Steve Ellwood

I'm a 50+ guy working in the ICT space; I live in the Northern Highlands of Scotland in a 250 year old cottage by the sea with my wife and 6 dogs.

I'm a Coastguard Rescue Officer, and I'm interested in Knowledge Management and Social Media.

Posts

May 25, 06:25 AM

Nick Clegg won't be much use on this issue.

A sensible person might suggest that Nick Clegg is as much use as trying to get dog hairs from your favorite jumper by soaking it in hydroflouric acid, then running over it with a combine harvester, and then ignoring it for 25 years, then returning to the field dressed as a Roman soldier and then bashing at it with a rake, drinking a pint of paraffin and before your kidneys and liver give out, spending your last hour on the planet singing a selection of hits from the pop combo Dollar through the inside of a toilet roll.

Now imagine your jumper is social mobility, and you'll have a good idea of how much use Nick Clegg is.

... I'd add that I think abolishing grammar schools removed the last vestiges of chance for the "working class"; The Labour party apparatchiks pulling up the ladder behind them. "Baroness" Shirley Williams? Looking at you...

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May 18, 05:07 AM

The problem is that when a small system, like an Agile team, tries to change a large system, like a company and its customers, through long and continuous contact, the small system will change much more than the large system.

This is also known as Prescott's Pickle Principle:

Cucumbers get more pickled than brine gets cucumbered

ht to @flowchainsensei for reminding me abou @Kallokain

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May 16, 08:57 AM

Please don't advocate learning to code just for the sake of learning how to code. Or worse, because of the fat paychecks. Instead, I humbly suggest that we spend our time learning how to …

  • Research voraciously, and understand how the things around us work at a basic level.
  • Communicate effectively with other human beings.

These are skills that extend far beyond mere coding and will help you in every aspect of your life.

+1 for Research and communicate; it's astonishing the number of people who *still* ask "How do you know that..." It is as if they never heard of Google, and they never learn anything interesting... because they spend their life just watching reality TV.

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May 09, 09:35 AM

As for Diageo, once you cut through the glam veneer of pseudo corporate responsibility this incident shows them to be a band of dishonest hammerheads and dumb ass corporate freaks.  No soul and no morals, with the integrity of a rabid dog and the style of a wart hog

Nice vitriol, and clear expression from a very good craft brewer. Read the story.

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April 17, 05:39 AM

Spiffing allows you to write your CSS and stylesheets in conformance to proper British English (also known as correct English) grammar and spelling regulations

I love this; thanks to @RachelReveley

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January 11, 12:02 PM

An anecdote of social messaging as the killer app

Wicklin is one of the experts on statistical software development at SAS Institute. Prior to creating the Hub, SAS already had other collaboration systems in place, such as SharePoint, and implemented wikis and blogs on its intranet for knowledge sharing. But the Hub caught Wicklin’s attention in a way those other tools never had.

“I guess the difference between the Hub and all those others is that I use the Hub, and I didn’t really use the others,” Wicklin said. Internal blogs were a fine vehicle for “a select few” within the organization who committed to maintaining them, and wikis could be useful for finding specific information, but the Hub couldn’t be beat for browsing through short messages from people across the organization, in search of the “serendipitous moment” of finding something he hadn’t been looking for (but still found useful) from someone he never would have connected with otherwise, he said.

We first reported on SAS’s implementation of Socialcast in April, when it was fairly new. The company did an informal launch of the software in January 2011 and had more than 1,000 users within a month. By the end of the year, the Hub had nearly 8,000 users out of the company’s 12,000 employees. The adoption is even greater than it might sound from that, given that the total employee count includes people like landscapers and food service workers, who don’t use a computer to do their jobs. In divisions like research and development, use of the Hub is nearly universal.

SAS internal communication manager Becky Graebe said the Hub is delivering on the goal of providing new ways for employees to connect and collaborate. “People ask me, ‘Do you think this is cutting down on email?’ Well, I’m not measuring that right now. Our intent was to get people communicating more, not less. We’re a knowledge-based organization, so this is focused on knowledge sharing. We’re trying to get knowledge out of the minds of our employees, out onto the table where it can be talked about.”

