Thursday round-up: 2gether, 2 winners, 2-pennorth

Quick round-up; am in Belfast tomorrow at SSEI so won't be an end-of-the-week trawl.

- Enjoyed my one day at 2gether08; mixed feedback, but then that's what you get with a mixed crowd, I guess...and a mixed line-up; networking was great, even if the social media-meets-social good crowd is a realtively small and incestuous one. Do check out the site for video of the sessions and speakers: there was a lot there....include myself and Cliff from UnLtd now in full technicolour video apparently....

- At the event last night, they announced the New Statesman New Media Award winners. Check out the list here, including two SSE Fellow-led/involved organisations, Patient Opinion and School of Everything. Congratulations to Paul Hodgkin and Andy Gibson (and the rest of Everything), as well as all the other nominees, which included SSE Fellow Nathalie McDermott for the excellent SavvyChavvy

- Am not avoiding talking about this, but easier to check out previous posts, or my comments on Rob's blog for my two-pence worth of views....

- Doing very nicely by doing good: the Economist's take on microfinance making macro profits

- Room to Read founder John Wood featured in the Sunday Times; interesting feature on an amazing organisation

- Lots on social enterprises in the health sphere and pensions....check it out on Third Sector et al. You'll be glad to know you can TUPE yourself over. For nurse-led stuff, you'd do well to check out Entreprenurses (and their recent 5-part podcast), the fount of all knowledge and expertise on the subject

- Finally, self-referential link news: this blog got picked up by New Start (who also have a decent article on 'accidental social entrepreneurs') and, halcyon days indeed, Social Enterprise Coalition's Media Monitor....

Podcasts and audio links and updates

I linked the other day to some recent podcasts on Social Innovation Conversations and that got me thinking about the various other bits of audio I've been listening to of late; some of this is repetition of previous podcast posts, but anyway:

- You can do a lot worse than Peter Day: both his InBusiness and his Global Business programmes. And, topically enough, the last programme of the latter was from the Skoll World Forum for Social Entrepreneurship. Shame that a UK-based programme on the subject was so US-centric but maybe next time....

- SmallBizPod is good (as is the blog and their news RSS feeds); hope that Alex Bellinger will put online some stuff from the Shine Unconference which he came to

- Also enjoying the Bottom Line with Evan Davis; always interesting when the 3 CEOs he has each week are from organisations of vastly different scale and sector...

- Others to watch out for are the various US magazines (Harvard Business Review, Stanford Social Innovation Review) and universities (MIT etc) which are putting more and more material online.

- Finally, for a bit of light-ish relief, the Bugle which, in my humble opinion, is carat-gold genius.

Friday round-up: Coca-Cola, Clay, Causes

Another week passes, and for your Bank Holiday reading, we present... the Friday round-up:

- Some good recent posts from some of the Social Enterprise Ambassadors: Matt Stevenson-Dodd, Daniel Heery and Chris Allwood; all well worth a read

- I've banged on a lot about the need for blogs to be authentic and honest; Stephen Bubb's blog, whilst he divides opinion, continues to deliver on both fronts: entertaining, name-drop-tastic, frank posts that feel like a conversation: how many ACEVO members will follow his lead, I wonder?

- This is a useful intro on using Social Media for Social Change

- And, as a nice foil to that, here's a piece about how Facebook Causes don't tackle root causes: or how social media is only useful if it impacts in the real offline world....

- Clay Shirky video that discusses where we find the time to watch TV, blog and the like.... [hat tip Beth]

- Interesting article on developments in Chinese philanthropy of late (post-earthquake)

Edge Upstarts Awards are happening on June 18th at Lindley Hall (near Pimlico); keynote speaker is Ed Balls....and the Enterprising Solutions Awards are also open for nominations / entries (till July 1st). Don't be put off by our CEO Alastair being a judge for both!

- The 9 myths of fundraising diversification is quite interesting: for those who need to do it (in these times of credit crunches and the like) to ensure no over-reliance in any one area; it's been a key part of SSE's strategy over the last few years, and this is good on stuff to consider before you start

- Simon Berry, CEO of the mighty Ruralnet, has been pushing an idea about using Coca-Cola's distribution system to help send out rehydration tablets in the developing world; support the campaign by joining the Facebook group or viewing the website here

Have a great weekend.....

What is social enterprise? animation

Just a brief animation to end the week, courtesy of SEC and Inside Job productions (itself a division of Media For Development, established and run by SSE Fellow James Greenshields). Enjoy:

Wednesday round-up: OTS, Olympics, Obama

In a radical break with tradition, here's a Wednesday round-up for you of relevant news, views and opinion.

- First up, I've tried to capture a fair bit of Skoll, and post-Skoll coverage: that would be a links page on its own, though, so best viewed and checked out via our Del.icio.us bookmarks link at http://del.icio.us/SSE/Skoll which encompasses a pretty decent cross-section....

