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Filed under: Lloyd Davis

A blog about appreciation

Matt_with_tuttle_group

Today’s blog is an appreciation blog.  Often we find ourselves just taking people for granted and not giving them enough appreciation for what they do for us – so this is an attempt to redress that balance in some small way.  I’d just like to say a big thank you on behalf of all of us who work in Northern Ireland’s emerging digital and online content sector to Matt Johnston (@cimota) for the tireless work he does on behalf of us and to promote our sector and our companies. 

I’ve spent the last two days in London with Matt.  We decided it was time to go and tell a few more people about the many talented people and small businesses that work in our chosen space in Northern Ireland.  Over the course of those two days we’ve promoted Digital Circle and its companies to:

·         The Technology Strategy Board

·         A group of social entrepreneurs

·         The Royal Society of Arts (RSA)

·         Everyone present at Friday’s Tuttle Club in London’s Centre for Creative Collaboration

·         The gathering of entrepreneurs and start up companies at Dominic Campbell’s City Camp London get together at the Hub King’s Cross

We’ve been blown away by the amount of interest there’s been in Digital Circle and at every event Matt’s had a stream of people wanting to ask him about the workings of the Digital Circle, how it started out, what the future plans are and what the Digital Circle members have gained from being part of the community.  It appears that what we have in Northern Ireland is quite unique in terms of small and micro businesses actually engaging, collaborating and helping each other out.

So this is my way of saying we appreciate you Matt and all you do for us.  The non-stop networking, the liaison with our government departments and Invest NI, the constant promotion of our companies, the search for opportunities for all of us and the signposting, the bright ideas you have, the introductions you make, the tweeting you do (I couldn’t believe how many people at Tuttle nodded when you revealed your Twitter name – they’d all come across you), the sheer volume of stuff you wade through so that we don’t have to and the dry good humour with which all of the above is delivered.

Please join me in appreciating Matt and post up your story in the comments of how he’s helped you or your company.

If you’d like to know more about the Digital Circle or join our community, you can do so via this link http://digitalcircle.ning.com/

Conversation isn't dead after all...

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Dave Briggs & I were in Belfast last Wednesday.  We had a few meetings planned but a couple of hours downtime in the middle of the day.  I decided to place an open invite on Twitter & the Digital Circle Ning site for people to come along & join us in a “conversation” between 12 & 2pm.  It sounds a bit vain but I thought it would be a good way for Dave to meet some people in Belfast in an informal way that wasn’t either at a conference, at a formal meeting or in the pub in the evening.  Learning Pool is based in Northern Ireland but Dave works from home in the East Midlands of England so I also thought it would be a good opportunity to introduce him to a few people that I know.  We weren’t sure whether anyone would show up.  I’d pitched it a bit like a mini-Tuttle club (anyone can go along to the regular Friday morning Tuttle club in London’s Centre for Creative Collaboration run by the rather fabulous Lloyd Davis & Brian Condon (more info about Lloyd & what he does in one of my very early blogs) – so there was no agenda and no formal topics (although we’d floated social media, public sector and anything you want to know about starting up in business – as I guess those are our specialisms).

We held our “event” in the rather grand Linen Hall Library in the centre of Belfast – it seemed a fitting venue for a Conversation & there’s was a cafe so we avoided any library “shushing”.

It ended up being rather good fun & some people did indeed swing by – a mix of small business owners, tech entrepreneurs and consultants – and conversation flowed for the entire two hours.  There’s Newsrupt’s Lyra McKee pictured above and as you can see, the fifteens in the Linen Hall cafe are pretty impressive too.

Colin Mitchell & I (he’s @pixelpage on Twitter) had some banter later on via Twitter & concluded this would be an ideal way to introduce a visitor to your town or city to a few interesting people.  Dave said he’d come away with an impression that Belfast was very friendly and had a lively start-up community.  As always, interested in your views.

Mark Nagurski, Derry's own Martha Lane Fox - 10 things the two Digital Champions have in common

This week Mark Nagurski started his new role as Derry’s first Digital Champion.  There’s been a lot of interest in and around the appointment and it’s become a whole lot bigger & more prestigious since Derry’s win of the UK City of Culture 2013 competition.  “Digital Champion” is a job title we’d never heard of 5 years ago but it’s becoming increasingly popular.  Other job titles of a similar ilk and in the same type of space would be Brian Halligan’s appointment as “entrepreneur in residence” at MIT or the appointment of Lloyd Davis as “social artist in residence” at the University of London’s Centre for Creative Collaboration.

Mark’s remit is to spend the next two years promoting the burgeoning creative digital sector in the North West of Ireland.

Now I realise that Martha’s job as the UK’s Digital Champion is on a much bigger scale than Mark’s but I thought it would be a bit of fun to spot some similarities between them beyond their shared job title – so here goes:

1.       They are both internet entrepreneurs and have been deeply steeped in the internet and what it means for business and society forever

2.       Neither of them studied a technology subject at university – Martha studied Ancient & Modern History at Oxford and Mark studied International Relations at the LSE

3.       They were both born in the 1970s so they’re both still “young”

4.       They’ll both talk to anyone

5.       They both write extremely well & are articulate in conversation

6.       They love starting things and are serial entrepreneurs

7.       Neither of them have sisters

8.       They are both grafters and will work their backsides off for a cause they believe in

9.       They believe in themselves and their own abilities

10.   They know what they’re talking about and command respect from their audiences and peers.

Good luck in the new role Mark.  I for one am delighted with your appointment and I can’t wait to see the success and opportunity you’ll bring to Derry and the NW in the next couple of years.

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Ever wondered what a social artist in residence does?

Lloyd

Well I wondered too so a week or so ago, Dave Briggs & I went to the Centre for Creative Collaboration to call with Lloyd Davis and his intern Rose Kue for a very welcome cup of tea in their new premises just off the Grays Inn Road.  Lloyd is already famous for lots of things (including founding The Tuttle Club for social innovators which meets in London every week and has spawned many mini Tuttles in places as unlikely as Royal Tunbridge Wells (should they be Tutters?) and soon to be touring right across the US).  He also plays the ukulele – which I’m hoping he’ll do at the Learning Pool conference on 12 May for the enjoyment & entertainment of our delegates.  However, of most interest to me right now is his role as social artist in residence for the University of London.

My simple interpretation of what this involves is that it’s a desire to revive the lost art of social conversation and use it in a way that drives collaboration and identifies interesting projects.  I love how Lloyd himself describes what he does – starts lots of fires and then pours petrol on the flames...how much fun is that?

Anyone who knows me will be aware that I have a terrible reputation for being Learning Pool’s “social director” and I would describe what I do at work in the main as “collecting interesting people and doing a lot of ear whispering...”  It was fascinating for me to meet someone whose job description is even more attractive to me than my own.

Lloyd’s project will seek to bring people from different disciplines together (initially people from Goldsmiths, Royal Holloway & the Central School of Speech & Drama and then SMEs, large corporates, the local community) and encourage them to do interesting & important things outside of the traditional structures that people usually work or interact within.  Lloyd will document these social “experiments”, see what works, share that with other people and see what types of projects emerge.  Should be an interesting 2 years!  You can read the Centre’s official blog at this link http://bit.ly/awx1uW and you can follow any or all of us on Twitter (@MMaryMcKenna @davebriggs @LloydDavis @RoseKue )