Archive for June, 2009

Don’t become an accidental spammer

Many businesses are keen to engage in social media. This was very clear at the Institute of Directors event last week where I was speaking on Creating Value through Web 2.0, with Silvia Cambié and Giles Colborne. From what I have noticed in real world discussions as well as online, this interest reflects the interest of business leaders generally. Many have an awareness of blogs and Twitter and Facebook and there is a huge curiosity about how to best use these social media tools in a business context. But alongside that curiosity is also a sensible concern about how to engage appropriately in this new medium. One of the delegates at the event, Roy Graff of ChinaContact sent me a tweet via Twitter suggesting that that I discuss the Habitat case as a study in how NOT to engage in social media.

Habitat and Twitter

Habitat is a well-known upmarket furniture retailer in the UK. I first heard that they had started using Twitter via the Social Media Today site. One of the conventions in Twitter is to use “hash tags” ie too add a hash symbol # to keywords to make it easier to identify other tweets about the same topic. So, for example, if you are tweeting about the elections in Iran, you would mark your tweets with #iranelection. Habitat appeared on Twitter using all kinds of popular hash tags to mark their tweets — but their tweets had nothing to do with the keyword topic and were, instead, blatant hard sell copy pushing their furniture. The Social Media Today site sets out some great screenshots of Habitat’s Twitter feed - an example is “#iPhone Our totally desirable Spring collection now 20% off”.

Social media as a cross-cultural space

This kind of communication on Twitter showed a complete ignorance of social media culture. The best way to explain social media culture is to think about it as a cross-cultural fourth space — like another country you might visit. If you were to do business in China or India, you would take the opportunity to learn about the etiquette and cultural norms for business people in those countries. For example, you might take the time to find out what the etiquette is for taking someone out for dinner or whether it is appropriate to bow or shake hands etc. Similarly, you need to approach the social media space as a cross-cultural experience and take the time to learn about the nuances of communicating within that context.

Authenticity

So, one of the most highly prized values in the social media space is authenticity. If you are going to use the hash tag #iPhone then you need to be tweeting about something relating to that mobile phone device. To use it as a way to “spin” people intp reading your sales advertisement shows a huge disrespect to those around you. Twitterers were outraged by Habitat’s forcing their sales pitch into their conversatiaon space. Think of how infuriating it is to receive junk phone calls with recorded messages selling you stuff just as you are sitting down for a meal. Or your home fax machine ringing and churning away in the middle of night with junk faxes till they’ve used up all your paper. Twitterers felt the same sense of violation. I believe that at one point Habitat was even using the #iranelection hashtag. The furore in the Twitterverse was palpable. It was like being door-stepped by someone asking for your help in a good cause who then suddenly switches to trying to sell you Viagra. Habitat had become a spammer without even realising it.

Habitat blames the intern

On 24 June, Social Media Today posted an apology from Habitat, which said, “The top ten trending topics were pasted into hashtags without checking with us and apparently without verifying what all of the tags referred to. This was absolutely not authorised by Habitat.”. On 25 June, Brand Republic reported that Habitat was now blaming an intern, quoting a spokesman as saying, “The hashtags were uploaded without Habitat’s authorisation by an overenthusiastic intern who did not fully understand the ramifications of his actions. He is no longer associated with Habitat.”

I’m not sure that Habitat has really extricated itself from this mess by this “blame it on the intern” message – and, in fact, I think they’ve dug themselves deeper into the doo-doo. Many others seem to think so too. Check out the Twitter hashtag #habitatfail for the reactions of Twitterers. In my view, for a big corporation to blame a hapless intern shows a great moral cowardice.

Assuming there was an intern…

Let’s give Habitat the benefit of the doubt and assume there really was an intern in the first place. What is implied to the world by this simple blame statement: It wasn’t us, gov - it was the intern’s fault”?

An intern, as one of the most junior members of any team, needs to be - and should have been – properly supervised and trained, as well as mentored appropriately to do their job well. For the big corporation to dump them into any role with no training and say, Get on with it and if you screw up, you’re out on your ear, is bad business and bad ethics. Even if Habitat had given him clear initial instructions about the appropriate way to engage on Twitter, they should not have walked away and left him to his own devices without checking back to make sure what he was doing was “authorised”. How difficult is it to check your own Twitter page? The intern’s supervisor could have done that without even getting up from his computer!