- A social enterprise business park as an Olympic legacy: sounds good. And most interestingly, put forward by someone who is a practitioner, not an umbrella org looking for funds; and we used Calverts for our last big printing job (highly recommended)

- When Muhammad met Liam (Yunus and Black): interesting conversation transcript

- A compare and contrast on social franchising (US- based) from Social Enterprise Reporter

- CSR as a business strategy

- Decent piece on (social) entrepreneurship / government policy in HBR; incidentally, there is a piece in the current Stanford Social Innovation Review which suggests what the new US president (come on Obama!) should do in this field. More on this soon...

- Also in SSIR is a piece about the relationship between producitivity and impact in the non-profit sector; it's called "More Bang for the Buck" which gives you an indication of where it's coming from. I think I took more from this case study

- Big welcome to the first 4 UK Ashoka Fellows, and congrats to Ben Metz for pulling off a good event the other evening. The Fellows are Camila Batmanghelidjh, Al Harris, Bob Paterson, and Faisel Rahman.

- OTS has released a piece of research from Rocket Science on Social Enterprise Networks. I found this useful and informative, but I'm not sure if that's only because I'm approaching sector-geek status. What the report does do, alongside give a good overview of regional and sub-regional networks, is emphasise the need for more peer-to-peer learning / networks....and wisely pulls out SSE as a case study. :0)

More soon, when the frenzy of the last few weeks calms itself.....do buy some extra reading in the meantime :0)

Is your website mainstream?

Noted today how the School of Everything (who live upstairs from us) blogged about how they hoped to see more people browsing on their website using Internet Explorer rather than Firefox, on the basis that this would demonstrate they are going 'mainstream'. They then compare this to the Wikipedia breakdown of the average percentages of browser use.

This seems to me an eminently successful exercise, and a useful 'finger-in-the-air' assessment for whether you are just reaching white 30 year-old men who like reading Clay Shirky, watching TED video podcasts and twittering or friendfeeding every waking moment. You know who you are (he said, looking in the mirror). Wonder what the breakdown would be for all web 2.0 sites?

Not really applicable in SSE's case, as we're hardly web 2.0 (this blog aside), but happy to report that Google's Analytics tells me we're pretty much bang on the Wikipedia average: 71% Explorer, 22% Firefox, 6% Safari, a bit of Opera (so to speak) and then the odds and sods. Must attract more geeks to the site.... :0)

SavvyChavvy

On a list of things I thought I'd never link to, a site with the name SavvyChavvy would probably feature. But it's not a micktaking site or a spoof online joke: it's a serious initiative to connect gypsy and traveller communities in the UK who are, by their very nature, often particularly isolated from each other. It allows young travellers in particular to connect to their peers, which is often as much about connecting East European Romany to their UK counterparts.

Does this section the community off in itself? Well, possibly, but providing them with a safe space to connect and communicate away from the excesses of Facebook groups and comments (there have already been 'spoof' profiles set up within the site, prompting new culturally-specific questions) seems like a sensible thing to do, especially when coupled with on-the-ground internet training. You can only join the community if you're part of the traveller community at SavvyChavvy.com (it's a social network built with Ning) but you can see some accompanying video clips here, and how the local South East TV news reported it.

Hopefully it might also go some way to reclaiming, or repositioning, the word 'chav', given that it is largely thought to come from the Romany word 'chavi' for a young person.

Congratulations to Jake Bowers and SSE Fellow Nathalie McDermott on a great initiative.

UnLtd World: voyage of discovery?

As I mentioned recently, I attended the UnLtd World launch recently, which was held in a dingy nightclub in a road tunnel by London Bridge (if the intention was to make us feel slightly seedy / 'underground' on our way in, then it succeeded!). I was keen to attend, because I've been following its development ever since a very early meeting about the concept almost a year ago.

Certainly, in the rash of web 2.0 / third sector projects, I think it has as much chance of success as anything. Like most judgements, this is based for me on the product but, equally importantly, the person. Firstly, the site is very usable, pretty intuitive and with lots of useful features, specifically designed for use by social entrepreneurs (resources, relevant groups) or to be interesting to them (shoutbox microblogging, Q&A debates etc). It seems to be gathering momentum, although (and this is one caveat), it's difficult to tell if you don't add friends....(sounds like a dense point, but ways into the information other than through friends is crucial: I'm beginning to find some of these).

Generally, I feel positive about its chances, and the second reason for that is about the person leading it, Alberto Nardelli, who has insisted on its openness and usability by others from the start. Though 'closed' in that you have to register, it is open in terms of its structure (APIs, feeds etc) and that ethos is written through Alberto and the site like a stick of rock. I remember at the original discussion, someone said that it was not about being "King of the Hill" anymore, but building "the hill" (being it even) for others to use and interact with. Though at the moment (particularly given the name etc) it seems like more the former than the latter, I think we will see more interesting uses of this 'hill' moving forward. This is where it gets interesting for SSE, in that we can work with Alberto and his team to think about how we best interact with / use / pull from / feed into / re-brand the hill to our own (aka our students and Fellows') purposes; I'm meeting him about this on his return from SXSW.

