New project: Managing Your Digital Footprint

This Monday (29th September 2014) the Managing Your Digital Footprint project launched across the University of Edinburgh.  I’m hugely excited about this project as it is a truly cross-University initiative that has been organised by a combination of academic departments, support services and the student association all working together, indeed huge thanks and respect are due to Louise Connelly at IAD for bringing this ambitious project together.

I am representing EDINA across both of the project’s strands: a digital footprint awareness-raising campaign for all students (UG, PGT, ODL, PhD) which is led by the Institute for Academic Development (IAD) in collaboration with EDINA, the Careers Service, EUSA, Information Services, and other University departments; and a research project, a collaboration between IAD, the School of Education, EDINA and EUSA, which will examine how students are managing their digital footprints, where such management is lacking, and what this might mean for future institutional planning to build student competence in this area.

Before saying more about the project it is useful to define what a “digital footprint” might be. The best way to start that is with this brilliant wee video made specially for the campaign:

Click here to view the embedded video.

Digital footprints, or the tracks and traces you leave across the internet, are a topic that frequently comes up in my day to day role as social media officer, and is also the focus of a guest week I provide for the MSc in Digital Education’s IDEL (Introduction to Digital Environments for Learning) module. Understanding how your privacy and personal data (including images, tags, geo locations) are used is central to making the most appropriate, effective, and safe use of social media, or any other professional or personal presences online. Indeed if you look to danah boyd’s work on teens on Facebook, or Violet Blue’s writings on real name policies on Google+ you begin to get a sense of the importance of understanding the rules of engagement, and the complexities that can arise from a failure to engage, or from misunderstanding and/or a desire to subvert the rules and expectations of these spaces. What you put online, no matter how casually, can have a long-term impact on the traces, the “footprints” that you leave behind long after you have moved on from the site/update/image/etc.

When I give talks or training sessions on social media I always try to emphasize the importance of doing fewer things well, and of providing accurate and up to date bios, ensuring your privacy settings are as you expect them to be, and (though it can be a painful process) properly understanding the terms and conditions to sites that you are signing up for, particularly for professional presences. Sometimes I need to help those afraid to share information to understand how to do so more knowledgeably and safely, sometimes it is about helping very enthusiastic web/social media users to reflect on how best to manage and review their presences. These are all elements of understanding your own digital footprints – though there are many non-social media related examples as well. And it is clear that, whilst this particular project is centered on the University of Edinburgh, there is huge potential here for the guidance, resources, reflections and research findings from the Managing Your Digital Footprint project to inform best practice in teaching, support and advice, and policy making across the HE sectors.

So, look out for more on my contributions to the Managing Your Digital Footprint campaign – there should be something specifically looking at issues around settings very soon. In the meantime  anyone reading this who teaches/supports or who is a student at the University of Edinburgh should note that there will also be various competitions, activities, workshops, resources and advice throughout 2014-2015, which will focus on how to create and manage a positive online presence (digital footprint), and which should support students in their: professional networking; finding the right job; collaborating with others; keeping safe online; managing your privacy and the privacy of others; how to set up effective social media profiles; using social media for research and impact.

Digital Footprint campaign logo

The Digital Footprint project logo – anyone based at the University of Edinburgh will be seeing a lot of this over the coming months!

The research strand of the project is also underway but don’t expect anything more about that for a wee while – there will be a lot of data collection, analysis and writing up to do before we are ready to share findings. I’ll make sure to share appropriate updates and links here as appropriate. And, of course, questions and comments are welcome – just add yours to this post.

Find out more

Share/Bookmark

Tickets now available for our Fringe Show: What Skeletons Are in Your Closet?

I am delighted to report that once again I will be part of an EDINA show for Edinburgh Beltane and Fairpley‘s excellent Cabaret of Dangerous Ideas, an Edinburgh Festival Fringe show in which academics and researchers spend an hour sharing “dangerous” and challenging ideas.

::: Update ::: view our new trailer for the show:

Click here to view the embedded video.

Last year my colleagues and I spoke about FieldTrip GB and the concept of crowdsourcing your neighbourhood – and what challenge or disruption might be possible in that process. It was great fun and we learned a lot in the process of putting the show together, there was even a tie up to another Fringe show through an amazing wee music video made for us by the lovely Eccentronic.

This year my colleague, Helen Aiton, and I will be returning with a very different show based on the Statistical Accounts of Scotland which we are calling “What Skeletons Are in Your Closet?“, and I wanted to tell you a bit more about it in the hope that you might just be able to join us, in The Stand in the Square‘s Yurt in St Andrew’s Square, on Tuesday 19th August!

Image of the listing for the What Skeletons Are in Your Closet show.

Our listing on the CODI 2014 site, see also Page 279 of the Fringe Guide.

So, why are we talking about the Statistical Accounts of Scotland? Well firstly because they are fascinating resources. The two Statistical Accounts of Scotland, covering the 1790s and the 1830s, represent some of the best contemporary reports of life during the agricultural and industrial revolutions in Europe. The first Account was the personal initiative of Sir John Sinclair of Ulbster, a Scottish Baronet and Member of the Union Parliament at Westminster. He used Westminster money to carry out a survey of 166 questions put to ministers of the Kirk in each of the 938 parishes of Scotland (subscribers can view the full list in the Related Resources section of the Online Service)

Sir John’s vision was to cover the whole of Scotland with an overall, consistent, description to “meliorate the condition of the people” (read  more about Sir John’s vision here) and to form an account of the “quantum of happiness” of the communities of Scotland. It was a hugely ambitious idea and, as you might imagine, not all ministers provided the same levels of details – some contemplate detailed daily life, folk lore, and provide far more detail than required, whilst others keep their responses curt and factual. Regardless of length the ministers also each brought their own personalities to their returns with their own personal interests, with many sharing their thoughts on the moral state of their parishioners and their activities. 

An extract from the Dumries report for 1791-99

An extract from the Dumries report for 1791-99 highlights that, despite “dramming”, there hasn’t been a fight worth mentioning for 11 years… the minister commends the women for ensuring this orderly behaviour.

