Archive for the ‘General’ Category

EuroComm Blog now closed

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

by Yang-May Ooi

Thanks everyone for visiting the EuroComm Blog over the last few months and thanks in particular to those of you who subscribed.

It is now two weeks after the conference and we’ve had some great reviews and feedback on the blog as well as behind the scenes via email, Twitter and personal conversations. It sounds like many people took away a lot of useful information and made some valuable connections so that’s the best that we could hope for!

Thanks to all our bloggers who contributed to the success of this blog and also to the speakers for giving their time and sharing their expertise.

In particular, thanks to Silvia Cambie and the team at La Salle who worked so hard to make this conference run so smoothly and successfully.

This blog is now bowing out.

See you at next year’s EuroComm!

EuroComm on For Immediate Release podcast

Sunday, February 17th, 2008

IABC member Ronna Porter, director at Sound Strategies, gives an audio report on the EuroComm conference on Neville Hobson’s For Immediate Release podcast.

You can go to the FIR site to listen to the report by clicking on the FIR logo below:

for-immediate-release

More Reviews of EuroComm

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

A number of communicators who attended EuroComm have blogged their impressions on their blogs:

Kevin Keohane, client partner at Publicis SAS, writes 888 words from EuroComm 2008:

A good conference. My personal highlights were Suzanne Salvo’s (Salvo Photography) session on the ethics of photo manipulation and Ramon Olle Jr.’s presentation on the new face of consumer branding. And, of course, the ample and various networking opportunities that the conference schedule so insightfully provided – plenty of time between sessions rather than a quick cuppa and off to the next session. It’s the space in-between that glues these things together so well. Read more

Mike Klein, Communication Consultant, writes of Bubblings in Barcelona:

Now that I’ve recovered from the “mother of all head colds” that I caught in Barcelona while “partying and socializing at an Olympic level” (thanks to World Cup skier Bode Miller for that great line), I’d like to share a few of the major takeaways from IABC EuroComm in Barcelona: Read more

Silvia Cambie, Past President of IABC Europe/ Middle East and organiser of EuroComm, writes about life After Barcelona on her blog:

I think I am suffering from anti-climax.

I believe that’s what it is, because it feels like facing a big blank space and I have this urge to go out and buy myself a teddy bear.

I just came back from Barcelona where I chaired EuroComm 2008, IABC’s annual conference for the Europe/Middle East region.

I worked on this event for about nine months together with my IABC colleagues and the team at La Salle University… and I can’t believe it’s all over now. Read more

If you’ve blogged about EuroComm, please get in touch so we can add a link to your post here.

EuroComm Highlights

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

by Audrey Scarff

pedrera.jpg This week I had the fantastic opportunity to absorb some interesting and sometimes contentious ideas (Second Life is Dead?) from the high calibre speakers and 100 or so participants. A key benefit was participating with such a diverse group of communications professionals. Well done to the IABC for saving trees and providing some great resources on the conference CD.

Some highlights from the speakers include Jean Stephenne’s keynote and a possible cure for malaria from GlaxoSmithKline. He rightly observes that there’s no security in anonymity anymore for global companies. Let’s face it, everyone knows who you are anyway so you have to play by the new rules (think Web 2.0 interactions with advocate groups).

He also claims to have found a vaccine against old age – where can we get some?! I think he and fellow speaker Charles Gancel should get together and talk about a solution to the senior management shortage.

A running theme for the external-communications focussed talks that I went to, such as Ulrich Gartner from Electrolux and the sensational plenary session by Ramon Olle, was that you don’t have to spend millions to build your brand. Phew! say all the SMEs. It’s often a bit hit and miss (eg. Ford’s Finding the Jones’ YouTube series) but really worth it when you get it right (Happy Pills viral marketing success and Electrolux’s Big Brother influenced kitchen show, again on YouTube).

Charles Gancel says there’s more head hunting going on today because of retiring baby boomers and consequently a senior management shortage. This brings up the need for even better knowledge management, and retention of talent. It highlights the importance of change communication professionals and good intranets.

I found the term ‘institutionalised communicators’ quite amusing – conjuring up pictures of communicators in straight-jackets. Seriously though, with Social Media/ Web 2.0 you have to let go or risk an audience backlash. I also noticed a quiet undertone of suspicion amongst some of the audience to the very term ‘social media’ – many believe this type of thing has always been here, it’s just taken a different shape in the form of wiki and blogs, etc.

With such an interesting mix of topics and people, these ideas became fruit for further discussion over a bottle or two of rioja. What I particularly appreciate about the IABC event is that it is friendly and non-commercial; although a tremendous amount of networking goes on, it’s not about feeling pressured to buy something, it’s more about sharing with and learning from your peers. In a gorgeous location like Barcelona, who doesn’t want that!

This article first appeared in the IABC Europe/ Middle East newsletter

EuroComm Success

Monday, February 11th, 2008

by Jennifer Lewis (France)

guell.jpg Under the theme of the Barcelona architect, Gaudi, and his colorful mosaics, 100 communicators gathered for two days to explore innovation through communications. The Eurocomm Conference speakers successfully challenged the international audience to consider everything from training scientists as communicators to using a party metaphor for social networking.