A leader of a team is the responsible for how his / her team behaves and the quality of their work. He/ she is also responsible for the team’s well-being. If anyone is responsible, it is the intern’s supervisor – and that supervisor’s line manager and so on, all the way up to the Head of Communications. Because if that intern’s supervisor isn’t doing their job properly in managing that intern, there is an issue there that they themselves are not being properly managed by their line manager, and so on right up to the top.

At another level, the question that comes to my mind is: How much respect does Habitat have for the millions of people who engage on Twitter if they leave their Twitter communications strategy to an untrained, unsupervised intern? The message seems to be: Our Head of Communications is much too busy and important handling TV and traditionally respectable communications channels to even spare a thought about all those people engaged in the social media space - let alone a carefully thought out strategy - so let’s just put this junior onto it and that’ll be good enough. So, Twitterers, that’s all you’re worth to Habitat – the cost of a cheap intern’s time.

I’d be interested to see how Habitat’s recruitment figures pan out in the next little while, too. If you are a young person looking for an internship after this fiasco, would Habitat the kind of company you want to work for? Even if you’re in middle management or some other more senior level than an intern, would you want to work for a company that shows this level of inauthenticity.

But do we believe there was an intern?

My views above work on the hypothesis that there was really an intern. But, given Habitat’s performance so far in the Twitterverse, can we even be confident that they are being authentic in even claiming that there was an intern? It sounds to me as believable as, The dog ate my homework.

Practical tips on how to avoid becoming a spammer

How might Habitat have done things differently? In my view, there are some simple steps to take if your business is considering extending your communications opportunities into this fourth cultural space:
• Take the time to scout out the way that people are already behaving and communicating in this space
• Engage some professional guidance from someone who is a native of this space.
• Draw up a strategy for how you can start engaging in a phased way, with opportunities to review and adjust your strategy along the way. The key is not to rush in waving your banner wildly but to slowly build up relationships and trust before making more assertive moves.
• Put in place a proper team, with all the usual tools that you would use to manage a team working on a real world project - objectives, supervision, appraisal, milestones, end date and so on.

You will notice that you could easily apply those four steps to a cross-cultural project where you were aiming to expand your business into another country. Read through the bullets again and this time picture China or India or another region that is culturally different from your own. Taking the time to understand and respect another’s culture is the best way to avoid giving offence - and to avoid becoming a spammer.

Photo: thanks to david on flickr.com (CCL)

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Monday, June 29th, 2009 at 2:00am

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Sense of satisfaction

My 6 author copies of International Communications Strategy that I’ve been working on since November 2007 with my co-author Silvia Cambie arrived in the post today. After 18 months of hard work - involving research, writing, re-writing, editing and more - it’s very satisfying to finally hold the end product(s) in my hand. Even more so now that the book has also been nominated for the FT Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award 2009!

Posted via email from Yang-May’s posterous

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Saturday, June 27th, 2009 at 4:46pm

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Who do you trust with your news?

Everyone is talking about the power of citizen journalism these days. Social media tools that allow instant publication, such as blogging and Twitter, enable anyone with access to the Internet to report on what is happening around them. In many cases citizen journalists have scooped the news ahead of traditional news media — e.g. the ordinary guy who happened to be at the right place at the right time with his mobile phone to take a photo of the plane that crashed into the Hudson River in New York earlier this year.

There has been a lot of hand wringing by media commentators and the traditional newsgathering organisations. If anyone can be a journalist nowadays — and be happy to report on events for free — then what is the future for professional journalists with years of training who need to earn a living while reporting the news?

Last night, watching the rising tidal wave of news and speculation on the Internet about Michael Jackson’s death was an object lesson in why we still need serious journalists and why we need to find a way to continue properly remunerating them for fact-checked investigative reporting of the news.

I checked out my Twitter stream late last night after dinner and noticed a lot of Twitterers mourning the passing of Michael Jackson, posting “RIP Michael Jackson” and honouring his memory with reminiscences of his wonderful music and talent. Naturally, I checked out the news websites immediately — the BBC, CNN in particular, as well as newspaper sites such as The Guardian. None of the news websites were actually making the statement that Michael Jackson was dead — instead, they were reporting that he had been rushed to hospital and was not breathing. A couple of them said that he was in a coma.

