tash to raise money and awareness for research into prostate cancer?

Our client, The Gentry Grooming Co has signed up to support the Movember initiative, to encourage Mancunians to put down their razors and grow a moustache in aid of charity throughout November.

This is the first time Movember is targeting the men of Manchester to take part in an initiative staged by the global charity.

The Gentry Grooming Co is showing its full support for the charity initiative by offering a free moustache grooming service during November for anyone who registers as a Mo Bro (official participant) through the movember website.

To kick off the month all salons will also be offering a free cut throat wet shave as they ʻshave downʼ anyone taking part from the 1st of November.

Read the rest of this entry »

The new website

October 29th, 2009
wp-w

It’s all go over at Democracy Towers – and today has been a flurry of media calls along with a meeting about our new website.

New TV widgets, live twitter feeds and examples of the great work the Democracy team has been upto are all included, and of course the blogsite will remain a key feature. The site is and is developed by the WordPress guru Simon Wheatley, another Chorlton creative who has an absolute gift for beautifully designed sites, with simple usability (so much so that he’s recently been working on Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie & the Royal Navy’s new site!).

It’s all looking very exciting, and fingers crossed we’ll be launching the site as we move into our brand new offices in just a few short weeks time.

The future of Social Media Cafe #smc_mcr

October 7th, 2009

Last night I popped along to the 11th Manchester Social Media Cafe – for those of you who’ve not yet attended, the Social Media Cafe is an open forum where people share ideas and work.

Next month marks the 12 month anniversary, and the organisers opened up the floor to decide what should become of the format to those who attend.

The round table sessions were insightful, for a start, few held the same view of what social media cafe was. Many objected to its recent home at the BBC, claiming it attracted the ‘wrong crowd’ and others felt that much of what was said was simply preaching to the converted.

From my own point of view, i do love the exploritary nature of the sessions, but with so much knowledge, skill and intelligence in the room, i can’t help but feel frustrated with the the current ‘show and tell’ format.

In fact, the round table session on the future of the cafe encouraged greater debate, and better understanding of the view points of others, than i’ve seen at the SMC in a longtime.

My opinion is that the SMC would benefit from holding more discussion groups offering people the opportunity to create debate about challenges and problems they are facing and tackle some of the questions that we’re all asked (Is there a role for SEO in social media?!).

Maybe then Manchester will have the chance to carve out its own reputation as a thought leader in social media and the SMC can fulfill its potential.

The 1st anniversary of the SMC is at the Band on the Wall in November so  – if you’re interested, pop along.

MEN named newspaper of the year

October 5th, 2009

I can’t help but have a fondness for the Manchester Evening News. Following months of difficult changes, and the loss of many talented journalists and photographers, it’s interesting to see that they picked up the top title at the 02 Media Awards for Greater Manchester and Lancashire held at Urbis in Manchester last week.

On Friday (the day where 39 staff left the paper), we saw a presentation by an ex-MEN staffer at TEDx. Sarah Hartley is a good friend of the agency and is a new head of digital for the Guardian. She spoke openly about the future of journalism and the challenges the craft faces following the growth in hyperlocal community news sites.

Amongst other examples, Sarah flagged the East Salford Direct TV project, (billed as the regional alternative to CNN) who deliver hyperlocal TV news over the Internet, as an example of how the face of journalism is changing.

Sarah talked about how the growth in community journalism represented a major challenge to the traditional regional paper, and discussed how the two could find a way to work together.

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Google Makes Waves

June 5th, 2009

Wave is Google’s newest web based open-source collaboration tool set to launch later in the year. The recent developer preview event held in the States aimed to encourage developers to build tools for Wave to make it more useful and integrated for its future users much like with iphone applications.

Wave is based on a tree structure of communication which focuses around ‘hosted conversations’ the design of which is focused around real conversation patterns and speed of use. It integrates email and instant messaging all into the same message thread.

To make efficiencies, key strokes are streamed live in instant messaging to cut down on time you have to sit and watch the ‘katie is typing’ message like with other instant messenger services. This service even allows you to ‘drag and drop’ files into the conversation straight from your desktop rather than uploading attachments.

Other wave users can even see thumbnails of the files dropped into the conversation before they are fully uploaded.

My favourite bit is that you can add ‘robot’ users such as your blog to your wave. Adding the blog ‘robot’ to the conversation thread and anything which is said or done there is then uploaded to the blog itself. Any edits done within this thread will also be updated on the blog and non- wave users comments on the blog site updated to the wave thread. This could be great for collaborative blogging and conversations online.