EDINA runs the Statistical Accounts of Scotland Online Service and that means we are immersed in the Accounts from their wonderful insight into life in Scotland in the 18th and 19th centuries, to their weirder and more amusing stories, gossip and boasts. We have been looking for weird and interesting nuggets from the Accounts, and sharing these via Twitter and Facebook, for a while now but we wanted to do something different with this show…

The Accounts capture the lives of all of those in the parish and that means they provide a rich account of the lives of those beyond the traditional history books – the lives of women for instance – but also life on the edges of society, including those living in poverty, those with disabilities, migrant populations, etc. So, in this show our focus is going to be on these people, these overlooked communities, these lives on the edge, but we will also wonder how our own accounts of daily life overlook those on the margins… indeed some of those on the margins in the 18th and 19th century remain on the margins of our own records of daily life now, even in a world with social media and ready access to the means to capture your own daily life.

So, we will be looking back at those outsiders but also posing some questions. We want those coming along and participating in the event to think about what we might do if we wanted to create a new Statistical Account: What would we want to capture in order to assess the “quantum of happiness” of the people of Scotland in 2014? Who would we need to represent to go beyond the statistics that are, these days, widely collected on the Scottish Population? What’s missing and who is missing from those accounts? How could we move beyond the numbers to something nearer Sir John’s vision for that rich account of life across the nation?

Of course I’d also welcome your thoughts, both on these questions and any thoughts or experience of these outsider pasts as captured in the Statistical Accounts, here in the comments section. We’ve already heard – via Twitter – about a brilliant piece by Ella Smith for Deaf History Journal’s Summer 2014 issue (see the British Deaf History Society website for more on this publication), which looks at how the lives of deaf people are captured by the Statistical Accounts. Ella delves into the first and second Accounts to find both numeric and descriptive accounts of deaf people in Scotland and I’d definitely recommend a read of her article if you can find a copy of DHJ in your local library (or when it becomes available to purchase online).

So, please do join us on the 19th, join in the discussion here on the blog, or help us spread the word about the event. And whilst you are booking a ticket for  “What Skeletons Are in Your Closet?â€� you might also want to look at some of the other #codi14 shows, I gather that “I know what you ate last summer” – taking a critical view of store cards and personal data tracks and traces – and the lovely Dr Felicity Mehendale’s “Are we wasting your data” – on finding the right balance between useful health data and patient privacy – are both in the same “Our Privacy” strand.

I’d also recommend you take a look at “The Internet – A Human Right?â€�, a show relating to the Royal Society of Edinburgh’s Spreading the Benefits of Digital Participation Inquiry which I was involved in earlier this year. It will be a tricky topic if discussions during and launching the Inquiry are anything to go by so I recommend coming along and adding your voice to the mix! I’ll be along at this one too!

Related links:

You can also find out a wee bit more about the Statistical Accounts in this video of Helen talking the Accounts and the Online Service:

Click here to view the embedded video.

Share/Bookmark

Livetweeting and EDINA events at Jisc Digital Festival (#digifest14)

A brief post to let you know that on Tuesday 11th and Wednesday 12th March myself and various EDINA colleagues will be taking part in the Jisc Digital Festival 2014.

I will be livetweeting throughout the event – you can view all the tweets on #digifest14 and you can also view a stream from the event via the Jisc website. There will also be materials shared on that site following the event – including my own (see also below).

I will also be running a social media surgery on Wednesday 12th March (9.30am in the Chill Out Lounge) – if you have questions you’d like answered then do come along or tweet them to me. Even if you are not along in person, I’ll do my best to tweet back an answer ASAP!

The full programme of EDINA participation in the event is:

 Tuesday 11th March 2014
11:30-12:15 Increasing the offer to FE Surgery (Chill Out Lounge) Speakers include: Anne Robertson and Conor G. Smyth, EDINA
All Afternoon Going beyond Google (1): content-rich mapping for the classroom and the field Tech demo (Hall 3 Gallery, Demo Pod 3) Addy Pope, EDINA
All Afternoon Going beyond Google (2): using the right media Tech demo (Hall 3 Gallery, Demo Pod 3) Andrew Bevan, EDINA
14:30 – 15:15 Location aware apps: design patterns and solutions surgery Surgery (Executive room 2) Ben Butchart, EDINA
Wednesday 12th March 2014
09:30-10:15 Increasing the offer to FE Surgery (Executive room 2) Speakers include: Anne Robertson and Conor G. Smyth, EDINA
09:30-10:15 Social media best practice surgery Surgery (Chill Out Lounge) Nicola Osborne, EDINA
9.30am and 10.30am Fill your repository from around the world: Repository Junction Broker (RJB) and its potential to increase open access content in your institutional repository Tech demo (Demo Pod 2) Muriel Mewissen, EDINA
9.30am and 10.30am Going beyond Google (1): content-rich mapping for the classroom and the field Tech demo (Demo Pod 3) Addy Pope, EDINA
10am and 11am Going beyond Google (2): using the right media Tech demo (Demo Pod 3) Andrew Bevan, EDINA
11:00 – 11:30 The strategic developer: a new role for HE? Expert speakers (Hall 10a) Paul Walk, EDINA
14:45-15:30 Stronger together: community initiatives in e-journal management Panels Speakers include: Peter Burnhill, and Adam Rusbridge, EDINA

 

Materials from the Social Media Best Practice Surgery

My session was a surgery so I based the format on an open discussion and question and answer session. There was no central presentation as such, but I did create a brief prezi as a jumping off place for discussing topics in more depth. The prezi links to other presentations and materials and can be found here:

http://prezi.com/o2wchskexxdm/jisc-digital-festival-2014-social-media-surgery/

I also produced a resource lists which you can download as either a PDF or a .doc. I am happy for anyone who wishes to edit/update and reuse at their own institution to do so if they would like.

Share/Bookmark

Repository Fringe 2013 now open for registration – and social media participation!

This year I have the great honour of being Chairing Repository Fringe 2013 (#rfringe13), the annual unconference on all things repository related. There will be several posts appearing here over the coming months in the lead up to our three days (31st July – 2nd August 2013) of repository ideas and fun and that kicks off today as I’m excited to say that registration is now open!

Now, as my job title is Social Media Officer, you may be wondering about the connection between repositories and social media. However, I have been involved in the organisation of Repository Fringe for some years now both because of my own event amplifying skills (I wrote a book chapter on amplification of Repository Fringe 2009), but also because social media is increasingly important for link sharing, for scholarly discourse, for information discovery. That makes social media increasingly important for publications, for research impact and for the use and visibility of materials deposited in repositories of all flavours – see, for example Melissa Terra’s April 2012 post for the LSE Impact of Social Sciences’ blog on the impact of blogging and tweeting research papers ).