I set up a live blogging event using Scribble Live to record my “in the moment” responses to the unfolding news and speculation: Michael Jackson – Dead or Alive? (The complete live blog post also updated in real time here on my blog). At the same time, I had the BBC live video stream open on another tab in my browser and was listening to their continuing commentary and updates. I tweeted my own comments on what was happening — that the news sources were not saying that he was dead although the Twitterverse were already mourning him.

The BBC news report was very careful to use phrases such as “it is reported that Michael Jackson is dead ” or “reports say”. They kept emphasising that they did not themselves yet have “independent confirmation”. What was particularly interesting to me was that it was another traditional news website that was reporting the death, the LA times, as well as an online entertainment site, TMZ. The BBC WAS at pains to say that these news sources were very well respected and were reputable sites. However, they were unwilling to make the definitive statement that Michael Jackson was dead until they had obtained their own independent confirmation.

While I was live blogging all this, a number of other people on the Internet had obviously found my site as Scribble Live was telling me that up to 38 people were “watching” my life blogging. Some of them added their own comments to say that Jackson was in a coma and others were wanting to know whether he was dead or not, and whether it was 100% confirmed that he was dead.

This was a fascinating experience. If I had been at work or in a party space and we had heard this kind of news, we’d have turned on the TV or radio and while the reports would be coming in, we’d all be wondering and chatting and talking about Michael Jackson and what was the latest moment by moment news. As I live blogged my views and what I was hearing from the BBC, it felt exactly as if I was in that sort of environment, albeit with people I didn’t personally know. It is such a human instinct to gather at times of crisis to find out what’s going on. And tools like Twitter and Scribble Live make it so easy to gather in a way that makes geography irrelevant.

In terms of the news sourcing, what was interesting to me was this. The LA Times, a respected and reputable news source, said that Michael Jackson was dead. Did I — and many others around the world — believe them? Instinctively, I was waiting for the BBC’s confirmation so at some level, I evidently did not trust the LA Times as much as I trust the BBC. From the reaction of other people online, this seems to have been their response as well. I believe that the LA Times reported the death at around 10:30 PM London time but the BBC only confirmed this fact through their independent verification at approximately 11:46 PM. So in terms of news reporting, the LA Times scooped the BBC on this story — but it was only when I heard the BBC’s, authoritative voice say “It has now been confirmed that Michael Jackson is in fact dead” that I was ready to face the reality of the pop star’s passing.

It was also interesting to note that the BBC’s live report remarked that there was a lot of rumour and speculation on the Internet and via Twitter during the few hours following Jackson’s admission to hospital. It seemed a very 21st century moment — while we were watching the news, the news was also watching us.

For me, the significance of this is event that, while many of us “ordinary folk” can publish our views and opinions online instantaneously, this kind of interaction is rife with the potential for rumour and speculation. At best, we are generally at one remove from the news. There are of course ordinary people who are caught up in extraordinary events and have the opportunity to blog or twitter about their experience in the moment — such as what has been happening in Iran — and I do not mean at all to disrespect what they’re communicating to the world about their personal experiences. I just want to emphasise that trained journalists adhere to a rigourous code of ethics, including vigourous fact checking before making their reports and this is an important and valuable function — it is sometimes better to be late with the correct facts than early with a sensational scoop.

Photo: thanks to groupieblog

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Friday, June 26th, 2009 at 4:41pm

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Michael Jackson - Dead or Alive?