The audience heard from award winners, a philosopher, agency leaders, good old practitioners and even a musician. Tales of audience segmentation, blogs gone right and wrong, how to make managers accountable for cascading and using the brand to teach consumers how to buy all found welcoming ears.

Change communications, affecting nearly 100% of attendees, was rounded off with a simple measurement criterion suggestion by UK speaker Russell Grossman. Why not just target the day when employees look back and say, “I can’t believe we ever did it like that?”

Lots of networking opportunities were built into the agenda and Spanish tapas refreshments lured everyone to the table. La Salle University served as a gracious host and involved the next generation of communicators as volunteers to take our coats and direct us on campus.

A number of presentations helped us think about old and new definitions. Communications is based on the Latin- to share. Branding has its roots in burning- originally to prevent theft of animals. Followership should be people’s response to good leadership. Lastly, what’s a Buzz Director? That’s the employee who guards the CEO’s reputation on-line and off.

This article first appeared in the IABC Europe/ Middle East newsletter

Getting Ready for EuroComm

Friday, February 1st, 2008

by Yang-May Ooi

The EuroComm Conference will be starting on Monday 4 Feb and run through to lunchtime on Tuesday. I know that a number of communicators will be arriving in Barcelona over the weekend, ready for a fresh start on Monday morning. I think there’s going to be a great vibe there and I’m personally looking forward to seeing a number of IABC friends from the European region as well as meeting some of the blog contributors I’ve been in touch with over the last few months.

On Sunday morning, I’ve been invited to join the IABC Think Tank to brainstorm some ideas and look ahead over the next five years at the challenges and trends that will be facing communicators. That’s going to be a good session, I’m sure. In particular, I’m going to be interested to hear what my colleagues from across the region are excited and / or concerned about for the profession over the coming years.

Hopefully, we’ll have some blog posts in the next couple of weeks after the conference with people’s thoughts about the key issues that came out for them through the various sessions. If you’d like to contribute your responses to the conference in the form of an article for this blog, please do email us via the Contact page. Or you can add a comment to this or any of the blog posts.

Catalan Coffee

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

by Andrew Riley

andrew riley The IABC’s seventh EuroComm conference in Barcelona 4-5th February looks a right cracker. As the Chair of the sixth EuroComm in Dublin I was so pleased to meet at EuroComm nearly a hundred senior communicators from approximately 20 countries. Ramon Olle, then CEO and chairman of the board at EPSON Europe was our first plenary speaker in Dublin giving us his CEO insight into what is leadership in a diverse corporate world and how can it be communicated. He not only ended up staying to listen to the other speakers remaining for the entire two days in Dublin, but he also has been instrumental in setting up the ties with La Salle university in Barcelona to host EuroComm 2008!

What stands out for me is that EuroComm is a conference put together by IABC European professional communicators for themselves and their peers. Those helping out at IABC do it for free - because we are confident and committed to our work and because we want to make the conference registration fee accessible to people at all levels.

What I took away from Dublin EuroComm was an immense wealth of IABC friendships and knowledge of the art and craft of professional communication - such as John Simmons of The Writer sublime explanation of his use of storytelling to define the Guinness brand essence to the Guinness board and marketing team. I have never before heard a conference hushed to such silence as when John narrated an imaginary story of travelling around Africa to find the Guinness essence and ended it by the cat Pangar Ban in library of Trinity College Dublin next to the Book of Kells. In contrast to this communication approach we were sharply brought down to earth by the strategies and practicalities of combining people and technology in communication by John Leggate CBE, Chief Information Officer for BP and winner of 2007 European Excel Award, and by Paul Mylrea, director of media relations for Transport for London who led the response to last July’s bomb attacks. (Some of the presentations at Dublin are available for download at http://europe.iabc.com/eurocomm/presentations.php )

One of the take aways from Dublin was the great interest in learning about corporate communication and social media, the break-out session of Marc Wright of Simply Communicate became standing room only and so it is by popular demand that Barcelona features an afternoon panel discussing “Creating Value through Online Communities” with Yang-May Ooi, Marc Wright and Giles Colborne. Other comments we have taken on board in putting the IABC 2008 EuroComm conference together is to maintain our commitment to showcase communication excellence throughout Europe and to have more break-out sessions to cover a broad range of issues.

Now it’s time for you to take action and take a good long read through the 2008 EuroComm programme - it’s a delicious as a Dublin beer and a Catalan coffee.

Andrew Riley is an assurance reporting and communications specialist at Harrison Riley and President, IABC UK (UK)

Happy Xmas!

Tuesday, December 25th, 2007

We will be taking a break over the Xmas and New Year period, back in the week beginning 07 Jan 2008.

Wishing you all a Happy Xmas!