- David F. Carr

As you might expect of a technology company, SAS already has plenty of Web-based collaboration in place, including internal wikis and about 600 intranet blogs. What it saw in Socialcast was the opportunity to spark conversations that link to all those other resources.

“Seeing the way communication was growing outside the company at a very rapid rate with social media, we asked, how do we bring some of that inside?” Lee said. “So we said, let’s bring a Facebook application inside the company—and that’s exactly what we did.”

- David F. Carr

NOTES

Something related I posted on Google yesterday is are social messaging and activity streams enough. We know they are the sweet spot in sense-making, ease of use and that primal social connection. But after the fact we need to curate this stuff before it falls into obscurity (ie. knowledge manage the knowledge flow). Wiki’s are a good tool for curation, as are blogs to describe what’s been happening…or you could move from social messaging to a blog or forum for extended discussion.

Yes social messaging can occur in group spaces, so this is a start of having this stuff in the right topic ballpark. But still tools like forums are really good after the fact if you want to browse by date or view a title index.

So blog, wikis, forums, are great content tools to share and do work; but for quick no frills one-click participation, you can’t go past social messaging in its appeal and effectiveness…and of course if that blog post or wiki edit ain’t appearing as a feed item in the activity stream, does it exist.

In the end social messaging and the activity stream is sustained as a killer app as it’s where we hang out, it’s where we already are. This is why email is so successful, and why blogs, forums, etc. did not replace this feeling. Now social messaging/activity streams are here as the real alternative to the inbox experience.

What are your thoughts on social messaging/activity stream apps like Yammer (now have wikis) and Socialcast. The both have group spaces. But are they getting by without blogs and forums. Not in the flow sense, but in consolidating this for easy re-use or findability.

Not blogs, not wikis, not Sharepoint(!) - but the allowing of serendipity!

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January 10, 09:43 AM

A paradox for employees today is that they really need to connect with and collaborate more with more people, and strengthen their personal networks if they are to deliver better results and strengthen our their positions. One problem they are facing when doing this is that most current incentive models do not reward employees helping their colleagues, unless there is a direct and measurable return on their contributions. Another problem is that many organizations fail at making the contributions that employees do outside of their own team visible, and thus if fails to recognize them. These problems put people in a kind of deadlock position. During uncertain times, most people will simply do what becomes visible and recognized by those who evaluate them, their managers. They will most likely also most be asked or commended by their managers to do so, because their managers are in a similar position as they will be judged by their managers on the visible contributions from the team they are managing (and so it goes on, all the way to the top).

Thanks to @johnt for the pointer to this.

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September 24, 06:45 AM

CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS — Amazon.com, the books-to-diapers-to-machetes Internet superstore, is a perfect snapshot of the American Dream, circa 2011.

It grows by the hour, fueled by a relentless optimism that has made America America. First it sold books. Then it realized that buying printed words in bulk, sorting and shipping them was a transferable skill. It has since applied it to anything you could want.

In 2011, for example, I have bought the following from Amazon: a hard drive, an electric shaver, a Bluetooth headset, a coffee machine and some filters, a multivoltage adapter, four light bulbs, a rubber raft (don’t ask), a chalkboard eraser, an ice cream maker, a flash drive, roller-ball pen replacements, a wireless router, a music speaker, a pair of jeans and a shoe rack — and, oh yeah, some books. (Disclosure: A book and a long-form article I have written are sold on Amazon.)

Buying these things the traditional way would have meant driving around to many different stores and paying as much as twice the price for certain items. What’s more, Amazon knows me. It’s like family. It knows where I live, what I like, my credit card number. (Which, come to think of it, makes it closer than family.)

In a moment rife with talk of American decline, my Amazon experiences provide fleeting mood boosts. They remind me that, for now at least, this remains the most innovative society on earth.

And then my bubble burst.