  • 11:16 PM fusionview - Watching unfolding news and speculation online about whether Michael Jackson has died
  • 11:17 PM fusionview - Saw people saying how tragic it was on Twitter about 20 mins ago
  • 11:18 PM fusionview - Checked out news sites BBC and CNN and all they said was that he had been rushed to hospital not breathing
  • 11:19 PM fusionview - Ustream claimed live coverage - “Ustream Michael Jackson passes away- live coverage- www.ustream.tv
  • 11:19 PM fusionview - But too many people on the Ustream site made streaming freeze
  • 11:20 PM fusionview - Many in Twitterverse claiming he’s dead and posting RIP etc
  • 11:29 PM fusionview - Michael Jackson taken to hospital bit.ly
  • 11:30 PM fusionview - Interesting to see difference between professional journalists and social media observers.
  • 11:30 PM fusionview - Journos cautious until facts confirmed
  • 11:30 PM fusionview - Journos use terms like “reports”/ “reported”. Cautious tone. BBC report what other news agencies said. But “no independent confirmation”
  • 11:34 PM fusionview - CNN reporting Jackson in coma. BBC “not clear what the position is”
  • 11:35 PM fusionview - Live BBC online stream now filling time with review of Michael Jackson’s career while waiting for more news
  • 11:38 PM fusionview - LA Times reported Jackson dead but BBC don’t believe them. They want “independent confirmation”
  • 11:38 PM fusionview - Is LA Times less reputable than BBC?
  • 11:39 PM fusionview - Perhaps that’s why the world tends to believe BBC as dependable? They won’t say anything till they themselves are absolutely sure
  • 11:39 PM fusionview - This is a fascinating object lesson in why we need real journos
  • 11:40 PM fusionview - Fans gathering outside hospital
  • 11:40 PM fusionview - TMZ and LA Times apparently have inside line to hospital staff, say BBC
  • 11:41 PM fusionview - BBC careful to emphasise TMZ and LA Times very respected
  • 11:41 PM fusionview - Assoc Press also now reporting Jackson dead
  • 11:41 PM fusionview - BBC still not committing
  • 11:41 PM fusionview - Hospital wouldn’t give info to BBC
  • 11:42 PM fusionview - Anyone else out there have any views?
  • 11:43 PM fusionview - Yes, coma seems a certainty
  • 11:44 PM fusionview - BBC just confirming he’s dead
  • 11:44 PM fusionview - BBC: “We can now confirm…”
  • 11:44 PM fusionview - BBC: we have confirmaiton now he has died aged 50
  • 11:45 PM fusionview - Is news true and 100% only when BBC confirms it?
  • 11:45 PM fusionview - BBC: rumours spreading before confirmation due to Twitter & social media
  • 11:45 PM fusionview - So even while we’re watching BBC, they are watching us
  • 11:46 PM fusionview - RIP Michael Jackson
  • 11:46 PM Courtney Rafter - hearing he’s in a coma
  • 11:47 PM fusionview - Yes, BBC has confirmed he’s dead
  • 11:48 PM fusionview - BBC live stream news.bbc.co.uk
  • 11:52 PM fusionview - I’m now closing this live blogging feed. Thanks to everyone who has been watching and adding comments. My condolences to Michael Jackson’s family, friends & fans

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Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Thursday, June 25th, 2009 at 11:17pm

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Creating Value through Web 2.0 - Debrief

Our talk on Creating Value Through Web 2.0 last night was as interesting for my co-presenters Silvia Cambie and Giles Colborne and myself as for the delegates who came along. We had a lot of great questions and good discussion coming out of this very topical issue, helped along by the panel chairman David Wootton.

First off, our slides can be downloaded as a pdf in the box below so if you were at the talk and want a copy of them, please click the link for the download - and if you were not there but would like to see what we discussed, you’re welcome, too.

Now, onto the debrief. Many of the delegates at this Institute of Directors event represented small to medium sized enterprises, with a number of freelancers and also solo professionals in the mix. We had a lot of the lively discussion during the question time and also in the pre- and post-event drinks. I thought it would be useful to continue the discussions online here on my blog for a wider audience as well as for the delegates who were there last night. So here are some of what struck me as the burning issues that came out of the presentation and discussions last night:

# Should we participate in social media?

Web 2.0 and social media is here to stay with millions of people around the world engaging in social networks, blogs, Twitter, forums and more. Traditional broadcast media such as newspapers, magazine, radio and TV will still be around and very influential but are evolving and finding new ways to engage with their audiences through the multiple channels now becoming available through the web. Traditional PR will still be valuable but it is worth considering how to integrate a social media strategy into your businesses communications strategy. Even if, after an assessment of the relevance of social media to your business, you decide that it is not the right medium of communication for your business, you need to at least monitor what is being said about you and your business online and be prepared to act and engage with those commentators in an appropriate way.

