Russell Davies

As disappointed as you are
About | Feed | Archive | Findings | This blog by email

coffee news

Dsc00654_2

I was in Wales last week so couldn't do Friday. Sorry about that. But Ben's doing it on Friday, so please go along. (Ben - can I assume you've stopped being anonymous now?)

And this week I'm in Oregon, and next week New York. Both Friday's are full up with work-type stuff. So I was wondering if anyone fancied this Saturday morning in Portland and next Saturday in New York? Not sure exactly where or when yet. Anyone up for it?

Dsc00678

Quite a lot of the previous week at The Tate was devoted to staring at Matt. (Staring here courtesy of Fiona). Also present  Mark, Lebowski and Rebecca. I felt a little sorry for Matt and Fiona, I think the rest of us were guilty of something I've seen in planners a lot; when we find people who know new and interesting stuff we turn into instant groupies, desperately trying to suck all the  information from them. Especially when they're smart, nice and have  great jobs. (Or at least jobs that sound great to planners.) So apologies and Matt and Fiona, and many thanks for coming. We managed to avoid discussing advertising almost entirely and focused instead on robots, buttons and different types of visa.

I don't think the Tate experiment worked though. At least two people couldn't find us because of the ambiguous floor numbering system and it's not as comfy and welcoming as The Breakfast Club.

October 30, 2006 in coffee morning | Permalink | Comments (9) | TrackBack (1)

blogging and stuff

Dsc02479

Someone asked me these questions via email. And sharing is good. So I thought I'd share the answers:

1. Why do you blog?

The usual reasons: Ego. Because I like sharing stuff (and you discover that if you share stuff you get stuff back.) To practice writing. To practice thinking. Because it's become a habit. To keep a tab on things that I've thought or noticed. To make friends and influence people. To write fewer emails. To show off. To poison the minds of young planners all over the world. To earn upwards of $100 a year in advertising revenue. Because if I didn't I might have to get on with something worthwhile.

2. How has having a blog affected your career?

My career used to be based on my early discovery of the feature that let you put pictures in PowerPoint. Once this became commonplace I had to find a new gimmick. Hello blogging.

3. What kind of relationship do you have with your community? and how do you go about developing it?

I hope that I have the kind of relationship with my community where I wouldn't call it 'my community' and I wouldn't go about 'developing it'. I think of the blog as a place where people visit or hang out. That's about it. I also like that it's a place in a distributed village, there's a whole loose group of people who visit each others blog, chat about stuff, share ideas and are even starting to meet up and talk in real life. I think that's the best 'professional' thing I've ever been involved with.

4. What do you perceive to be the future of blogging in your profession?

Before long the blog will have replaced the resume/CV. Or whatever the next evolution of the blog is. If your job is having public ideas I suspect it'll become very surprising to people that you're not doing something like a blog.

October 30, 2006 in huh? | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (1)

book club of the month club

Dsc04436_1

In a frantic bid to go one better than us simple coffee people Gareth is starting a book club. Which is actually a fantastic idea. I'm looking forward to this. (Picture above represents how happy we'll all be once we've talked about books.)

October 28, 2006 in book | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

good idea


Postcardpolaroidpolaroid

Send them a polaroid. If you have a second. And a stamp. And a polaroid.

October 28, 2006 in images | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

estate agent humour

Funnyestateagent2

Funnyestateagent1

Saw this on the beach in Tenby. I don't know if the local estate agent/realtor (FBM) is responsible. But I hope so. Funny.

October 28, 2006 in diary | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

help faris's friend

Ba

Faris has a friend looking to plug into Latin America planning blogs and stuff, I know there are some of you out there, so please visit Faris and make some suggestions. If you'd be so kind.

October 28, 2006 in huh? | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

campaign

Campaign1

Campaign2

I started writing a column for Campaign last week. (First stab is above, if you have a Brand Republic account you can find it here.) I haven’t done something this nerve-wracking for a long time. You’d think I’d be blasé about writing stuff with all the blogging I do, they only need about 440 words a week, but it’s actually rather stressful. (You'll also notice that I chickened out of anything too original for the first one, rewriting some of the stuff from the Big Thinking conference. But I'm hoping to be more original from now on.)