Thanks to a methodical and haunting piece of journalism in The Morning Call, a newspaper published in Allentown, Pennsylvania, I now know why the boxes reach me so fast and the prices are so low. And what the story revealed about Amazon could be said of the country, too: that on the road to high and glorious things, it somehow let go of decency.

The newspaper interviewed 20 people who worked in an Amazon warehouse in the Lehigh Valley in Pennsylvania. They described, and the newspaper verified, temperatures of more than 100 degrees Fahrenheit, or 37 degrees Celsius, in the warehouse, causing several employees to faint and fall ill and the company to maintain ambulances outside. Employees were hounded to “make rate,” meaning to pick or pack 120, 125, 150 pieces an hour, the rates rising with tenure. Tenure, though, wasn’t long, because the work force was largely temps from an agency. Permanent jobs were a mirage that seldom came. And so workers toiled even when injured to avoid being fired. A woman who left to have breast cancer surgery returned a week later to find that her job had been “terminated.”

The image of one man stuck with me. He was a temp in his 50s, one of the older “pickers” in his group, charged with fishing items out of storage bins and delivering them to the packers who box shipments. He walked at least 13 miles, or 20 kilometers, a day across the warehouse floor, by his estimate.

His assigned rate was 120 items an hour, or one item every 30 seconds. But it was hard to move fast enough between one row and the next, and hard for him to read the titles on certain items in the lowest bins. The man would get on his hands and knees to rummage through the lowest bins, and sometimes found it easier to crawl across the warehouse to the next bin rather than stand and dip again. He estimated plunging onto his hands and knees 250 to 300 times a day. After seven months, he, too, was terminated.

In a statement this week, Amazon acknowledged the complaints and said that it was working to address them, including by installing air-conditioners.

The prevailing American story line right now is seething anger at politicians: that they’re corrupt, or heartless, or socialist, or dumb. But the Amazon story, and many other recent developments, suggest that the problem is significantly deeper.

Far beyond official Washington, we would seem to be witnessing a fraying of the bonds of empathy, decency, common purpose. It is becoming a country in which people more than disagree. They fail to see each other. They think in types about others, and assume the worst of types not their own.

It takes some effort these days to remember that the United States is still one nation.

It doesn’t feel like one nation when a company like Amazon, with such resources to its name, treats vulnerable people so badly just because it can. Or when members of a presidential debate audience cheer for a hypothetical 30-year-old man to die because he lacks health insurance. Or when schoolteachers in Chicago cling to their union perks and resist an effort to lengthen the hours of instruction for children that the system is failing. Or when an activist publicly labels the U.S. military, recently made safe for open homosexuals, a “San Francisco military.” Or when most of the television pundits go on with prefabricated scripts to eviscerate their rivals, instead of doing us the honor of actually thinking.

The more I travel, the more I observe that Americans are becoming foreigners to each other. People in Texas speak of people in New York the way certain Sunnis speak of Shiites, and vice versa in New York. Many liberals I know take for granted that anyone conservative is either racist or under-informed. People who run companies like Amazon operate as though it never it occurred to them that it could have been them crawling through the aisles. And the people who run labor unions possess little empathy for how difficult and risky and remarkable it is to build something like Amazon.

What is creeping into the culture is simple dehumanization, a failure to imagine the lives others lead. Fellow citizens become caricatures. People retreat into their own safe realms. And decency, that great American virtue, falls away.

Join an online conversation at http://anand.ly

- do you buy much from Amazon?

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September 07, 10:00 AM

A hundred and fifty years ago, adults were incensed about child labor. Low-wage kids were taking jobs away from hard-working adults.

Sure, there was some moral outrage at seven-year olds losing fingers and being abused at work, but the economic rationale was paramount. Factory owners insisted that losing child workers would be catastrophic to their industries and fought hard to keep the kids at work--they said they couldn't afford to hire adults. It wasn't until 1918 that nationwide compulsory education was in place.

Part of the rationale to sell this major transformation to industrialists was that educated kids would actually become more compliant and productive workers. Our current system of teaching kids to sit in straight rows and obey instructions isn't a coincidence--it was an investment in our economic future. The plan: trade short-term child labor wages for longer-term productivity by giving kids a head start in doing what they're told.