Repository Fringe also embodies many of the core social media values of enabling community participation and authorship. The event is designed by and for the repository community and everyone who registers (free of charge) is encouraged to participate at every level of the event, from organising, to presenting, to amplifying and, of course, socialising. For me this has always made each event an opportunity to use or try out social media with a really up-for-it community – who picked up and embraced Twitter early, are always keen to share their images, presentations and expertise; who surface new ideas and great new ways to use these technologies in their own professional contexts; and who always provide thoughtful questions and reflections on the ways in which repositories and social media can work together.

So, if you have an interest in repositories then please do register for this year’s event. And otherwise expect a few more posts on how we are using social media this year, why we have chosen to use the combination of social spaces we have, and what we have learned from this year’s event.

DeliciousShare/Bookmark

Pondering the Possibility of an Online Hack…

Over the last few weeks we have been mulling the possibilities of running an Online Hack for the Will’s World project. You can read more about the plans on the Will’s World blog where you will also find a survey that we would love you to complete for us or pass on to developer/hacker/creative colleagues and friends.

As mentioned in our Will’s World post the idea is to try and take the energy and creativity of an online hack event and translate that into something virtual not because we don’t like people, pizza, and coding through the night but because we recognise that type of format isn’t always right for people who may want to take part. That might be because an employer is supportive but can’t release a staff member for a full work day, it may be that they are available but cannot fund travel and accommodation, it might be that they have caring responsibilities that would make an in-person event much harder to fit in, or it may be that the venue isn’t sufficiently accessible for those with different physical abilities.

But there are also lots of other special things that we think an online hack affords. Running something online and with a cunningly chosen time/appreciation of time zones means collaboration across the globe – something the Open Source movement have been up to for years of course. And it can be much easier to start on a new hack when you know what software and hardware you have to hand (not to mention not having to travel with all your tech!), you know your internet connection is reliable and/or you’re used to working with it’s speed, and you have all that quirky personal creative stuff to hand – be it arduino kit, a fine selection of felt tip pens, a monster supply of gluten free brownies, etc.

Will's World Online Hack is coming soon..

Will’s World Online Hack is coming soon..

And the reason I wanted to post something about this process on my own blog is that we think this is a pretty innovative idea but one of the particular challenges comes from considering which suite of social technologies will work and combine best to ensure this event has the buzz, the energy and the relevance of an in-person meet up.  The survey is part of our approach to finding out what might work but I’d also appreciate any comments here about what you think would work best for real time collaboration?

For instance I’m thinking that Google+ may be an effective and fun tool to try out – particularly for managing multiple video streams – for this event but I haven’t had a good excuse to trial this on such a grand scale before so would love to know others thoughts on how well this works in reality for larger groups of participants. Please do any suggestions or comments on the hack idea either here or via the survey.

DeliciousShare/Bookmark

Engaging with Social Media – JISC Communications Workshop Post

This post is my contribution to the JISC Project Communications Workshop taking place on Friday 5th October 2012 for the rather marvellous projects in the Content funding strand. The JISC Communications team have asked me to come up with an inspiring 10 minute presentation on social media. I’ve decided to focus on what I think is inspiring about engaging people in your project – and how that can benefit a project. Ten minutes isn’t enough to cover every aspect of social media of course so I’ve focused on my ideas for great engagement and am hoping for lots of fantastic questions and comments on your ideas and experiences.

So, without further ado here is my presentation (it may take a few moments for the video to load):

Click here to view the embedded video.

Well, what did I miss?

I would love to know what you think I may have missed out, what you would have liked to see, or questions about some of the ideas and examples in that video. Here are some key points that I think I may have missed

  • Make your posts sharable. You might do this by adding sharing buttons to each post on a blog (via an AddThis or ShareThis plugin for instance), by encouraging people to like an update or contribute comments, etc. You can also do this by making sure that key people know you have posted something of interest in their particular area – doing this directly and infrequently can be a very effective way of reaching new audiences.
  • Spread the word. Make sure you always share your own posts or updates. For blogs you could do this by emailing those interested in the project (but don’t do this too frequently), it might be through allowing individuals to join a mailing list or receive an alert for new updates – or to like a page or follow an account for news. It may just mean adding URLs to your online presences in your print materials or mentioning them in talks and presentations. No matter how you do it you need to make sure that those you wish to communicate with have plenty of opportunity to find your updates but don’t feel bombarded with emails or updates.
  • Record and measure what you are doing. You might do this using screen captures of key tweets, Google Analytics on a blog, Facebook Insights on a project’s Facebook page, etc. You can also use tools like Storify, If This Then That, and the TAGS explorer to help capture the conversation around your project – social media is as much about listening as it is about talking.
  • Don’t be afraid to ask for help. In addition to the JISC Legal, Netskills, etc. you can also ask your social media audiences for help – what they might want to see more of, social media tools they might like to see you using. And you can use guest posts, key advocates comments, etc. to help you keep your social media presences lively, relevant, to help you find new ideas for content. You will also find useful guides to specific types of social media online – how to podcast, how to liveblog, etc.
  • Be timely, connect your work to current affairs when appropriate. This can be a hugely effective way to show your relevance to others work, to the world at large. It’s something we try to do with the JISC MediaHub blog – for instance our posts on the Paralympics and the current Tate Pre-Raphaelite exhibition.
And I think that’s all I want to add for now aside for some useful links from the presentation and video which you may find useful when thinking about your own social media presences.

Questions?

So, it’s over to you – whether you are at the workshop or just reading this on my blog I’d love to know your questions about using social media for communicating projects, research etc. Either post them below as comments or tweet them to the workshop hashtag #jiscpcw and I will respond on Twitter from my account, @suchprettyeyes.

If you have specific questions about using Flickr you are also welcome to find me and comment/message me there as Eurovision_Nicola. If you have questions about one of our specific presences feel free to comment on the appropriate channels: RepoFringe (includes OR2012 content), AddressingHistory or JISC GECO accounts.

