Collaborative working conference – closing

[Again, apologies for this being super late]

By this point in the conference I was running on empty, a banana was all I managed for lunch, I was pooped and my head was killing me so I ditched the laptop.

However, Simon Berry – Chief Executive, ruralnet uk - achieved the unenviable task of inspiring at the end of the day with his practical and successful examples of collaboration, from working on the open innovation exchange bid, using open, transparent and free ICT tools, to the ColaLife campaign which is making huge strides towards using the Coca Cola distribution networks to save the lives of children in developing countries.

Many of the speakers at the conference talked about collaboration (in all of its forms and levels of formality) as vital to the ongoing success of the sector and it was great to see so many people fired up about the opportunities it could offer them.

Collaborative working conference – web 2.0 session

[apologies for this being posted a bit later than it should have been]

Into the first workshop … Michelle McMahon from Ammado is asking us all about if and how we are using web 2.0.  The experiences vary from users who are passionate to users who are sceptical to people who don’t know yet if it’s for them … my only thought at the moment is that I hope that I’m not annoying anyone with my continuous tapping :-)

There’s an interesting range of what people what to get out of this session; there is talk of using web 2.0 to interact with members, to communicate internally and also to get a better general understanding of what all of these tools are and how they can be used.

So, what is web 2.0?  Web 2.0 is participatory, it is about people creating and sharing online.  At the start of the internet it was talked of as the information age, now it should be thought of as the participatory age.

An interesting thought to start the session, how do people communicate with a ketchup bottle online?

Michelle’s favourite examples of web 2.0 sites at the moment are http://wetellstories.co.uk, a Penguin site which used popular authors to create new stories online, with input from the public.  The site had the effect of raising the profile of both Penguin and the authors involved.  The second highlighted site was for the Obama ’08 campaign http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/hqblog/, rallying support of people online – the site featured an Obama ringtone .. I’m interested to hear what that sounded like.  http://worldwithoutoil.orgis a site which simulated what might happen during a global oil crisis.  For once at a conference the internet is working and Michelle is showing some footage from You Tube from the World Without Oil site.

Some of the other examples of web 2.0 in action included …

  • Organisations such as the NSPCC using fan pages on Facebook to attract supporters 
  • Ebay, working with Mission Fish to administer donations from items sold on Ebay
  • Community pages on the Ammado site for various causes, promoting calls to action through widgets which can be shared on other social networking spaces
  • The Born in September twitter campaign, raising money for Charity Water by targeting people who were born in september
  • powergramo - allowing you to create podcasts using skype
  • Kiva - a site which uses donations to fund micro loans around the world

Some of the delegates had their own experiences of web 2.0, which included …

  • Using a blog to answer questions that you’re constantly asked so that you don’t waste time repeating yourself – you can also link to other sources of useful information
  • Blogging about work which can attract local newspapers in search of a story
  • Smaller charities using free blogs (like wordpress.com or typepad) instead of a website, there is some of the basic functionality of websites

As with all workshops in every conference ever we started to run over time and my stomach was becoming quite vocal as lunch approached.  Michelle looked briefly at future trends affecting web 2.0, such as the increasing visibility of charity – company online relationships.

Off to lunch …