Large-scale education was never about teaching kids or creating scholars. It was invented to churn out adults who worked well within the system.

Of course, it worked. Several generations of productive, fully employed workers followed. But now?

Nobel-prize winning economist Michael Spence makes this really clear: there are tradable jobs (making things that could be made somewhere else, like building cars, designing chairs and answering the phone) and non-tradable jobs (like mowing the lawn or cooking burgers). Is there any question that the first kind of job is worth keeping in our economy?

Alas, Spence reports that from 1990 to 2008, the US economy added only 600,000 tradable jobs.

If you do a job where someone tells you exactly what to do, they will find someone cheaper than you to do it. And yet our schools are churning out kids who are stuck looking for jobs where the boss tells them exactly what to do.

Do you see the disconnect here? Every year, we churn out millions of of workers who are trained to do 1925 labor.

The bargain (take kids out of work so we can teach them to become better factory workers) has set us on a race to the bottom. Some argue we ought to become the cheaper, easier country for sourcing cheap, compliant workers who do what they're told. We will lose that race whether we win it or not. The bottom is not a good place to be, even if you're capable of getting there.

As we get ready for the 93rd year of universal public education, here’s the question every parent and taxpayer needs to wrestle with: Are we going to applaud, push or even permit our schools (including most of the private ones) to continue the safe but ultimately doomed strategy of churning out predictable, testable and mediocre factory-workers?

As long as we embrace (or even accept) standardized testing, fear of science, little attempt at teaching leadership and most of all, the bureaucratic imperative to turn education into a factory itself, we’re in big trouble.

The post-industrial revolution is here. Do you care enough to teach your kids to take advantage of it?

as usual, a thoughtful piece from Seth Godin

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August 24, 07:40 AM

new shiny standardised IT-dominated factory processes fail to absorb the variety of customer demand; in other words it becomes hard for customers to get what they want. When customers can't get what they want they return, especially for public services about which they have no choice, until they do get what they want. I call this 'Failure Demand' (demand caused by a failure to do something or do something right for the customer). It represents a massive cost, failure demand can run as high as 80% of all customer demand in industrialised shared services projects, locking in costs for many years

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August 24, 04:50 AM

Distributed software development can be productive

This doesn’t mean that all outsourcing of software development is uneconomic. As Jeff goes on to explain in that video, a Dutch firm, Xebia, has successfully grown hyper-productive teams using Scrum that are geographically distributed.

But Xebia’s teams, some in The Netherlands and some in India, are set up in a counter-intuitive way: instead of having complete teams in each country, each team is split between the two places, with half its members in The Netherlands and half in India. The dispersed teams were at least as productive as colocated teams and sometimes more productive than the teams located wholly in the Netherlands.

Apparently splitting the teams geographically forced more conversations among the team about what the client really wanted. Being forced to explain to the developers in India each day what the client wanted helped everyone get clearer and so the teams as a whole tend to become more productive

so co-location isn't always the best answer - with good management.

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August 22, 06:16 AM

Does internal social media/software work? Seems to be working for IBM/ Hat tip to @elsua for the pointer from http://www.elsua.net/2011/08/09/ibms-trip-to-become-a-socially-integrated-ent...

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August 18, 02:57 AM

In that period of soul-searching that typically follows any instance of social upheaval, we shall no doubt hear many explanations for the events that overtook the streets of Britain last week. One which will surely elbow its way to the front is the notion that, in some ill-defined sense, the disaffected youth of this country have been denied any "hope".

What hope is that, precisely? Is it the hope that, despite having set one's face against the acquisition of even the most elementary formal qualifications in literacy and numeracy, or of basic English language or personal skills, one should be able to find an employer who will offer one employment in preference to buying a fork-lift or taking on a migrant?