 

Useful Resources 

 

DeliciousShare/Bookmark

How to LiveBlog Part 2: My Top Ten Tips

In How to LiveBlog Part 1 I discussed why you should LiveBlog your event. But once you’ve decided that you will be LiveBlogging how do you actually go about it?  Well…

1. Be Prepared

To borrow a catchy phrase from the boy scouts (and Tom Lehrer) you should always be prepared!

For liveblogging there are several essential bits of preparation which will make your life much much easier:

  • Decide what you will be LiveBlogging – if you are one of the event organisers then talk with your colleagues about what will be useful to capture, what might not be appropriate to cover. Usually you can assume that talks and presentations will be fine to LiveBlog. It can be tempting to decide to cover the main content rather than any question and answer sessions but I would always recommend capturing question sessions – they are the easiest way to add value to an event write up as they are the least easy to capture part of the event (and may be absent from recordings, others’ notes, and obviously are not covered by slides), and they tend to add the most value to a session – surfacing all the issues, awkward questions and surprises that are often absent in a main presentation.
  • Be realistic in your planning – you cannot be in two places at once so don’t over commit your schedule. Full on LiveBlogging is tiring enough without adding running between rooms or buildings so make sure you can deliver the LiveBlogging you plan to.
  • Create draft posts for the session you want to cover – this is a simple and really effective time saver. It will force you to decide if you wish to blog as part of one long post or a series of shorter LiveBlog post. If you are organising a major event I would recommend setting up one post per session or (depending on presentation lengths) per presentation. This will help each talk stand out on your blog, be findable by search engines, and encourage your delegates to engage. If you are blogging an event you are attending then I would instead create a single blog post as you don’t want to jam your blog – and your RSS feed –  with loads of posts on one event and emphasize how frequently (or infrequently) you update your blog the rest of the time.
  • Prepopulate those draft posts -whilst speakers, titles and all kinds of details can change on the day it is increadibly useful to have somewhere to start your blog post. When I’m preparing for LiveBlogging a major event I will set up a draft post with a paragraph explaining the name of the event, a link to the event page and/or programme, a sentence explaining that “this is a liveblog so please be patient and let me know about any errors, typos etc.“. I will also add the speaker name, role, affiliation and talk title. This means all I have to do when their talk begins is to correct any key details (often the title!), add any important framing information (e.g. “well we’re just back from coffee…“) and start typing my record of the presentation/talk/discussion.

2. Work with your Limitations

When you are planning your LiveBlog you need to be aware of and work out how you will deal with any potential limitations, they might include:

  • Typing Speed – I am one of nature’s touch typists thanks to a misspent youth hanging around chat rooms. We can be a slightly smug bunch when it comes to liveblogging but what we gain in verisimilitude, we can lack in quality. Sometimes the very best liveblog summarises down to key nuggets. The popularity of visual notes (such as Francis Rowland’s excellent sketches shared on Flickr) are a super illustration of why summarising can be powerful. I may be able to grab almost every comment in real time (albeit with occasional typos) but slower typers can make for great and still very thorough LiveBlogs.
  • Acronyms – I do a lot of LiveBlogging of acronym-heavy events. If you know you are about to encounter a lot of these I’d recommend making a handy cheat sheet or keeping Google open in another tab or application for swift checking – it can mean the difference between an embaressing typo and a hugely valuable link through to a website/wikipedia page that enlightens others.
  • Come to Terms with Your Spelling and Autocorrect Demons – No LiveBlogger has 100% spelling or accuracy hit rate. The nature of the medium means errors will creep in. You either have to live with that or find a way to fix errors fast. Other attendees will often be happy to comment on your post and correct any facts, name spellings etc. so do keep an eye on your comments and approve those (if you don’t already authorise each comment before it is published you should be, there are too many spammers out there not to). But embarrassing typos can creep in often through autocorrect functions in word processing packages (again a reason to stick to the blogging software or a plain text editor) or, worst of all, tablets and phones. I will usually LiveBlog on my laptop but sometimes I run out of power or decide to LiveBlog something at the last minute and find myself trying to take notes on the iPad. Because they are not designed for long form typing the autocorrect function is particularly awful. I suggest switching it off entirely or applying a wee bit more proofreading than normal as mobile devices seem hugely imaginative and bizarre in their autocorrect suggestions.
  • Connectivity – if you are organising event you should know if wifi/wired internet access will be available and may be able to ensure it is. If you are attending an event it can be a hit and miss affair. You can and should ask the organisers or venue about connectivity ahead of time – it will help raise their awareness of the importance of wifi for their attendees and they might be able to do something about it – if I am speaking at an event or if I have been asked to LiveBlog an event for others I will always ask whether wifi will be available and find out about logins/connection set up either ahead of or at the very beginning of the event. However it may also be worth having a backup plan. If you can take some sort of device that ensures you have a connection then do – I usually carry a pay-as-you-go 3G dongle with me to events and it has been hugely helpful many times. If a dongle is not an option or the issue is an intermittant wifi connection then most blogging programmes will save your work as you go – but you can always do a swift CTRL-A, CTRL-C to copy everything in the post before hitting “Publish” or “Post” so that you don’t lose any work if the connection falls over. If you know that the wifi connections resets every hour, or cannot handle the load of a whole conference or twitterers, or is just very slow, then you may want to draft your work in another application to ensure it’s safe even if the internet connection goes down. Given how badly formatting transfers between programmes I would recommend a really basic plain text or rich text editor if you are using this method – it will be much easier to format basic text than to fix formatting conflicts between, say, Word and WordPress.
  • Power – depending on how difficult it is to find power you may need to preserve your battery life in creative ways – closing down background programmes, turning down the brightness etc. It can be the difference between a saved/posted blog post and a wasted afternoon.  This is where having a second device – if only a phone – to hand to email yourself any final notes can be useful. As a last resort I have also been known to switch down to paper notes (but if your handwriting is like mine that really will be a very last resort)!
  • Guidelines – these really shouldn’t be a limitation but… you may need to ensure you are going to be able to stick with any organisational social media guidelines (like the EDINA guidelines we have here) as you blog. Typing quickly and constantly can really push your adrenalin up and you need to always have a little concious reminder to employ good judgement before you publish that blogpost.