# If we participate, where should we go - Facebook, blogs, Twitter?

The most sensible place to enage online is where you customers or stakeholders are. If they are on Facebook, then it’s worth looking at how you can engage with them there. Even if your business doesn’t blog, do your customers or key influencers in your sector blog? If so, how might you engage with those bloggers in a genuine way?

# How can you tell if anything you find online is fake eg fake rave reviews of a product or company?

Yes, there is a lot of fake stuff and rubbish out there! How can you tell if someone you meet at a party is a fraudster or conman or raving psycho? There are “tells” usually - especially if you spend some more time with them. Similarly, there are also “tells” online - you can check out previous blog posts which will tell you about the blogger over a period of time, you can Google someone for more background information, you can judge overall tone and content and so on.

# Is there scope for using social media in a business to business context?

Most business blogs we hear about tend to be in the consumer context but many of the delegates offer services and products to other businesses. I was able to share the case study of THFC Space, the blog that I manage for The Housing Finance Corporation (THFC) where I work part-time - as a not for profit lender lending over £1.5billion to the social housing sector, THFC Space’s target community are Finance Directors, Chief Executives and Treasury Managers within this niche sector. Social media is about peer-to-peer communication so THFC Space engages the company’s peer group - as guest bloggers as well as readers. This creates a network of experts sharing specialist views with each other and positions THFC as a lender that has in depth knowledge about the hot issues that are affecting its customers’ businesses.

An article I wrote with a detailed discussion of the THFC Space project can be downloaded as a pdf in the box below.

# What about Return on Investment (ROI)?

As small and medium enterprises, a hot topic was the ROI of social media. How can you judge the success and outcomes of social media? What about the time it takes to engage online?

Well, there are many tools to analyse the success of a social media project eg the number of visitors, the number of times a pdf is downloaded, the geographic location of visitors, the number of links from other blogs. You can see if pretty much real time which blog posts are popular and how many comments are coming in about a topic you’ve discussed.

Taking a step back from social media, how do you measure the ROI of giving your time for free to say, write an article or give a talk such as the one we were all engaging in last night. Giles, Silvia and I spent time preparing and meeting together then coming to the event - how many hours of work did that represent? And what was the ROI for us? Or the ROI for the delegates taking the time out from their evenings to learn something valuable for their business? I would suggest that the ROI for social media is in the same ball park as the ROI for such activities. For me, the ROI of real world events and of my blog / engaging in social media are very similar - raising my profile as a writer, increasing my knowledge and expertise in my field of interest and networking with others with similar interests: all valuable in different and sometimes unpredictable ways - and sometimes, even resulting in commissions for work.

If you were at the talk last night and have any comments or questions you’d like to add, I’d love to hear from you - please add a comment below or email me via my contact page. If you weren’t there, I’d love to hear your views, too, so please do join the discussion as well.

And before I sign off, I’d really like to thank Mei Sim Lai for inviting us to speak and for making it such a fun and lively event!

Download our presentation and also an article on THFC Space from the box below:

If the box above is not showing, you can click on the following link to download the pdfs - http://www.box.net/shared/82r76olov8

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009 at 1:34pm

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My Local London: Richmond to Hampton Wick Riverside Walk

In my last podcast (#23) I started an occasional series called “My Local London” where I share some of the things about London that I find interesting, unusual and fun, as someone who has lived here for over 20 years. In that podcast, I talked about The Fourth Plinth on Trafalgar Square. Today, I’d like to share with you a riverside walk we did the other day from Richmond to Hampton Wick. I’m doing this by way of a written post instead of a podcast as I didn’t bring my digital recorder with me on the walk - and also, I’ll be including some directions about the walk so you may want to print out this post if you want to go on the walk yourself.

One of the best things about London is the River Thames, which bisects the city from West to East. You can walk along most of the Thames Path across Central London through some of the city’s most historic sites. You can also head out East towards the sea or West up towards the source. I’m particulary fond of the western segments from Hammersmith westwards. You can do most of them in short, manageable legs as there are many tube or train stations that make it convenient to walk along in half or full day chunks.