Even as late as the 1980s the relative prices of capital and labour in the UK favoured those with low skills and a willingness to work, over expensive machines. That factor-price ratio has now changed, probably for ever. Globalisation, technological advances and a downward rigidity in the wage that is deemed "acceptable" in the UK mean that the mass-produced merchandise that so appeals to street thieves can no longer be produced economically in this country. The relatively low-skill jobs that are involved in such manufacturing are the preserve of people who are willing to work for less than their counterparts in the UK, and to do so more reliably. The future of UK manufacturing will increasingly lie in goods and services embodying training and skills.

Those who wish to have any hope at all should first be clear about their aspirations.

R Rothschild, Emeritus Professor of Economics, Lancaster

Excellent letter from the father of a friend of mine.

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July 26, 04:45 AM

Einstein apparently said. “Everything should be as simple as possible, but not simpler”.

He would probably have said “Never use a tool you do not understand”.

From experience, most stories I’ve seen use the “As a… I want…” format with “So that…” added to improve their appeal to business investors. A bit like lip stick on a pig.

Consider these “So that” examples from a super duper tip top team I know…

  • “So that I can start using the system”
  • “So that I can cover my arse”
  • “So that there is less risk to manual error”

The problem with “As a… I want” format is that business value is an afterthought. However, it is a dangerous after thought. Seeing it there leads the business to think that some thought has been put into value when the reality is it has not been.

A subtle but more insidious problem with the format is that the user is the starting point. This means that the target solution starts by assuming certain roles will perform certain functions. Often a project will result in responsibilities being re-distributed to different roles. This situation needs to be handled with care and delicacy. By stating who will perform which roles, you may be signalling to a user group that they are losing or gaining new responsibilities… both of which may be unpopular.

Although I do not use the formats, I prefer “In order to… As a… I need” which places business value up front as the primary concern. Check out Antony Marcano’s blog post for more detail.

Which way do you do stories? Is it just about shared understanding? - see: http://practicalagility.blogspot.com/2011/07/whither-requirements.html

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July 09, 09:51 AM

I wonder if this gets through?

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July 09, 09:46 AM

Would that I could do this from G+

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July 01, 08:11 AM

They are control freaks. They are vain. They are ditherers. They don't listen. They are bullies. They are afraid of conflict. And they can't do small talk.

Well, perhaps not *all* CEOs. How about yours?

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June 24, 06:22 AM

If you use social media for your employer and you use a “corporate” voice. You are in effect a troll too.  You seek to interact with real people but you are not present at your end. If you seek to have influence, you too must have a name and be you.

Thoughtful post from Rob Paterson espousing honest conversations, real voices and authenticity. Many places could learn from this.

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June 15, 04:47 AM

Most employees don’t spend their time executing business process. That’s a myth. They spend most of their time handling exceptions to business process. That’s what they’re doing in their [e-mail] inbox for four hours a day. Email has become the great exception handler.”

“Unfortunately, what it means is all the learning disappears because it’s hidden away in people’s inbox. It’s not searchable and discoverable “

snippet from @johnt pointing to an earlier Ross Mayfield post. If folk can see how you have sorted things... they'll know how to sort things.

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June 15, 03:46 AM

Connected people will naturally gravitate toward an ethic where they will trade personal productivity for connectedness: they will interrupt their own work to help a contact make progress. Ultimately, in a bottom-up fashion, this leads to the network as a whole making more progress than if each individual tries to optimize personal productivity.

Perhaps more importantly, the willingness to assist others leads to closer social connections, and increases the likelihood of reciprocal behaviour, where an obsession with personal productivity does not.

On a work basis, businesses today want it (or think they want it) both ways. They want their employees to be personally productive, making the classic logical error that if everyone is highly productive personally then the company will be. Nope.“

a lovely sectionfrom a 2 year old post by @johnt

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at BT Innovate & Design
Information Technology and Services | Inverness, United Kingdom, GB

Summary

Steve is a highly motivated and customer oriented professional with 30 years experience in a wide range of roles within BT.

He has experience of managing projects in sales, IT, and customer service.His service management background has made him able to take on and use complex technical information in customer friendly terms. He's managed substantial teams both as direct and matrix manager.