3. Advertise your Blog – with Realistic Expectations

I find that readership of my blog sees massive spikes when I’m LiveBlogging – that’s a reflection of the fact that I will make it known that I am LiveBlogging, usually through Twitter and using the event hashtag. If I am at an event all day I will tweet at the very beginning or – or even en route to – that event to let people know that I will be liveblogging and where they will find the post.

If I’m attending an event I might post a link to my skelatal draft saying something like “I will be blogging x in this post: <URL> today…“. If I am covering a multi-day event or am organising an event I will usually post something brief explaining forthcoming liveBlog activities. I try to explain where I will be, where more information can be found, and what should be expected: am I just LiveBlogging or am I also planning to tweet? Will I be taking pictures of the event? Is any of the event being videoed or streamed somewhere? You don’t have to promise the world, you just need to advertise what will be blogged, where, and how. Set realistic expectations and make sure you can deliver on them.

4. Know your Kit Bag

On the day it’s important to know you have everything you need to hand. That means that what you pack is important but also how you pack it – you need to know where you can quickly find your power lead, your pen, your schedule for the event, etc. Typically I will have the following items packed in my own eccentric combinations of bag pockets/sections:

  • Laptop. This will be fully charged the night before the event but I will try to use mains power throughout to ensure I don’t have to think about checking battery level.
  • Laptop Power Cord. This will always be very near the laptop in the bag, usually in a bag full of cables.
  • Extension Cord(s). I work in academia and the kind of buildings events are held in can be a real lottery in terms of power access. In the last year I’ve LiveBlogged in venues including a medieval chapel with two power sockets, a railway museum with numerous sockets but only at the edges of the room, an education room with 4 power sockets in the corners of the room and with a film crew using half of them, and a seminar room with multiple sockets on every desk. There are no guarantees. So I usually carry either a 10m surge protection 6-way extension lead (essential if you are carrying a large number of devices) or a 20m 2-way extension lead. As a result of barcamps past I have my name, email address, mobile number and twitter handle permanently marked on both of these as it’s easy to lose your cables out there! If I’m staying overnight with a bigger bag I’ll take both. A side benefit of multiway extension cords is that it’s a great way to make new friends at events as  there are always a raft of laptop users looking for power!
  • Tablet, SmartPhone or similar second screen. If you are organising an event you may want several of these but there are two reasons you should always have at least one extra screen: (1) To have a spare device to take notes on and (2) to keep an eye on conference/event tweets in parallel to notetaking. It’s often easier to grab your phone and do a quick check of the discussion whilst you are saving a post than to switch tabs, wait for a page reload, etc.
  • Camera. Pictures add value to blog posts so I try to take some form of camera with me to every event. My iPhone does the job fine but if I can find space for it a DSLR does better. If I’m running an event I use both with the DSLR on a tripod with remote and the iPhone for quick complimentary snaps.
  • Chargers and cables, various. To keep LiveBlogging you need to know your kit will all be fine. I keep a cable bag stocked with iPhone cable, VGA converter cable for my laptop, mini USB cable (for camera), spare headphones, memory sticks, and the all important 3G dongle. That little bag comes in handy as a LiveBlogger or presenter and I’ll top it up with camera remote, micro USB cable, iPad charger, etc. depending on what else I’m carrying.
  • Printed programme. Not all event organisers think to provide you with the details you want to hand for liveblogging. Often you want to be able to glance at the schedule and remind yourself of names, topics, etc. to complement those pre-populated posts. I tend to print my own programme and keep it my laptop case so it’s always to hand.
  • Business Cards with Blog URL. If you do this LiveBlogging lark a lot it’s helpful to have your blog on your business card – then if colleagues ask where they will find your post you can quickly reply without them needing to note down a full URL. My cards have a QR code for my blog on them which is even easier!
  • Paper, Pen. Sometimes tech lets you down. A trusty old pen and paper are essential for those quick notes, reminders, emergency note taking etc.
  • Water. Because almost no event has an endless supply of water and sitting with a warm computer on your lap in an air conditioned room can be dehydrating. If there are only short breaks having your own stash of water also enables you to finish a post rather than join slow moving refreshment queues.
  • Emergency Snacks. A flapjack, a banana, some chocolate, some wasabe peas… it doesn’t matter what type of snack you pick (as long as you like it) but some sort of energising snack (bonus points for those that make no noise) will help you cope with unrealistically short coffee breaks or just very tiring long sessions. LiveBlogging may look like sitting still for the day but typing for that long is a bit like running a marathon. If you have friendly colleagues on hand to pass you refreshments that’s great but my experience of big conferences is that having a snack to hand will save time, queuing and keep you at the energy level you need to keep up with the action. For similar reasons you should never begin a LiveBlogging day without a proper breakfast and, for me at least, a coffee.
Cake, an excellent emergency snack...

Cake, an excellent emergency snack…

There is other kit I’ll take to events I am full-on social media amplifying – video camera, MP3 recorder, etc. – but the list above is what you’ll find in my everyday kit bag for attending events.

5. Add Value

Capturing Q&A sessions, as already mentioned, can add a lot of value. Adding links, explaining acronyms or pointing to related projects or websites is also really valuable for remote readers and those in the room. You also need to get a flavour of the room and to put across the mood without being too judgemental about the event or providing too biased an account (assuming you are there to record not critique – which is better done after the event anyway).

Do capture the detail others may not: lunch and coffee breaks make readers feel involved but, most importantly, they also explain gaps in streaming, liveblog update speed, a quietening down of tweets, etc. But remember that you do need to respect your fellow participants – if someone asks you not to record a question or comment or service name then make sure you respect that wish. If someone falls over a step there’s no need to blog that. But if a fire alarm starts going off LiveBlogging that moment may help explain any tweets or recording issues – you are the eyes and ears of the remote audience so reflect the character and mood of the room but don’t feel like you must be on surveillance duty.

Speed is the other big value-add that you can offer. I try to hit “Publish” or “Update” often as that keeps the version being read as near to current as possible. If you are using a plugin to help with shorter, more frequent updates then this can be easier to manage but the general thing to note is that the faster you share, the more useful that is to your readers. The more often you share, the harder it is to fall behind or lose data.

6. Images matter

I don’t use a huge number of images in myLiveBlog posts but I do usually take them and they can make a big difference – if you can include them you should (attributing correctly of course) even if those images are added back in after the event. Images are even more important now that Pinterest and Tumblr are so popular – the sharing of posts and websites via particularly interesting images is becoming a mainstream method of discovery so a good picture may not say a thousand words but it could garner you several hundred more clicks.