So I'm pretty positive and will hopefully have more to write about this soon. My solitary "But?" is a version of one that was rather brutally expressed in a comment on the Guardian blog's piece on the site:

"More web 2.0 candyfloss. You could surely do more for your community by getting up off your arse, getting out from behind the computer and just doing a few hours community service."

Now obviously this sets up a rather unfair and untrue either/or scenario (either they'll use UnLtdWorld, or they'll do something in the real world), whereas most of the people signed up are already engaged in real-world projects in one way or another. But we do have to think about where resources are best expended to the furthering of social justice, of social change. I get as carried away by the new tech and geekery as anyone else, and don't want to be Luddite, but I do think there is a rise of slacktivism and what might be called 'hands-free philanthropy'.

This is a wider point than just UnLtdWorld. At the two most recent events I've been to, I've found out about three new web-based philanthropy / social networking / social entrepreneurship initiatives....and there is a real difference between an existing SSE Fellow or UnLtd Award-winner using these sites to further practical ends on the ground, and a whole load of well-meaning people putting shouts out to each other and debating their favourite films. Or clicking a couple of buttons and keeping a healthy distance from all that poverty and disadvantage. It must come down to impact (UnLtdWorld's Research Lab (log in required) looks like an erstwhile attempt to pre-empt this) in the end, and the most effective way of using human and financial resources to achieve an organisation's (or society's) goals.

Ultimately, web 2.0 sites such as this are (incredibly powerful) tools to facilitate things to happen, for changes to be made; they are not the change themselves. At the risk of a bad extended metaphor in reference to the title of this post,  that's what's written at the top of my map whilst charting a course through the ever-changing, somewhat choppy waters of new technology on behalf of SSE. I hope UnLtdWorld proves a useful port of call.

Top 5 most popular posts and other stats

A navel-gazing blog post: I was a late convert to Feedburner, so it took me 6 months in to sign up to it, and I've been hooked ever since. Also a fan of MyBlogLog, but Feedburner is great for keeping tabs on subscribers, posts, reach and all sorts. Scarily, I realise I've been blogging since April 2006 for SSE, which means it will be two years worth' of blogging some time soon. So, some stats:

- 252 posts
- 26,000 page views (according to Typepad); average c. 40 per day since the start (though currently 70)
- c. 350 feed subscribers or so (according to Feedburner).

Check out the graph of slow, organic, audience growth (the big spike was a glitch, sadly):

Feeds



 





Piechart





And here's how the subscribers break down (click on the image for more detail). Google, followed by e-mail (FeedBlitz), followed by Bloglines....etc...

Which is all heading in the right direction, though I think I need to pay more attention to Beth Kanter's advice on How to build your blog audience.

Finally, a list of the top 5 posts on this blog (drum roll please):

1) Social entrepreneur and social innovation blogs
2) Corporate social responsibility and inflection points
3) Why the third sector shouldn't fear blogging
4) Virtual social networking: a blessing or curse? (score one for our intern, Thor)
5) Measurement and scrutiny of the third sector

I'll be tyring to group and theme some of the older posts in coming weeks (bit of retrospective indexing).

Recent social enterprise podcasting....

Never thought I'd say this: am glad to be having a whole week in the office....but what all the travelling around has done, apart from confirm my thoughts that Rail Miles or Green Miles are a good idea, is allow me to keep listening to various podcasts. Here's a brief run down of recent listening:

- The Bottom Line with Evan Davis; this is really growing on me, actually: simple format (3 CEOs discuss their businesses, and another cross-cutting issue) and very accessible; gives a swift insight into their businesses, and the challenges these organisations face.

- SmallBizPod's recent cast on Social Firms was interesting, not least because it interviewed Nigel Kershaw, CEO of Big Issue Invest / Chair of Big Issue. Nigel is a great and plain speaker on this stuff, on cutting through the financial mechanisms, and there are some understated Kershaw gems here, including "we are the Goldman Sachs of the sector" and "we're going to change everything". SmallBizPod were apparently at Voice 08, but I missed them.....Sally Reynolds from Social Firms also features on the cast, and it was interesting to hear about their quality (star) mark for social firms, and her thoughts on the development of that part of the sector.

- If you're interested in China or Russia, then Peter Day's In Business podcast has been really interesting over the last couple of weeks.

- John Elkington, Chief Entrepreneur at Sustainability and co-author of the Power of Unreasonable People, featured on Harvard Business Review's IdeaCast (also, read another review here). HBR also have a new "Green" area and conversation, although it is, as you would expect, at the corporate end of things....

- Other off-topic stuff has included Start the Week (though it is always 'end the week' for me) and the marvellous Mark Kermode / Simon Mayo on film (heartily recommended)

- Finally, worth mentioning that Jude Habib, SSE Fellow, who runs sounddelivery, had a piece in ThirdSector magazine about podcasting as part of their look at web 2.0 type stuff.

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