He's a persuasive communicator at all levels with wide experience of presentations to both technical and general audiences.

He's demonstrated capability to work successfully on own initiative, and as part of virtual/matrix teams as member or leader.

He has wide interest in and understanding of Web 2.0/Enterprise 2.0 developments, and is currently working in the Knowledge Management area in addition to his work in solution design.
Specialties: Service Management & Design, Process consultancy, coaching for results

Experience

  • Aug 2009 - Present
    Security Solution Designer / BT Innovate & Design
    working on Common Capabilities and other activity within the Platform
  • 2004 - Present
    Coastguard Rescue Officer / Maritime and Coastguard Agency
  • May 2009 - Present
    Transition Manager / BT
    I worked in the BT Transition Centre, helping a fair sized team through the corporate transformation into new ICT roles across the company.
  • Feb 2007 - Present
    Service Designer / BT
    Designing the Service Wrap for ICT Service in large ICT/outsource bids
  • 2007 - Present
    Service Designer / BT Global Services
  • 2005 - Present
    Editor / Cromarty Live
  • Jan 2006 - Present
    Service Architect / BT
    Providing ITIL Consultancy and risk management support to a transformation programme within the NHS for BT.
  • 2002 - Present
    Internal Social Networking / BT
  • Oct 2005 - Present
    ITIL Process Design / BT
    Handling process design consultancy for a major outsource being done by BT
  • Mar 2002 - Present
    Service Manager / BT
    Managed team of Service managers looking after BT Retail Call Centre Applications, and BT Global Services OSS and applications

Education

  • 1970 - 1976
    Barnard Castle School
  • International School of Manila
  • Manchester University

Additional Information

Websites:
Interests:
OpenID, Web2.0, VRM, Security

Posts

June 01, 06:47 AM

To be fair, I use Wordpress (obviously) for my site; initially, I mapped my domain name to Wordpress.com, and GAYD was the easiest way to get matching mail.(http://steveellwood.com/2008/0.... Because it's Wordpress, it was peasy to migrate to selfhosting (http://steveellwood.com/2009/0... - but I was (and am) very happy with my GAYD mail so it stayed like that.

June 01, 06:18 AM

interested on your views on using google apps for your domain, and why you went that route as opposed to pure freebie route?

October 26, 03:09 PM

Well, two I suppose, but most folk know both exist and I don't hide behind either. It's just one group of people gave me a nickname (5th Woodbridge Sea Scouts were the culprits) and it sort of bled into my life. This was before social networking, so as that came along it was natural to use one or the other depending on the main audience. My family obv all call me Paul, and most colleagues, but my friends either call me Beardy or Paul depending where they first met me. So, yes there's only one persona, two handles on that.

October 26, 02:07 PM

Just the one here too.

July 01, 03:34 PM

the unsaid bit, of course, my face to face interaction - at the moment - is in the community in which I live. Which, incidentally, is thriving with a wide range of homeworkers.

Because I work from home, my lack of commute means a) my employer gets more time and b) my community gets more time and involvement from me.

As you guess, Frank, I look forward to mingling with colleagues when I get a chance - even if it is Osmosoft!

July 01, 12:54 PM

So thank you for the retweet, Steve; this is a good topic and one which is worth exploring. I like technology and some of the ways BT uses it, for all that we moan, has been innovative and world-leading. If we all work at home then we can apply for any job and those of us far from the centre are less disadvantaged. But for all the communications channels I think that human beings, even introverted ones, are essentially social animals and that a relationship is sealed far better face to face even if you only meet once. I thought I hated travelling to London yet our travel ban finds me missing the opportunity to run into people as I once did, the opportunity to drop by and say hello to those I want to influence (or befriend). I used to like when about of a third of my life was working at home, a third travelling and a third in the office (and in town). I miss social contact (even though I still block out Friday lunchtime for the pub er networking) and think I did prefer when we all sat together throwing things at one another and you could focus somewhere other than the laptop screen...

