Rob Cottingham

Meeting your social media humor needs since 1963

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14 Dec 2009

Friends with benefits

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Our benefit package is we don't block Facebook.

The debate rages on over whether social networks (and Twitter, and YouTube, and, and, and) have any legitimacy in the workplace, fueled in no small part by people who sell tools to block them.

But employers who turn their noses up at Facebook et al. may well discover that their coveted Millennials (a.k.a. Generation Y, a.k.a. those damn kids who won’t get off your lawn) are happy to return the favour when recruiting time rolls around. Blocking access to Facebook looks a lot like those IT departments that wouldn’t install web browsers on your computer a decade ago… or external email access a few years earlier.

And like those tools before them, the social web today is increasingly being used by companies and organizations for productive, collaborative work. So it’s not just a question of denying your HR department a hiring pool of cool kids. Blocking social media from your company can mean cutting yourself off from an important potential source of productivity, innovation and increased efficiency.

Of course, that’s an argument I like to make to people who haven’t just received a dozen Farmville notifications.

Originally published on ReadWriteWeb

11 Dec 2009

Shorter employer health reform ad

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Category: Everything Else

“Call Congress now. Tell them you don’t want business to pay any new taxes. But to protect medicare. And you want real improvements in health care. And then, while they’re on the line, ask for a pony. No, wait – a magic pony.”

10 Dec 2009

Vancouver Sun’s Gillian Shaw covers Alex’s new post at Emily Carr

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Category: Everything Else

Alexandra Samuel has chalked up some impressive firsts.

With her husband Rob Cottingham she launched Vancouver’s first social media firm back when Twitter was something birds did, not humans.

More recently, she and Cottingham astounded traditional knowledge-based businesses by giving away the keys to the shop — open sourcing all their trade secrets and lucrative and long-built consulting tools.

And this week Samuel announced she is taking up a post as director of the new Centre for Moving Interaction at Emily Carr University of the Emily Carr University of Art+Design.

I couldn’t be more excited about Alex’s new position (you can read about how excited she is here!) – and not just because it gives me an excuse to stroll around Emily Carr’s fascinating campus more often. This brings together so many strands in Alex’s astonishingly varied skein of skills, knowledge and talents that I can’t wait to see how it unfolds.

Posted via web from robcottingham’s posterous

Google profiles Social Signal’s project management process

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Category: Social Signal

Social Signal regulars will know that we’ve (and by “we”, I especially mean “Alex”) put a lot of effort into finding the perfect solution to our project management needs. We’ve tried web apps like Basecamp and Remember the Milk, desktop apps like Daylite… but nothing has met all of our needs.

Which, frankly, doesn’t surprise us too much. Every organization has its unique demands and idiosyncrasies, and short of a tailor-made solution, no off-the-rack suite is going to drape every bump and curve in the most flattering way.

But we came remarkably close with a combination of project-management upstart Manymoon and Google Apps. (You may remember Manymoon from such blog posts as this one, and such podcast episodes as this one.)

And now the nice people at Google are telling the story of how we did it, as part of their series of customer profiles. (To see Social Signal’s article, selected “Professional services” and “Small business”. Or view it as a Google Doc right here.)

It’s boggling to realize how recently you would have had to pay thousands of dollars for tools like these – mainly because they were only being built for enterprises, if at all. Yet the no-charge edition of Google Apps is more than enough for most organizations… and Manymoon is almost shockingly affordable.

And therein lies an untold story. How big an impact has the arrival of new, no-to-low-cost business applications (and their open-source counterparts) had on the creation and growth of small businesses and non-profit organizations? So many of them run with such tight margins that I’d be surprised if it isn’t substantial, but I haven’t seen any research on the question. Anyone else?

7 Dec 2009

Warm hearts vs. cold feet

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Category: Vancouver

If you’ve ever accidentally soaked your shoes in a puddle on a freezing day, you’ll appreciate how miserable the experience can be… and how desperate you can be to get to your home, school or workplace to change into a spare pair.

When you’re living on the streets, though, it’s more than just discomfort. Cold, wet feet can quickly become agonizing to walk on – adding a big barrier to finding a job, food or shelter for the night.

And I’m going to let Kate Dugas from ChangeEverything.ca take it from here:

A few months after its launch, ChangeEverything and the people that make up the community here, made a difference in the lives of some people living on the streets of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside with successful drive for warm clothing during a particularly bitter cold snap. Since 2006 we have used ChangeEverything.ca to collect thousands and thousands of items of warmth for folks living in the DTES of Vancouver..

Cold wet feet are a huge reason people living on the street get sick and even die in the winter. Getting clean dry socks to local shelters is a great way to help alleviate this problem. So this year we are focusing on socks!

So start looking through your closets and drawers. We’ll take mis-matched socks that are clean and in good condition. But even better, we’ll take ones that you went out and bought especially for this purpose. Reply with a comment on this post if you have leads on enormous quantities of socks, or if you just have a few pairs or even one pair to give. Each pair will totally make a difference. It’s true. Believe it.

I am also working on having a Vancity “Got Socks” account opened. Watch this space.

Kate

PS -oh and please spread the word. tweet this. add it to your facebook. emai your friends about it, heck post it to your fridge! see if your kids want to take up a collection at school for socks. whatever you can think of, the wackier the better.

Just leave a comment on her blog post to tell Kate you have socks to donate. And click here to pass the word along on Twitter!

ChangeEverything.ca launches "Got socks?" drive

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If you’ve ever accidentally soaked your shoes in a puddle on a freezing day, you’ll appreciate how miserable the experience can be… and how desperate you can be to get to your home, school or workplace to change into a spare pair.