The OR2012 Pinterest page showing how images are collated and used.

The OR2012 Pinterest page showing how images are collated and used.

As an event organiser images are essential – even if these are shared elsewhere they will help others write up the event. At OR2012 we created a Flickr group and allowed any delegate to add their images here. Use of this group and the taking of hundreds of photos by the OR2012 team, all shared under liberal CC licences, meant anyone else reporting on the event could find details from liveblogs and add their own value by pulling out their own highlights and illustrating their reports with photos.

7. Don’t be Afraid to Ask for Help

I’ve already said that you shouldn’t plan to be in two places at once… but if you let people know what you are LiveBlogging you may be able to get some friendly fellow bloggers our covering that second room, that other round table, etc. I’ve also already said that other attendees and presenters will often be more than happy to help with corrections or clarifications. If you ask for help you’ll hear about others’ blog posts that complement your own, you’ll see those reports of your events, and you’ll make sure you correct that speaker’s surname before the autocorrect error becomes too big of an issue.

8. Link, Connect, Be a Good Blogger… 

Links to related websites, slides, etc. add real value and can be done on the day or afterwards. If people leave comments make sure you engage with them. Connect to speakers’ websites or blogs, point to related resources. Basically make sure that you add value without being too cynical – it’s not about SEO type linking to anyway, it’s about adding value for yourself, your readers, and your fellow bloggers, writers, participants.

9. Shout About It

This is the best way to ensure that YOU get the best value out of your post. Do make sure you let people know about your LiveBlog – tweet when you update it or when the event is completely blogged, let the organisers know your post is there and so make sure you link back to their website.  Don’t get obsessed but make sure that those that want to see the post know where to find it. If you are running the event I would recommend including links to blogs – and a note that LiveBlogging will be taking place, in any printed materials (if you do this via bit.ly you have the bonus feature of being able to track the most effective route to accessing your post(s).

A rather modest recent example of a tweet shouting out about a LiveBlog.

A rather modest recent example of a tweet shouting out about a LiveBlog.

Finally and most importantly make sure that you shout about your post to your colleagues, your peers, etc. It can be really easy to only think about those in the know about the event, your fellow delegates, and that big wide world of people on the web but the most value in your post might be the person at the next desk. Shouting out to the web is easy, summarising the relevance and advertising your posts to colleagues can be harder but is at least as important in most cases.

10. Keep the Momentum Going

Make sure you build on your LiveBlog. If you have been attending an event you might just make sure you link back to that post where appropriate – in your weekly round up of activity perhaps, by highlighting it next time you blog about the same project, event in a series, etc. Again this adds value for you and for your readers.

If you are running an event your LiveBlog should be the start of the conversation. Others will be blogging and reporting on your event and your LiveBlog will be linked to. Do keep an eye on those other posts and help to highlight them through tweets, through highlights posts on your own blog, etc. This helps reward your fellow bloggers for their participation, it recognises their own efforts, and it reinforces the value in LiveBlogging an event as it evidences interest in that event and, through links, in those specific LiveBlog posts.

So, those are my 10 rather extended top tips… what are yours? Leave a comment or any questions below!

 

DeliciousShare/Bookmark

How to LiveBlog Part 1: Why LiveBlog?

After working on amplification of big events this year, the most notable being Open Repositories 2012,  I thought it would be a good time to share some of my tips for liveblogging and why that should be part of a plan for social media amplification of a variety of events. As I’ve also just been asked for advice on LiveBlogging I thought that would be a really useful topic to talk about. In this post, part one of  two, I’ll be telling you why I think LiveBlogging is so useful. Tomorrow, in part two, I’ll share my top ten practical tips for LiveBlogging.

What is LiveBlogging?

Well it’s blogging in real time, “live”, around some sort of event or key moment. However, different people have different definitions…

Sometimes liveblogging means blogging throughout an event that are shared at the end of talks, at the end of sessions or  later the same day. It’s faster than traditional “blogging” and typically includes a record of what has been said with only minimal reflection on content when compared with other bloggers who might write up an event a week later as a summary with commentary. That’s a style of liveblogging that can work for any blog set up or choice of software and for any level of blogging experience. It’s a good way to get started but it’s more “as live” than “live” I think.

UKSG is a great example of a high quality "as live" blog with multiple contributors.

UKSG is a great example of a high quality “as live” blog with multiple contributors.

Others see LiveBlogging as short instant updates to a page – that’s the model that the Guardian use and works well for the moment-critical sports (e.g. Olympics Closing Ceremony) and media journalism (e.g. X-Factor Season 8 Finale) they use liveblogging for.  That style of liveblogging will require a slightly more specialist set up for your blog – use of the liveblogging WordPress plugin or similar – or an awful lot  more draft blog posts at the ready. It’s a good approach if minute by minute updates are needed but you could achieve a similar style through tweets, or through embedding a Storify or CoverItLive and using tweets and brief notes instead of a blog format.

Guardian Olympic Closing Ceremony LiveBlog - this screenshot shows the mini update format.

Guardian Olympic Closing Ceremony LiveBlog – this screenshot shows the mini update format.

My preferred format of liveblogging uses a standard blog – preferably one that already has a specific audience interested in the event or topic – and posting semi-finished blog posts throughout an event. I begin with skeletal blog posts that lay out what will be blogged that day/session. I will tweet links to these out to the event hashtag (assuming there is one) and then edit and update that post hitting “publish” or “update” whenever there is a suitable pause. That might be at the end of each presentation, it could be at the end of a session, but usually I will update roughly every 20ish minutes assuming a short pause – playing of a video, a particularly irrelevant tangent, etc. – arises.  If something important, a major interruption, or similar occurs then I will update that post more frequently. No matter how many times I’ve updated a post I will then tweet that the session/morning/speaker is blogged during proper breaks in the schedule (coffee, lunch, etc.).

ScreenShot of the OR2012 LiveBlog showing the introductory paragraph and my LiveBlog style.

ScreenShot of the OR2012 LiveBlog showing the introductory paragraph and my LiveBlog style.