The walk we did this week started at Richmond station. Coming out of the station, turn left and walk along the high street (The Quadrant) full of shops, cafes and restaurants. Richmond has the feel of a lively, cosmopolitan - and affluent - town and you could spend quite awhile shopping in the upmarket boutiques and refreshing yourself with cappucinos and lingering over lunch. But we were out for fresh air and exercise so we strode past them all briskly, heading down The Quadrant until Duke Street where we turned right.

Duke Street open out onto Richmond Green. Walking diagonally left across the Green, you suddenly have a vast sense of space after the confines of your tube or train journey and the hustle and bustle of the high street. At the far corner, aim for Old Palace Lane, a cute little street of workers cottages that look like they have come straight out of Wordsworth’s Lake District - but no doubt costing millions these days!

At the bottom of Old Palace Lane, the river opens out to the left and right, with Twickenham Bridge on your right. Turn left and the footpath will now take you all the way to Hampton Wick, with the river on your right.

The route takes you past some lavish houses and flats on your left, with cafes spilling out onto the paved riverside walk. There were ice cream vans and scores of young kids and teenagers as well as young families and older couples mingling in this area between Twickenham Bridge and Richmond Bridge.

Once you pass Richmond Bridge and head onwards to Petersham Meadow, the scene becomes quieter and more rural. Up on the left, the red Gothic building of The Star and Garter nursing home for ex-servicemen and -women rises up over the meadow. The path gradually narrows as trees and shrubs now close in and it suddenly feels like you’re in the middle of the countryside, with very few other people but a few cyclists and other walkers.

This lovely rural section carries on for a few miles until you reach Teddington Lock, where smart apartment blocks appear on the far bank across the neatly tended lock. At this point, you can cross the footbridge to the other side and head towards Teddington Station but we stayed on the south bank and carried onwards towards Hampton Wick.

At Lower Ham Road, we came across a canoe club and several teams of school children learning to canoe in single kayaks and also a team of them in a double catamaran. It looked great fun to be careening through the water on such a bright clear day - although the kids were having some difficulty co-ordinating their strokes: they needed a big scary guy beating a drum Ben-Hur style, I reckon…

Just before Kingston Bridge, we found the Boaters Inn, an unexpected gastropub in a rather unprepossessing wooden building. Our feet were aching and we were ravenous so we stopped for a late lunch - and to our delight, the food was delicous, the portions were huge and the inside of the Inn has the feel of a modern brasserie! Between us, we checked out the fish and chips, fish pie, pan fried mackerel and grilled pork chop before diving into chocolate brownies and ice-cream, summer pudding and lemon cheesecake. Yum!

Moving on, we came to civilization at Kingston Bridge where there is a huge John Lewis! We didn’t tarry there for a shopping break as we would have liked but now headed to the north bank across the bridge for a stroll in Hampton Palace Park, which is free and not connected to the palace itself these days. Back in the day, though, it would have formed part of Hampton Court Palace grounds, as signified by the landscaped water feature and fountain in the park that draws your eye to the eastern facade of the palace in the far distance. As we meandered through the long grass, we came across herds of deer that glanced up curiously at us, descendants from the deer that Henry VIII used to hunt here.

The original plan had been to walk all the way along the river to Hampton Court train station but after just over 8 miles, we were flaked so we headed to Hampton Wick station which was nearer and headed back Waterloo (trains are every 20 mins or so and journey time is about 30 minutes).

The map of our walk is below - click on it to go to a detailed view with mileage in Google Pedometer:

Resources:

There are a range of guides to the Thames Path

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Saturday, June 20th, 2009 at 1:19pm

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Abso-bloomin-lutely Ascot

Whenever I think of Royal Ascot, I think of Audrey Hepburn as Eliza Doolittle in Cecil Beaton’s amazing cream and black creation with that huge hat, yelling out, “Move your bloomin’ @rse!” to the horror of the smart set that Henry Higgins has insinuated her into. The fabulous thing is, of course, that Royal Ascot isn’t a fictional event that only appears in a Hollywood musical but a real event that has been happening for centuries and still continues today - and anyone these days can enjoy a abso-bloomin-lutely lovely day at the races, whether you’re a Queen or a flower girl.

We were heading out on a commuter train from Waterloo to Richmond this morning to go for a walk by the river and to our delight, found ourselves on the Ascot train. Normally, the commuter route is a dreary one, with washed out office workers sitting glumly reading the papers or just staring out of the windows. To be fair, the reverse commuter train that heads out to the dormitory towns is less grim in that it’s usually fairly empty and conveys people like us, heading out of the Big Smoke for a day trip or to visit friends.