It’s partly that there’s an actual immovable deadline, I can’t just stick up a closed notice. Or a picture of a tree. It’s partly that I’ve been reading Campaign for 20 years and find it slightly intimidating. And it’s partly that (in my own head) you lot are pleasant blog-folk willing everyone to do well and tolerant of mistakes and the readers of Campaign are vicious industry-insiders who can’t wait to pounce on any slip or dumb idea.

I know that’s ridiculous. And that more people probably read this than read Campaign and that there’s probably quite a lot of overlap between the two, but still, that’s how I feel. (Another difference is that if I’d been writing this for Campaign I might have felt obliged to go back and edit out one of those probablys). I should also say how excited I am to be doing it. One of the reasons I left Nike was to do more writing for money and it’s rather thrilling that I’ve got some writing work this quickly.

But writing these things is also teaching me how much harder writing for print is than writing for a blog. For me, anyway.

Firstly, you can’t just link to examples. If I want to mention some esoteric new thing I have to explain it, I can’t just point to it. And there’s the same problem with credit. Quite a lot of the thoughts in the first piece came from a chat with Richard. Linking to him is easy. Explaining all that (and who he is etc which you’d have to do in a print piece) eats up too many of my 440 words.

Secondly, it’s so slow. Since I was on holiday last week I sent them two pieces at once. The one for next week is about YouTube and mentions Coke and Mentos in passing. Then today I read about the new eepybird thing, which will be out on Monday. Which instantly had me panicking that maybe I should change what I’d written, though looking at it again, I think it’s fine. But, that’s the problem; print means you can’t just bounce off events, you need to think about bigger things, ideas that might last longer than a week.

Campaign have also been very accommodating about me wanting to blog about what I’m writing, I was very keen to do that, because I find sharing work on here incredibly useful, so the plan is this:

Campaign comes out on a Thursday. My deadline is the Friday before, so I plan to put a rough version of what I’m going to write about up on here on the Monday or Tuesday before that. I’m not sure yet what ‘rough version’ will mean, it might be just some early ideas, or a mind map, or a bundle of stuff that seems related. If anyone wants to comment on that I’d be hugely grateful. I’ll put the finished pieces up on here after they’ve come out, as jpgs and text, so they’re searchable. If people want to comment on the finished version that’d be excellent too. And I’ve created a Campaign category so you’ll be able to find all the pieces at once.

(Of course I say ‘all the pieces’ it keeps occurring to me that I might suck at this and my career as a Campaign columnist will only stretch to two  weeks. Ah well. We’ll see.)

October 28, 2006 in campaign | Permalink | Comments (8) | TrackBack (0)

closed

Holiday

October 22, 2006 in diary | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)

nested brands, minimal brands

Dsc00658_1

Love Saves The Day is a little coffee shop inside Vox Pop records in the Northern Quarter of Manchester. It's a great place. And it's a great example of something I've been thinking about ever since Fruitstock - the phenomenon of one brand nesting inside another. It's not a new thing, think Starbucks and Borders or er, another example that doesn't come to me right now, but I think it's a skill that more and more brand owners are going to have to learn.

Lovesavestheday2_2

Because it's not particularly easy for either party. I think Innocent got it very right at Fruitstock - the other brands there seemed right and appropriate and I think Nike have tended to get it right at Run London. But I've also seem horribly inappropriate partnerships and nesting arrangments. (Though none of these examples occur to me right now either.) The other thing I like about Love Saves The Day (and it is only a coffee shop, I mustn't get too carried away) is the way they've created an effective brand with a really small amount of physical stuff. One logo thing, some bags, some stickers.

Lovesavestheday1_1

The bags make the sign.

Lovecups_2  

The stickers turn generic cups into branded cups.

It's clear adding sustainable value is going to be a core skill in building brands over the coming decades, so creating attractive brands that are about maximum idea and minimum stuff seems another good discipline to learn.

October 21, 2006 in brands | Permalink | Comments (8) | TrackBack (2)

chaos chaos

Chaos

The folk at the Chaos conference were kind enough to ask me to take part and I was very keen to, until something came up. And I was really a bit too late in letting them know, which was rude of me. I feel bad about that. But I feel even worse now because it looks like being a really good show. Damn.

I can't go, but you should. You can sign up here.

October 21, 2006 in interesting | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

« Previous | Next »