June 28, 10:51 AM

As you say, it depends on the type of work you're doing. I have a bad habit of forgetting that there are parts of the company (like, say, 99.9% of it or so) that aren't involved in writing software, but for those that are (or who have another team-based creative role), I think co-location is hugely beneficial.

If your job doesn't involve working as part of a team (an actual team doing something together, not just a bunch of people under the same manager), then I expect home working is at least as effective as working in an office (and cheaper), as long as you don't end up isolated.

June 16, 02:46 AM

and it's added

June 16, 02:24 AM

Should add @ribbit!

February 05, 09:04 AM

What I found interesting from the day, was the completely different approach you can take using SM.

The Commonwealth Office being not too dissimilar to other major companies we know, have what I can only call a "traditional" approach to SM (if that's possible!)

Now take what MediaSnackers are doing in the youth sector and it kind of turns the whole thing up side down, if that makes any kind of sense.

I found their thoughts on creating a press release completely refreshing, new and exciting, something that many small business would feel completely at home with, if only they knew what was possible.

Well that's my take on the day, sorry for the long ramble.

Cheers!

February 05, 08:29 AM

Glad you enjoyed the session and the FCO's social media activities always is a great illustration/case study ;-)

Peace

DK
MediaSnackers Founder

February 01, 05:02 AM

Data management: being able to manage/organize these zillions of coded ...things

Information management: to be able to collect, store, organize, communicate relevant data ... corresponding to needs of people, missions, processes, projects, all that in the adequate place and adequate time

Knowledge management: being able to detect, collect communicate, make understand both tacit and explicit knowledge, created from information, "learning by doing", within minds and organizations...

January 30, 05:33 AM

Steve

You may or maynot have noticed that the team over on BT Tradespace have been twittering for some time now and also have GetSatisfaction, YouTube, Viddler, Flikr, Myspace, FB and other SN profiles.

From my experience, it's been a great way to engage in conversations with BTs customers and the team have been able to respond to comments made about Tradespace as well as just generally getting to know the Tradespace customers. It's also been an enabler to creating advocacy, just take a look at the number of RTs to Tradespace tweets made by Tradespace customers!

January 26, 09:41 PM

steve, got your email yesterday, will respond soon. As you know I have started to experiment with engaging with customer outside the Firewall ... Twitter, GetSatisfaction being the two places so far, but also looking at how we can leverage Zuberance to "amplify advocates". So far the effects have been positive, about 4 customers who where tweeting negatively have been "satisfied" if not turned into advocates. So far I have avoided obviosuly Tweeting as an employee of our organisation and tried to make it look more "peer to peer" in the public domain, but interested in exploring how we develop this further and stretch out the net wider to find more dissatisfied customer to help.

November 20, 02:02 AM

no one needs facebook at work

November 18, 01:14 AM

Trust is the first thing to disappear under tension. The instinct is to go to Command and Control. Why? I wish I knew. But it takes a strong and certain leader to rise above that instinct and emply the full engagement of all employees to help the organisation (any organisation) to find its way out of whaever mess it's in.

Trouble is. If you haven't taken the time and trouble to nurture the trust beforehand . . . .

you're in a bigger mess than you first thought of

November 11, 02:29 AM

AND

often the customer does not know (yet) what they want

OR

when you give the customer something you find a completely different group of customers have found a different and useful purpose for it (viz. the origianl mobile phone)

so keep looking and keep exploring and the customer will pick up on something you never thought of and use it creatively

October 31, 11:52 AM

The only business Facebook should be banned at is a home office! I have to reroute my Facebook alerts so I don't see them while I'm working!

October 21, 05:48 PM

WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH

Oh, sorry, Been in the office too long.

October 21, 09:35 AM

All his life has he looked away... to the future, to the horizon. Never his mind on where he was... what he was doing.

Sorry, couldn't resist.

October 21, 08:47 AM

Sometimes all you want to do is crawl away.

So maybe we need to be proactive for those we haven't heard from for a while

October 07, 09:51 AM

Thanks for the mention, and other kind comments on Twitter Steve, much appreciated! As a reward, I hereby grant you one Web Indulgence :)

September 18, 11:11 AM

Went we moved house I went to Argos, bought the cheapest hoover there and got an earful off the girlfriend for being a such a cheapskate.