This style of liveblogging is about making the fullest record available in the quickest time. I am a touch typer so the record tends to be verbatim or near-to. However the same approach works with more edited/summarised/digested blog posts as well. This form of liveblogging is about capturing a lot of detail though as this is what those unable to attend, reading the blog, or awaiting the blog post as record on which to base their own write up, want quick access to. There is not the same urgency for reflection, commentary or criticism of an event.

Why Should You LiveBlog?

A LiveBlog is the fastest way to get meaningful information out to those who cannot attend an event but they can also be an indispensible record of the event for those attending in person. Once your audience/delegates/participants know that the key talks and questions are being recorded they are empowered to choose what they want to record or note… talking full notes of a session is not the best way to engage so if your audience know that they don’t need to do that they are, to know small extent, freed up to listen, to engage, and perhaps to tweet a key highlight. They know that they can go back to their colleagues with some record of the event, something to base a report on and to share. There is not the same urgency for commentary, analysis, reflection, etc. all of which are useful but often benefit from slower drafting processes.

If you are organising an event LiveBlogging also offers a bridge between the live in-person experience and the types of artefacts you might be producing afterwards – the reports, the videos, the articles. It can be hugely expensive to livestream events (particularly as you may need to pre-empt demand and the temptation is to over cater) for very little benefit – often a stream will be viewed by very few people in real time and will be a one-way experience offering very little benefit over the recorded experience. Twitter is a great medium for participating in discussion, or finding out about an event but it can be very hard to quickly get a sense of who is on stage and what the chat is referring to without some sort of note of what has come before, what the topic is, etc. If you see a tweet halfway through a day paging through previous tweets often won’t fill in those gaps but LiveBlogs can be that almost-instant record that provides a reference point of what is taking place, and which provides an essential hub for finding richer artefacts as they are published.

For audiences outside of a room the LiveBlog may be the only way to access the event and they can do it in real time or near real time. More importantly that record is easily searched for, can be used as a connecting point for any video captured, slides shared, and it will be less ephemeral than tweets…

And if you are good at LiveBlogging you become an asset to an event organiser – a person to encourage along in the knowledge that you will help share that event experience with your readers, followers, fellow delegates etc. I have been encouraged to LiveBlog or invited to attend events purely to LiveBlog in the past. I feel privileged to be able to add something extra to what are usually excellent events whilst the organiser knows that someone experienced is on hand capturing the key event content.

That value of sharing, explaining, changing the virtual footprint of an event is such that some conferences do offer discounted rates, free places, or perks to bloggers (not just “live” ones) so if you are planning to LiveBlog something on your event list for the year do make sure you let organisers know!

Why Shouldn’t You LiveBlog?

LiveBlogging isn’t an easy add-on to an event. I’ve probably been liveblogging at least 20 events each year for the last five years and have established my own ways of organising, preparing and managing that process during an event but it can take a while to get used to the process. The main thing to bear in mind is that, whilst a good LiveBlog will get great readership and kudos from your readers and possibly fellow delegates, it is also a task which takes you away from the event you are engaging in.

If you are attending an event to network, to meet new contacts, to establish yourself then LiveBlogging may not be the best option. You will be more occupied by your computer than your peers and that can mean LiveBlogging can be a comforting barrier to making new connections. It can also position you as an organiser, administrator, or otherwise less visible person. If you are already known to many of those at the event this gets a lot easier – if it’s known that you’ll be LiveBlogging people will check in with you, catch up and perhaps even bring you a coffee, they will come to you. That still means you are more likely to meet fewer new people but it can be OK and that chat can have real usefulness.

Sometimes missing out on chat isn’t really an issue. I’ve been LiveBlogging webinars lately and that purely adds value to the experience as it forces you to pay attention – often remarkably hard to do in a busy office – and is still so unusual that other attendees and organisers tend to be particularly delighted to have a searchable record of the event. Video and recorded webinars are brilliant but it’s even better if you can find out about that recorded session by Googling a name captured in a LiveBlog or can use that LiveBlog to skip to the crucial 15 minutes you want to see.

LiveBlogging requires a fair amount of kit – as you’ll see in my next blog post – so you really have to feel it’s worthwhile before you start lugging kit around the country. And that is assuming to have access to a suitable laptop etc. in the first place.  I haven’t weighed my one-day liveblogging kit but would be surprised if it was under 10KG when laptop, extension cord and a bottle of water are all accounted for. If I’m at conference that I’m providing additional amplification for I have a fairly chunky rolling case that tends to be packed with about 70% tech kit. You can travel lighter of course and even if you don’t it’s not a bad way to build up your shoulder strength…  but the odds are that you will be the one with a disproportionately heavy bag on the train home…

The most basic of my LiveBlogging set ups...

The most basic of my LiveBlogging set ups…

LiveBlogging is tiring and no matter how efficient your typing is you will find yourself absolutely exhausted by the end of full day. You may also have posts to tidy up, images to add, comments to reply to before you can be finished for the day. That can be OK for a single day but for two, or three, or five days that becomes an intense experience. There can be more fun ways to enjoy an event so as you work out what you might be blogging bear in mind what else you want to do as part of your attendance or organisation of an event and ensure you have breaks, rests, space to stretch your legs and look away from a screen.

The other reason you might not want to liveblog is that the event just may not suit it. Meetings aren’t usually a thing you would LiveBlog – although project kick off meetings can benefit from being LiveBlogged (or blogged “as live” but edited for discretion later). Sometimes events such as round table discussions or workshops may only be effective and honest if there are shared expectations of privacy. You should only be LiveBlogging where there are reasonable expectations about the public nature of the event. If in doubt you can always apply a little judgement and choose not to attribute – or even record – a controversial comment. Generally this isn’t an issue but people can get nervous if you are typing what they say word for word and it’s worth being aware of that when you are thinking about when it is and isn’t a good idea to liveblog.

So, should you be LiveBlogging?

Well I’m clearly going to say that you should. But only when and where it is useful, valuable, and has benefits for you as well as others. Personally I began LiveBlogging as I was taking near-verbatim notes for my own reference and started to think it was a real waste not to share those with others. It’s fine to report on a meeting to colleagues but it can add a lot of value to LiveBlog then add commentary as your report, to get feedback on your notes, to get clarification from the speakers and corrections in near real time.