This morning, Waterloo station was a-buzz with ladies in shimmering dresses and amazing hats. They stood out like shining creatures amongst the bemused travellers wheeling trolley bags and late commuters rushing to the office. We found our train and as we walked down the platform, it felt like we had stepped out of time into another more glamourous and beautiful time as groups of gorgeously dressed men and women bubbled around us.

When we got onto the train, it was such fun to see the glorious sea of hats bobbing up and down over the tops of the carriage seats. The carriage was noisy with laughter and excitement! There was a lively group of ladies sipping cappuccinos and chatting excitedly. In another group, there were a couple of dashingly handsome gentleman in morning coats, their top hats on the hat rack above their seats. They were all thrilled when I asked to take their picture - check out the slideshow below:

We felt like such slobs in our jeans and walking shoes!

Background


Asco
t is a racecourse near Windsor and while there are races round the year, Royal Ascot is THE annual summer event where everyone dresses up to the nines and what the ladies are wearing, especially their hats, is as important - if not more so - than the racing.

The Ascot website has a good summary of the History of Ascot.

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Friday, June 19th, 2009 at 8:18pm

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Creating Value through Web 2.0

I’ve been invited by the Institute of Directors (IoD) - along with my co-author Silvia Cambie and usability expert Giles Colborne - to give a talk on how businesses can take advantage of Web 2.0 to build networks and communities around their products, services and brands. The event will take place on Monday 22 June at 6.30pm at the Guildhall in the City of London.

The details are below, with booking information at the end. If you are able to come along, do add a comment to let me know and I’ll keep an eye out for you. Or just come and say hi afterwards.

Also, if you have any specific questions or topics you think it would be helpful for us to cover, please do add a comment. We’ll see if we can cover it in the talk or in the question time afterwards.

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Creating Value through Web 2.0

Venue: City Marketing Suite, Guildhall, Basinghall Street, London EC2P 2EJ
Time: 6.30pm to 8.30pm on Monday 22 June 2009

Internet communication is evolving the way we do business. Blogging, podcasting and social networks like Linkedin and Facebook are extending the ways we engage with people via digital means.

Web 2.0 is creating a business environment based on knowledge sharing and collaboration. The cyberspace is a new landscape with its own cultures and accepted rules of behaviour.

Social media offer businesses a powerful means of building networks and communities around their products, services and brands. However it is not a simple matter of ‘Build it and they will come’. A strategic approach is needed to produce ‘sticky’ content and create value from on-line interactions.

The speakers will give an overview of the social media and social networks used by businesses. They will introduce ways of engaging effectively with on-line communities and will discuss the intersection of commerce and social networking.

Silvia Cambie ( Director, Chanda Communications ) and Yang-May Ooi are authors of “International Communications Strategy Developments in Cross-Cultural Communications, PR and Social Media” to be published in July 2009 by Kogan Page. Silvia is a cross- cultural communicator and a journalist. Yang-May is a writer specialised in social media and a blogger.

Giles Colborne
is an expert in User Experience. He is Managing Director of cxpartners and former President of the UK Usability Professionals’ Association.

Tickets: £25 for IoD members inclusive of VAT of £3.26 and £28 for non members inclusive of VAT of £3.65
Contact: Mei Sim Lai OBE DL, Hon Secretary, IoD City Branch, IoD Hub, 35 New Broad Street, London EC2M 1NH
Tel: 020 7194 8385, Mobile: 07903 153793, Fax: 020 7194 8386, Email: MeiSim@LaiPeters.org

Photo: thanks to Daniel F. Pigatto from flickr.com (CCL)

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Friday, June 12th, 2009 at 2:00am

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The Fourth Plinth (podcast #23)

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In today’s show:

My running is back on track - hurray! I talk about my aim to enjoy the process of running and not set any race or marathon goals in case my overly goal-focused personality hijacks the whole purpose of this hobby - which is to have fun!