An Insider’s Look at Barcelona

Thursday, December 13th, 2007

by Adria Lopez

Adria Lopez is one of La Salle’s team of web designers and shares his insiders view of the sites and tastes of Barcelona for our conference delegates to try.

barcelona.JPG Barcelona’s architecture, weather, food and entertainment performances make this city a great option to take a breath.
The modernist buildings, as “La sagrada Familia” or “La Pedrera” both by the recognized architect Antoni Gaudí , make walking through the streets of Barcelona as an experience. “Passeig de Gracia”, perhaps one of the most important streets of the city for their buildings, shops and restaurants, is a good choice to stroll and shop in the stores of the most exclusive brands.

You may also stroll through “la Rambla de Catalunya, in the heart of Barcelona, where you can find a mixture of ambients and lifestyles that coexist in harmony to create a corridor between downtown and the sea. If you pass by “la Rambla” don’t hesitate to visit “el Liceu”, one of the most beautiful theaters in Europe, or “mercat de la boqueria”, considered one of the most important markets in the world.

If you decide to stay a few days in the city and you’re fascinated sports, you should visit the FCBarcelona museum and if the team plays in the city, go to a football match and enjoy in one of the most famous stadiums in Europe.

And of course, there is the gastronomy. The Mediterranean diet and “nouvelle cuisine” combine to provide our palates of great delicacies. Restaurants like “Arola” or “Alkimia” make that Barcelona is one of the meeting points of greatest masters of the kitchen.

May I Have Your Attention, Please?

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

by Angie Macdonald

Bloggers at Conference Social media is changing the way we do things and one of the issues involved is that of control. Control is slipping from corporates when it comes to promoting their products and from conference speakers and college lecturers, who are no longer regarded as the expert with the final say on the matter.

One example of this phenomenon is “back channelling”. In the social media context, this refers to people at conferences, or students, blogging and/or Twittering while listening to a speaker. It can also involve instant messaging or chatrooms and Internet Relay Chat (IRC) Channels. This is the “back channel”, where the audience engage in a different conversation, separate from the speaker directly in front of them.

At some conferences, a screen is erected behind the speaker, on which the audience can post comments directly from their computers. The speaker, facing the audience, cannot see the comments appearing on the screen behind him or her. From what I’ve heard anecdotally, the comments which tend to appear are generally negative comments on the speaker’s clothes, or how bored people are, rather than comments that further the debate. It is the equivalent of heckling, only here it is virtual and silent.

I’m sure there are some highly skilled people who are able to multi-task and keep with the programme. But most people are unable to give two things the same amount of attention at the same time. If you are trying to listen, analyse, remember, write and follow the conversation all at the same time, something’s got to give. You just have to think about the dangers of driving while talking on a mobile phone to realise that multi-tasking has its limits.

In an article published in the New York Times, David E. Meyer, a cognitive scientist and director of the Brain, Cognition and Action Laboratory at the University of Michigan is quoted as saying, “Multitasking is going to slow you down, increasing the chances of mistakes.” In the same article, René Marois, a neuroscientist and director of the Human Information Processing Laboratory at Vanderbilt University, when describing the ‘cognitive powerhouse’ that is the human brain, says “…a core limitation is an inability to concentrate on two things at once.”

What usually happens, is that by the time the blogger or Twitterer has finished writing or texting a particular thought, the speaker has moved on, the information that has been imparted in the interim is hazy, and the thread of the argument has been lost. This creates a knowledge gap which can result in misunderstanding, which in turn can lead to miscommunication.

Now, it’s fine if one individual has misunderstood. But what happens when that individual has published their misunderstood information online and millions of people around the world read it and get the wrong end of the stick? What are the repercussions? Where is the value in that communication?

Don’t get me wrong, I can see that there are advantages to back-channelling. It can be an inclusive behaviour too and means that those unable to attend a conference in person can follow what’s happening by reading updated blogs or receiving Tweets on their mobile phones.

It can also be a way to open up and encourage discussion and debate around a topic. So rather than information being delivered from one so-called expert in a top-down fashion, everybody who knows something or who has an opinion can join in and conference goers have an opportunity to learn from their peers. In that way, learning can become a more democratic process - a knowledge exchange offering instant feedback and reflection.

The danger is that in the process you may have to listen to people who think they are right, when they may be wrong, or people who love the sight of their words in print and subject everyone to their opinions whenever they can. As in the real world, sometimes conversations are inane, occasionally they are a waste of time.

We live in an age where children are being medicated for Attention Deficit Disorder and adults put their lack of success in life down to the fact that they were never diagnosed with ADD in school, and yet, here we are as adults, actively engaging in attention deficit behaviour. Not only that, but rather than being in the moment and giving it all our attention, we are taking a step back to observe and comment on what is occurring, analysing it as it is happening, rather than experiencing it.

There is no doubt that technology is changing social behaviour, communication and relationships. In spite of the advantages, I still think that in today’s attention-seeking world, perhaps the highest form of regard we can offer anyone, is to give them our full-blown attention.

I’m not sure if there’s going to be a screen for a back-channel at the EuroComm conference, but it will be interesting to hear what you think.

Photo: thanks to jean djinni on flickr.com (CCL)