I’ve definitely benefited greatly from LiveBlogging events whether I’ve been along as an organiser, a speaker or just there to be in the audience. We find EDINA projects, events, and conferences all benefit from LiveBlogging – but it’s not something we do every day, for every event, or on every blog. But, when used, it is a hugely effective way to increase the impact of an event, to reach out to and encourage other bloggers to join in and add to our perceptions of the event, and to engage with our rather wonderful audiences and communities.

Feeling inspired? Read my next post on LiveBlogging tomorrow!

Disagree? Have I missed something? Add a comment below, I’d love to hear your thoughts on this!

 

DeliciousShare/Bookmark

Recent social media news – including EDINA’s new LinkedIn page

It’s been a while since I posted an actual blog post rather than a liveblog and I thought it might be useful to summarise some interesting new social media news that has emerged over the last few weeks. It’s in no particular order but should hopefully be of interest.

Friends Reunited re-launches. One of the very first social networks has made a very unlikely comeback recently. Friends Reunited was the Facebook of it’s day (around 2001-3) encouraging old school friends to connect and post messages on each others walls. It had a real following in the UK but it didn’t develop fast enough and when it was sold from it’s private owners to ITV it really went into decline. However with the visual appeal of Tumblr, Pinterest and HistoryPin in mind and the massive appeal of family history as a new focus the site has relaunched in a new visual nostalgic style. Those used to frequenting Mum’s Comfort Food (formerly Monster Mash) in Edinburgh will instantly be used to the look and feel which is a bit like iPlayer in I Love the 1980s mode. And a fascinating footnote: Freindsreunited are manually retrieving login details for users who can no longer remember their logins, email addresses, passwords etc. It’s notable only because it’s rare a site is around so long it justifies doing that. Although from my first login there it looks like the masses have not returned to Friendsreunited (yet) despite the press coverage.

HistoryPin adds lots of new features! Chief amongst these are Channels which allow significant customisation and aggregation of contributions. A lovely idea for individuals, local history groups etc. We were lucky enough to have Rebekkah from HistoryPin along at a JISC GECO workshop on Geospatial in the Cultural Heritage Domain last month – you see the notes from her talk – which included sneak previews of the new Channels – over on the GECO LiveBlog for the event.

Facebook launches Timeline for Pages. Anyone with a Facebook page will know by now that the old style pages rolled over to the new style Timeline on 31st March 2012. The new look and feel will be very familiar to anyone looking at friends profiles over the last few months (personal profiles having rolled over around January).  Whilst the responses to personal timelines seems to have been quite mixed I think the new format work rather well for Pages and I haven’t seen much in the way of criticism – although inevitably looking around for familiar elements takes a wee bit of getting used to.

One of the most fun parts of the new format Facebook pages is the ability to add “Covers” – large images (851px by 315px – very similar to many WordPress theme banner sizes) which have presumably been labelled as “Covers” to appeal both to those who create elaborate scrapbooks and photo albums as well as those who wish they’d been in a rock band. We’ve now got Covers in place for all of our Facebook pages – why not take a look at the EDINA AddressingHistory Page and Digimap Page both of which use nice geospatial images:

Digimap's Facebook Page showing the new Timeline.

We actually try to keep a collection of images of events, services, etc. for just these sorts of times. A number of us at EDINA are pretty decent photographers and tend to take Digital SLRs to events anyway so we make a concious effort to capture our own high resolution images that are specific to us and our work so that when it comes to sharing images, illustrating blog posts or reports, etc. we have suitable images to hand. For AddressingHistory and JISC GECO, both of which were both very much about engaging the community and encouraging them to blog we’ve found Flickr accounts really useful – sharing images of materials and events lets others out on the web create more engaging posts and talk about our projects. Talking of images…

Facebook buys Instagram for $1 billion. Old news now but still worth noting. The story has mainly been reported from a “is this the new dot com bubble” perspective which is hardly surprising as the purchase does value a free iPhone app at more than the value of subscription-based New York Times. However looking at this a bit more pragmatically it’s not quite such a daft purchase. Facebook has paid “cash and shares” and with the Facebook IPO coming up very soon it’s possible those shares are a big part of the payment and being valued highly. More importantly Instagram has a lot of the design and hipster chic that Facebook lacks, useful in itself, and will bring with it a user base and their photos – since images are, in my experience, some of the most productive sources of interaction on Facebook, that’s also significant. Instagram’s main function is to make fairly mediocre phone images look quirky, nostalgic, and tangible in a hard to explain sort of way. Adding that functionality to the photo sharing and storing aspects of Facebook seems like a good move as more of us move to experiencing the site almost exclusively on smartphones or tablets. On a sort of related note a very good recent(ish) Planet Money podcast talked about the longtail of the app economy with the founder of Instapaper.

Pinterest sees rapid growth and claims 97% of fans are female (see piece in Forbes and stats on TechCrunch). If Pininterest has passed you by so far you may be more than a little surprised at the number of new users it’s attracted in a very short time. The idea is very simple and rather familiar if you’re used to using Tumblr, the Flipboard iPad app, the new(ish) Delicious Stacks, Flickr Galleries, Storify, and any number of more obscure Web2.0 sites.  Pinterest is essentially a virtual pinboard for images – you can also add short comments and share those links/images. It’s a very basic idea but engaging because it is so visual, easy to use, and the interface is based on big buttons, easy browsing etc.  Like many predecessors it’s a custom magazine for the web but, unlike many of those, it also has a big user community. And for reference websites with no “pinnable” images cannot be pinned/saved/shared so it’s a great reminder to always include a good image on your webpresences – particularly if you can share something eyecatching!

Citizen Olympics Reporting. Two recent and exciting citizen reporting initiatives have been kicked off recently. The first and larger is #media2012, a reporting network for the Olympics. They held a recent kick off meeting which you can read about here. There is also an associated project to provide crowdsourced blog coverage of the Scottish arm of the torch relay which goes by the name CitizenRelay. Read more about getting involved here.

And finally… EDINA has a new LinkedIn page! If you head over there you can start following us for updates and news. And if you are a current or former staffer here do update your profile to create a connection back to the page. We’ve actually been planning to create a LinkedIn page for a while so it’s really good to see it live!

And even more finally… Our Will’s World project (#willdiscover) has launched and is contributing data for this year’s Culture Hack Scotland. The data is here in case you’re interested but there will be much more on that to follow…

 

Delicious Share/Bookmark