Inspired by Matt’s You Are There segment, over at his rundiggerrun podcast, I start an occasional series My Local London, where I share with you some places in London which I find interesting, curious or are just plain nice to hang out in. Today, I’m in Trafalgar Square, taking a look at The Fourth Plinth. Discover how YOU can be a work of art by taking part in The Fourth Plinth project….

Also, here’s some video I captured via my phone camera of some street dancing outside the National Gallery on the north side of Trafalgar Square.

You can listen to the podcast using the grey podcast-player at the end of this post…

…Or, in the main player below, where you can also check out other Fusion View podcasts:

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You can also subscribe to receive my podcast free via iTunes

Listen Now:


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Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, June 10th, 2009 at 6:50pm

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A Wedding in South Africa - by Guestblogger Lois Nicholls

A South African writer, Lois Nicholls, contacted me via a mutual friend in Spain to tell me about her new book, ‘Aussie, Actually’, and also offer this touching “fusion story” about a South African’s return home from Australia.

She writes:

Alive! The word pops into my head as we enter Johannesburg’s Oliver Tambo Airport. Ironic really, isn’t it, for a country with one of the highest crime rates in the world? Yet I feel it. Sense it. Am reminded of a friend who says he comes alive every time he returns – feels boring, bland and
disconnected for weeks in his new country, Australia every time he goes back.

“An electricity in the air” is how another friend describes it. People seem to laugh more, live more. These thoughts resonate as my daughter and I arrive jaded yet expectant. We collect cling-wrapped suitcases and plastic piping containing an art canvas paintstakingly painted by my mother in law for my niece’s wedding gift and embark on our flight to Durban.

On arrival in Durban, we load luggage onto trolley, relieved and mildly surprised everything is still intact. We meet my precious parents who are so, so happy to see us. It seems like yesterday yet it is years since our last visit. My friend’s Italian in-laws are there too – collecting gifts and a watch needing repair from the bowels of my cling-wrapped suitcase. In the commotion of unwrapping suitcase, embracing parents and searching for
gifts, I leave the plastic piping carrying painting in the middle of Arrivals. I remember my concentration lapse halfway to my parent’s home.

The joy of arriving is tainted by the concern that I will never see the painting again. Surprise! Euphoria! They have found the painting. Early the next morning, my dad and I brave the hour’s journey back to the airport to claim my well-traveled artwork. I acknowledge the piping looks like a bazooka and marvel no-one called the bomb squad. We repeat the hair-raising journey back home to my parent’s picturesque little retirement village lined with neat homes and colourful gardens. The views are sensational. I marvel at how green and lush everything looks. Plants grow fast. There is broccoli in the garden, a prolific crop of bright red pepperdews (which my dad later bottles for me), green peppers are ready for picking and a profusion of pink dahlias bloom in the front garden. My mother carelessly tosses seeds into a flowerbed of rich, dark soil and they sprout within days. I learn the bright orange flowers that joyfully spill over a trellis in the back yard are Black-eyed Susans. I wonder if they’ll grow in my dry shale garden back home.

I photograph old oak trees and magnificent liquid amber’s dressed in their bright red autumn wardrobe. We take a walk within an extensive boundary of electric fencing and encounter impala, blesbok and zebra. The grass smells sweet. I am reminded of my youngest son who when asked what he loved most about South Africa, thought for a moment and then said: “The smell.” At the time a more cynical me wondered what he meant. I now understand.

A warm, friendly neighbour delivers freshly baked carrot muffins and says she’ll leave cheese puffs at the front door early on Sunday morning. Random acts of kindness are a hallmark of this little village. Green rolling mountains. The Howick Falls – gaily decorated with colourful, newly washed blankets at its summit. Where else in the world?

Everywhere are political posters marking April’s elections. Zuma is pasted on the town’s pillars and posts – his beaming face even covers an entire electricity box like Zuma wallpaper. My daughter is amused by a ‘Vote for the Tiger’ poster and takes a photograph to show her brothers back home. “He looks far too friendly to be a tiger,” she says of a grinning Rajbanzi.

We travel deep into KwaZulu-Natal (more…)

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Friday, June 5th, 2009 at 2:00am

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Portrait of Yang-May Ooi

Fusion View is created by Yang-May Ooi, author of The Flame Tree and Mindgame, legal thrillers set in Malaysia and London, first published by Hodder & Stoughton.

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