Round up from the conference session

Laura | games, nptech, social media, ukriders | Sunday, March 2nd, 2008

We had 2 lively sessions on the first day of the conference, with a wide range of participants in our audience from across the UK who worked with a diverse range of voluntary and community organisations.

Beth speaking in the Naked in a Goldfish Bowl Session

Beth Kanter from Boston joined us in the session using Skype (we hoped to have tested out the fab Oovoo but wasn’t to be, with wireless bandwidth issues on the day!).

Beth shared her experiences and enthusiasm of her recent fundraising successes and the factors which helped to make it happen by using social media. Big thank you to Beth for joining us, especially with the first time we ran our session being just after midday here in the UK, and only 7.30 am there with Beth in Boston. You can read Beths reflections on her part on our session here.

In our session we discussed about purpose, need, openness, transparency, and membership amongst other areas as well as some of the tools or ways that can help make it happen. Resistance from management or committees was raised several times as a potential barrier from adopting social media in voluntary nonprofit organisations. Our session was very much a discussion and conversation about use of social media and the change needed to help make it happen rather than us just saying ‘here are the tools and here’s how to use them’. We discussed about the reasoning and about the wider picture too, how people are using different ways to communicate and work together and that organisations should be looking to incorporate social media in addition to their current communications practice.

Paul Henderson from Ruralnet was able to share the insightful experience of his organisation that currently are ‘naked in a goldfish bowl’ themselves, as they are consulting with stakeholders and the wider community in exploring how to develop their future services online and openly.

We also ran the social media game (devised by David Wilcox) which is a really useful way to introduce the range of web 2.0 tools available to help organisations to make choices about what they want to do, and to decide how they are going to do it, and find and discuss a variety of tools to help make that happen. The tools included those for supporting of telling your story and reaching out and the tools to help work in collaboration or partnership with others or that can support more effective information management.
feeding back on the social media game
As with many conference sessions, we only had 90 minutes and on the second run of the session later in the afternoon, our lively discussion and conversation left us too little time to actually play the game, but we equipped participants with lots of ideas and examples for them to take away and use when supporting their own organisations in the field.
If you want to download the social media game as a tool to use in exploring social media with your organisation, you can download it from www.socialmedia.wikispaces.com/social+media+game.

Using Oovoo to chat about the forthcoming session

Laura | nptech, nptechuk, social media, ukriders | Saturday, February 23rd, 2008

Chatting on Oovoo about the panel session at the conference

Today, I used Oovoo for the first time to chat to Beth Kanter, based in Boston about her participation in our session taking place this Thursday. Oovoo is amazingly simple to use and see the picture about for a snapshot of what it looked like when speaking to each other. We hope to be using Oovoo in the session or Skype so that Beth can join in with David, Nick and myself to share her experiences with social media and nonprofits.

How we created conversations using social media

Laura | nptech, social media | Sunday, February 10th, 2008

Part of this blog is a follow on of conversations which took place on my blog when I recently asked the question “Social Media for Non-profits - what do you recommend?” in preparation to help David, Nick and myself to be able to collaborate and create a workshop for the UK Circuit Riders conference. In true collaborative social networking style, I asked the question, not only on my blog, but used other networks including Twitter, Facebook and Seesmic too (plus the old fashioned ‘web 0.0′ face to face with small organisations to see what their needs were!).

Using my blog and various networks was a really useful way to reach out to others and I received lots of comments and suggestions back from many people, some who I knew, and others who I had never connected with prior to this which was really exciting, getting an active global conversation taking place using a variety of media.

One example of creating conversation was the reply on Seesmic I received from Brian Rendel, based in Michigan who offered some of his ideas of what we should share in our session to help ICT development workers/circuit riders with helping them understand and join in with social media. Follow this link to see his reply …

Do feel free to comment and participate in this new blog, if you wish to write articles / posts that are relevant or submit information or links that we might have missed, do contact us!

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