It served appallingly for a couple of months then broke, so she insisted we got a fancy Miele. Unbelievable difference. Highly recommended too.

September 17, 04:35 AM

The layout/theme is Journalist by Lucian Marin.
If you scroll *way down* it's at the bottom of the page. Nice site, by the way.

September 17, 03:17 AM

Can you tell me who did your layout? I've been looking for one kind of like yours. Thank you.

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oforganon:

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This post in particular is addressed to men, not because women don’t rape and women don’t make/laugh at rape jokes and not because men can’t be raped, but because, by nature of the existing gender disparity, men are in a unique position to be taken seriously when they raise objections to…

tommorrisdotorg:

I’ve just been chatting to someone about the sad departing of Ceefax and Teletext, and the various memories we have of these centralized, TV-based Internet forerunners. I had a look at the Wikipedia article on Ceefax, and it’s got sourcing problems. Having recently been given access to

I think I used to live there, too…

I wonder how many would continue to worship at the shrine of Ayn Rand if they knew that towards the end of her life she signed on for both Medicare and social security. She had railed furiously against both programmes, as they represented everything she despised about the intrusive state. Her belief system was no match for the realities of age and ill health.

minimalmac:

When we want to watch things like movies and shows, we do so using streaming services on a three generation old iMac 20 inch that resides in our library/den. This means mostly Netflix unless available for streaming otherwise (Hulu, Amazon, iTunes, direct from the show’s website, etc.). One can safely assume that if it is not available via online streaming then we likely have not watched it.

Having read this, I think if I was a mainstream TV exec, I’d be worried. Very worried.

Morality & persecution - an excellent post!
  • My own system of morality, however, regards the following as immoral acts: Perpetuating institutionalised discrimination.
  • Indulging in the sophistry of equating morality with sexuality.
  • Perpetuating the deeply unhealthy doctrine of priestly celibacy, thus creating highly damaged, disturbed and repressed human beings.
  • Perpetuating sexist and homophobic attitudes under the guise of fabricated divine will.
  • Perpetuating the monstrous and intellectually criminal assertion that morality is conferred by faith, and absent without it.
  • Aiming the slander of ‘immorality’ against a harmless and normal state of being.

the White House said any proposed legislation “must not tamper with the technical architecture of the Internet.”

… and isn’t that good news!

It’s very seldom I get excited by what our prime minister has to say and this is one of those times. As Muslims we also believe in the Bible. We believe in the teachings of Jesus. Not only that, but in the teachings of all the biblical prophets, including Moses in the Torah. So this is something that we feel is absolutely in tune with the Muslim thinking. We have to base our behaviour according to scripture, God’s revealed message. “For a long time Muslims have been trying to express this idea, that for us as Muslims Islam is not just a religion but a way of life. To divorce politics from religion is not something we are able to do, we cannot leave our religion at home or in the mosques, it comes with us wherever we go. So it’s refreshing to hear the prime minister say Christians should do the same. I agree Britain is the best country for Muslims to live in, at least in Europe.

Muslim Council of Britain member and imam from Leicester, Sheikh Ibrahim Mogra

BBC News - David Cameron on Christianity - views

- not too much of a surprise there.  I liked

The statistics revealed that only 12% believe Mr Miliband has improved Labour, down from 36% last year, while six out of 10 said they thought political party has still not “faced up to the damage they did to the British economy”.

And even high-minded newspapers such as the Guardian decided more than two decades ago to fill their pages with trivia because they judged that the general public was becoming dumber and shallower.

Melanie Phillips, columnist for the Daily Mail. I don’t link to the Daily Mail on principle.

Let’s look at the statistics.

Number of celebrity-related stories on the front page of the Daily Mail website today: 77.

Number of celebrity-related stories on the front page of the Guardian website today: 0.

Number of Melanie Phillips columns in the Daily Mail today: 1.

Number of Melanie Phillips columns in the Guardian today: 0.

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