When you’re living on the streets, though, it’s more than just discomfort. Cold, wet feet can quickly become agonizing to walk on – adding a big barrier to finding a job, food or shelter for the night.

And I’m going to let Kate Dugas from ChangeEverything.ca take it from here:

A few months after its launch, ChangeEverything and the people that make up the community here, made a difference in the lives of some people living on the streets of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside with successful drive for warm clothing during a particularly bitter cold snap. Since 2006 we have used ChangeEverything.ca to collect thousands and thousands of items of warmth for folks living in the DTES of Vancouver.

Cold wet feet are a huge reason people living on the street get sick and even die in the winter. Getting clean dry socks to local shelters is a great way to help alleviate this problem. So this year we are focusing on socks!

So start looking through your closets and drawers. We’ll take mis-matched socks that are clean and in good condition. But even better, we’ll take ones that you went out and bought especially for this purpose. Reply with a comment on this post if you have leads on enormous quantities of socks, or if you just have a few pairs or even one pair to give. Each pair will totally make a difference. It’s true. Believe it.

I am also working on having a Vancity “Got Socks” account opened. Watch this space.

Kate

PS -oh and please spread the word. tweet this. add it to your facebook. emai your friends about it, heck post it to your fridge! see if your kids want to take up a collection at school for socks. whatever you can think of, the wackier the better.

Just leave a comment on her blog post to tell Kate you have socks to donate. And click here to pass the word along on Twitter!

Just in time for the holidays: Noise to Signal limited-edition prints!

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Category: Everything Else

Folks were great about suggesting their favourite prints to include in the first limited-edition run from Noise to Signal.

As I mention on the ordering page, these have a run of 150 each. They’re 8-by-10 giclée prints, hand-numbered, captioned and signed by the cartoonist in his own blood (ixnay on the oodblay: apparently that raises certain international shipping issues – ed.) and shipped flat. (Note the actual prints will not have the border or the Noise to Signal logo – just the cartoon artwork.)

The price for a limited-edition print is $200. But to reward early adopters (and help bootstrap this operation), the first 25 editions of each cartoon will sell for $125 each. To order, just click the “buy now” button. And thank you!

And now, my friends, your winning cartoons:

1. Unsaved changes

Unsaved Changes

Style:

2. Spiritual void

Spiritual Void

Style:

3. Monetize it

Monetize It

Style:

And if your budget doesn’t quite reach limited-edition prints, but you still want high-quality Noise to Signal goodness for your walls, may we recommend art prints, produced through those fine folks at Zazzle?


buy unique gifts at Zazzle

The next step in Social Signal’s evolution

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Category: Social Signal

Since we launched in 2005 – a social media firm at a time when the term “social media” had yet to be coined – we’ve evolved constantly. No big surprise: this is a field that’s changing rapidly too.

Last month, we told you we were refocusing on capacity-building: helping other organizations, agencies and individuals to make the most of social media. We expected that would mean we’d support our clients through trainings and Concept Jam strategy workshops, while reaching a larger audience through blogging, cartooning and other media.

But no sooner had we decided to head in this new direction than Alex was approached about a position at Emily Carr University of Art + Design. Emily Carr had received a major grant from NSERC to fund a new applied research on digital media, and they wanted someone with both an academic background in tech research, and real-world experience in the tech sector. For Alex, it was a perfect convergence of many of her passions… and the result is she’s the new Director of the Centre for Moving Interaction. (You can read her blog post about it here.)

Alex’s position at Emily Carr will bring a fresh dimension to her work as a tech capacity-builder, but Social Signal remains the hub for both of our efforts. I’ll be leading Social Signal and managing our day-to-day operations, client services and sales; Alex will partner with me to deliver Concept Jam workshops, group trainings and to provide advice on other projects as needed. Morgan will continue to support both of our work, working at Social Signal as our Operations Manager and as the new Partner Liaison at Emily Carr.

On projects that require additional expertise or more hands on deck, we’ll continue to draw on our great network of colleagues and partners.  Whether it’s Natasha’s technical prowess and project management chops, Aaron’s Drupal prowess and community animation skills, or Channing’s social media strategy insight and sharp eye for entrepreneurial opportunities for organizations, we like to know we can turn to the extended Social Signal family for a wide range of skills and expertise when the demand arises. (On that note, I’ve recently started working with David Eaves on our second engagement together. And between his grasp of negotiation strategy and keen understanding of organizational dynamics, he lends a whole new facet to what we can offer clients.)

We’re excited about this new structure, which focuses on assembling the best team for each specific project, as an extension of the trajectory we’ve been on for the past four years.When we first moved from doing all our development work in-house, to partnering with great developers like Affinity Bridge, Work at Play and Agentic, we discovered that we got better results – and the bandwidth to take on a broader range of projects – by selecting the best development team for each specific projects. Now we’ll have the flexibility to build the perfect all-around team as well.

Most crucially, this new structure gives Alex and me the flexibility to focus on the work we’re most passionate about: the teaching, brainstorming, training, inspiring and creating. Growing and running a company is its own full-time job, and as Social Signal has grown, that part of the job has become bigger and bigger. Instead, both Alex and I want to be working with our clients, their stakeholders, and the fascinating ideas, insights and discoveries that social media can offer. It’s been a great four years for Social Signal… and they’re just the beginning.

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Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence. Please attribute to Rob Cottingham with a link to the content's original page on this web site. For more information, contact Rob at rob@robcottingham.ca.

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