Check out the full product video (it’s quite long) here.

NW BUSINESS INSIDER – Reaping the rewards

June 4th, 2009

This month, I spoke to David Casey from North West Business Insider all about how important PR is during a recession. David spoke to several of the regions high profile agencies and excerpts of his interview are below:

“Measuring the true impact of a public relations campaign is an issue PR practitioners have grappled with for years. All manner of methods can be used to calculate return on investment, from counting column inches, to comparing editorial coverage with the cost of buying equivalent advertising space, but demonstrating the
value of PR to clients can be tricky.

But providing such accountability is imperative in the current climate. Although empirical evidence indicates that increasing spend in a recession can improve market share, clients need to see that their investment will generate a tangible return, otherwise budgets could be cut altogether.

Brian Beech, joint managing director of Biss Lancaster in Manchester, says: “If PR is just frothy stunts and unfocused corporate entertainment, it should be cut, but real PR is much more than that. As Microsoft’s Bill Gates once said: ‘If I was down to the last dollar of my marketing budget, I’d spend it on PR.’”
PR is vital for getting banks, funders and shareholders on side; communicating with staff and customers; and building relationships with third parties such as analysts, journalists and MPs, says Beech.

It’s a sentiment echoed by Jennifer O’Grady, founder of Democracy PR in Manchester, who says a communication void is never good for a business, and, in recession, can breed greater fear and damage the trust investors and customers have in a company or product.
“PR is a cost-effective solution for companies that want to maintain relationships with key stakeholders,” she says. “A small budget in the hands of a skilled practitioner can deliver an exceptional return on investment – from headline-grabbing national news to highly targeted e-newsletters.”

While the short-term budgetary gains of cutting PR are appealing, allowing a company to divert spend into other areas, the long-term impact may mean all investment to date is wasted effort . . . .

To read the full story, pick up a copy of this months North West Business Insider.

TheBusinessDesk.com report on our latest win

June 2nd, 2009

DEMOCRACY PR has been appointed by handmade frozen organic baby food producer BabyDeli to support its national roll out in Waitrose.

It is the first time that BabyDeli has retained the services of a PR agency having previously supported the brand with freelancers. The new listing at Waitrose adds to the brands availability in premium online retailer Ocado, John Lewis Cafes and a selection of healthfood stores nationwide.

Manchester-based Democracy, won the account after a competitive pitch.
Based in Irlam, Salford-based BabyDeli currently sells 12,500 meals a month and has an annual turnover of £300,000.

BabyDeli adds another growing brand to Democracy’s stable. Clients working with the agency include Baxter’s Licensed Brands, food manufacturer Duerr’s, The Gentry Grooming Company and Psycuity.

Thebusinessdesk.com

The Yorker gets a redesign

May 26th, 2009

Now I understand if most of you don’t know what The Yorker is, but just for reference before we get going; it’s my baby.

As an undergraduate at York I did a little bit of English Literature degree and a lot of journalism, web design and writing. When a friend of mine asked if I’d like to do a recipe page (apparently I looked the type) little did I know how much I’d come to love The Yorker.

York is pretty renowned for its student media, the two campus newspapers Nouse and Vision regularly win Guardian Student Media Awards and I was lucky enough to work alongside some of the individual winners at The Yorker.

Anyway to cut a long story short we decided that York deserved something new for a new online type of student. We set up a homepage, gathered the stories, designed the pages and launched in 2006. Then followed a whirlwind of activity, as we live blogged controversial University news, learnt the pros and cons of the readers ‘right to reply’ and brought in writers, photographers and techies to help keep the site up to date, fresh and relevant; we made it happen.

And then we graduated. It’s a very strange process handing over your role to a willing second year but we all did it (I was Lifestyle Editor in case you’re wondering), and of course I pop over to check on them every so often and find out the campus goings on.

Imagine my horror then yesterday when it didn’t look like my Yorker any more. I was genuinely alarmed, and I definitely didn’t like it.

This morning though I went back a little calmer and I have to admit I prefer Yorker 2.0 to 1.0. It looks professional: it’s easier to navigate, it’s easier to read, it’s better organised. The Yorker has grown up.

It would seem that I’ve moved on to bigger and better things and so has The Yorker. Our first steps created a foundation for the next generation to evolve into something better. The result demonstrates the creativity and passion of the great people we handed the batton to as they continue to make it theirs.