DigiTales Blog - Mel Carson

September 2007 - Posts

Just seen Johnny Chatterton, a student from Leeds University, on BBC Breakfast talking about his Facebook Group - Support the Monks' protest in Burma.


Given the internet has been shut down over there, this is an incredible example of how people, 80k as I write, are getting together via the web to condemn the government's actions, and keep news from the area coming through thick and fast.

Check out some of the Burmese blogs for some shocking pictures from the last couple of days.

It seems the post Summer weeks are the favourite time for agency summits, conferences, internal all-hands, agency days and client share-alls!

After a quiet spell in the sunshine, I find myself with 6 presentations in two weeks at all-day events. I'm not complaining, just be nice if they were spread out a bit!

P.S. Overheard on the train yesterday from Richmond to Waterloo: "Yeah man! Dat Facebook fingy is wicked yeah! Sign up to it bruvva and get Becky to be your friend innit. Den she'll send you loads of DIRTY pickchuss yeah! Wicked, she's well wicked man!"

Oh lordy......

Gotta be careful here, but The Guardian reports that The Big G will end their agency subsidy at the end of 2008.

Damian Burns, Head of Agency Relations at the media giant and someone who can drink Guinness prolifically, says there's been a "mixed reaction."

I gather the news has not been welcomed by some agencies who depend on the size of the kickback to help them win business, but applauded by others who feel they could do a better job, but up until now haven't had the level playing field on which to prove their mettle.

Would anyone care to comment, not on Damian's drinking prowess, but on the news?

Anyone see Millionaire's Mission last night?

It was doing my head in for most of it, mainly because I couldn't understand why the hell Seb Bishop wasn't saying anything!

It wasn't until the 44th minute that the Miva Mogul piped up with the best idea by far, making the most sense of the issues and demonstrating why he's a digital doyen!

How on earth some of the others made their money I don't know.

Some of them reminded me of Billy Birmingham's 12th Man Tapes, where Richie Benaud says "We work as a team and then we do it my way!"

If you missed it, catch it next week - you might see a few more of those Ask.com ads that appeared at the end of last night's transmission.

Posted Sep 20 2007, 12:26 PM by Mel Carson with no comments
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To coincide with BR's first Online Careers Fair, us bloggers have been encouraged to write on the theme of jobs, so I'm hoping if I tell you mine you'll tell me yours!

It all began in the year 2000....

... I was an eternally resting actor working at Harrods, and had been for 6 years. A degree in drama from Exeter University had propelled me to London and that infernal shop in Knightsbridge and I was trapped, aged 28, with no way out.

I done a few bits and bobs in theatre and TV, but realised the instability wasn't for me so I discovered the internet! Well, obviously I didn't discover it, TBL did, but I realised it may have some employment potential for me.

So I read every book/magazine going, did a week's work experience at a local paper my friend George was the editor of in Kent, and I did a week's course in web design, run by some Russians in East London.

This all meant I was more than qualified to get the job as Shopping & Travel Editor at BTLooksmart!

BTLooksmart was apparently the biggest internet start up outside the US at the time. A joint venture between BT and LookSmart, (a search directory provider based in the US), the investment was said to be $100m to provide search engine directories in a number of European countries, and monetise the traffic through advertising.

With hindsight it was a flawed business model to have display ads and pop-ups on search result pages, although we were the search engine for Tiscali, NTL and BT's ISP homepages, the US HQ were too slow to embrace the PPC and PFP models, and Overture and Google soon took over that whole space.

My job for the 1st six months was to write reviews of websites for inclusion into the directory. My target was a corking 55 per day, although I'd always manage 60+ just to suck up.

Can you imagine 15 editors all cranking out 55 reviews a day, and paying them internet-boom salaries when a search engine bot could do the lot in seconds? What were they thinking!!!

I soon moved on to the product and revenue management side of the business, and was one of seven guys out of fifty staff asked to stay on after BT dumped LookSmart in 2002.

In one year the seven of us, monetising paid inclusion listings on MSN, managed to creep back up to the same revenue number the entire search and display business was generating the year before.

No wonder Microsoft decided to get into the search game themselves......and look where I ended up :-)

In 2004 LookSmart decided to withdraw from the UK, and I was given the honour of turning off the lights in our fabulous office in Waterloo.

It was April 1st..........how appropriate!

Last week saw Aston Martin top a list of CoolBrands in a YouGov poll of 2000 members of the public.

Mulling over the list on the train back from the capital of cool - Paris - having just watched England recieve a colossal drubbing at the Stade de France, courtesy of South Africa , I noticed I was half way there...

...not to London - but to being cool - because I can now afford to be!

1. Aston Martin
2. iPod
3. YouTube
4. Bang and Olufsen
5. Google
6. Playstation
7. Apple
8. Agent Provocateur
9. Nintendo
10. Virgin Atlantic
11. Ferrari
12. Ducati
13. eBay
14. Rolex
15. Tate Modern
16. Prada
17. Lamborghini
18. Green & Blacks
19. iTunes
20. Amazon

Of the Top 20 - 4 are websites & another 5 are digital gadgetry - great for digital marketers!

Chuck in a bar of chocolate, and half of the cool brands don't break the bank if you're after some of their magic to rub off on you by association.

I agree with other commentators, the lack of social networking representation is a bit poor given the cracking uptake in recent months, but there's always next year.

Which is more than can be said for the England rugby team - it'll be another 4 years before we can call them cool again!

Spent my last day in Seattle at the Puyallup Fair, a kind of outdoors ideal home exhibiton meets fun fair meets rodeo-type of shebang (!)

Towards the end of the day I looked around to ask someone the time as I'd forgotten my watch. It took 15 minutes to find anyone (out of 1000s) with a watch on.....why?

Because they have a clock on their mobile phone so why bother having a watch?

Got me thinking.....has anyone thought of wrapping a branding message around the clocks on mobile phones?

Why not incentivise users with a subsidised handset or line rental by serving ads next to the time?

Has this been done before or have I just done myself out of millions of £££!!!

Having just got back from the US all "conferenced out", I switch my time-zone on my calendar back to GMT to find about six speaking ops winding their way into my affections over the next month or so.

Luckily Brett Tabke of WebmasterWorld fame has recently posted a rip-roaring guide to speaking in public at conferences and even includes a section on how to survive your spot while nursing a hangover - really well worth a read!

Hot off the server, this new site is bound to improve John McCririck’s social life!

Nothing to do with the gee gees, Tipped.co.uk is well thought out social-networking cum local-search offering that works wonderfully on your mobile phone too – http://tipped.mobi

With over 4000 users already furiously reviewing hidden gems, from restaurants and hotels to spas and shops, it combines the social aspect with a robust mobile platform.

The site is clean and un-cluttered and as the community grows, the richness of the results getting better and better is a sure-fire bet!

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