Not digital per se but a discovery through digital buzz: turning Paris into a giant playground.
Light and airy… perfect for a Friday post.
Archive for the ‘Inspiring’ Category
Swings In Paris by Jerome G Demuth, aka “G”
Posted: July 9, 2010 in Design, Inspiring, viral / buzzTags: Jerome G Demuth, Paris swings
Design For The Ripple Effect: Small Act, Big Change
Posted: June 26, 2010 in Branding / Content, Causes, Communication, Content curator, Design, Digital, Global, impact, influence, Inspiring, Personal branding, Social Media, viral / buzzTags: Andy Smith, Berkeley, Haas School of Business, Jennifer Aaker, Robert Chatwani, Sameer Bhatia, Stanford, The Dragonfly Effect, UCLA
by Professor Jennifer Aaker.
I’m *really* thrilled to introduce you to Jennifer Aaker, General Atlantic Professor of Marketing at Stanford University, CA, who wrote this post for HushPlush Bubble. Enjoy!
Two years ago, I thought social media and its applications were quite simply a waste of time. Who would want follow random people on Twitter, Tweet about grocery store experiences, or update their Facebook status to say they have a case of the Mondays? I thought: would I ever want to do any of this instead of:
- enjoying the sunshine,
- working on a research paper, or
- talking to someone IN REAL LIFE?
With only one foot in social media, I was looking for a way out. But my husband, Andy Smith, an early-adopter of all things tech and geek par excellence kept me in. I saw him surf the space, learn fascinating, obscure stuff, sign on to betas of scores of services and meet fascinating new people. I thought there was a small chance I might be able to get just a tiny glimmer of the value he saw in the space, and though I was doing my best to hang on with an open mind, I was really just looking for a plausible reason to completely bail out.
It all changed for me in May 2008. I was teaching a class called Creativity and Innovation at Berkeley’s Haas School of Business. On the last day of most of my classes, I summarize my ‘top ten’ list – insights I hoped students took away from the class. However, after many years of teaching, I finally realized my summaries were rarely ‘sticky.’ Few people seemed to get much out of them and it was just better to ask students what they learned. My MBA student, Robert Chatwani, responded that he learned to ‘reverse the rules’ to a greater degree, and shared a slide deck to illustrate how he and his friends and family tried to adopt that ‘reverse the rules’ philosophy during that semester. Earlier in the year, his best friend, Sameer Bhatia, was diagnosed with leukemia. He needed a bone marrow transplant to survive. Doctors estimated Sameer’s chances of finding a match at 1 in 20,000. Robert and Sameer’s friends and family took that challenge as simple and clear. If the chances were 1 in 20,000 to find a match, that meant all they had to do was register 20,000 South East Asians into the bone marrow registry. But they had only weeks to accomplish this goal. The story that Robert then told changed me fundamentally. He laid out how Sameer’s friends and family harnessed free social media – personal blogs, Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, Google Docs – as well as email and some traditional media – to get 24,611 South East Asians into the bone marrow registry in 11 short weeks. And among those 24,611 was a perfect match for Sameer.
This story changed me fundamentally; it became clear that – with a single clear goal, and an ability to understand:
- the psychology of grabbing attention,
- how to tell a story to engage others, and
- how to design for openness (enabling anyone with will to act easily and nimbly),
…social media could be used for extreme good, in a way that is astonishingly effective. This story also has changed my family’s life. It has motivated the creation of a Stanford GSB case, a Stanford GSB elective, a book, The Dragonfly Effect that Andy and I co-authored as well as a business, Vonavona Ventures that Andy started to support organizations that take a hybrid approach to success.
Here’s the video:
—-
Keep your eyes peeled for the upcoming book The Dragonfly Effect, Design For The Ripple Effect, due out this Fall. Many many thanks to Jennifer and Andy for this contribution and for letting me contribute my drop to their book.
You can follow Jennifer on Twitter, she is @aaker and Andy is @kabbenbock.
As always, feel free to connect with @merrybubbles…
Good + Innovative Design = Gold Ad Award Winner At Cannes Lions 2010
Posted: June 24, 2010 in Branding / Content, Causes, Communication, Content curator, Design, Green, impact, influence, Innovative, Inspiring, Surprising, viral / buzz, Visual identityTags: BBDP, BlackBerry, Cannes Lions 2010, Charity, Design, Outdoor display, Paris, Solidarités International, Water Day, Water installation, Water Talks
In my World Water Day post on March 22nd, I shared with you an inspiring and totally innovative live ad that was on display in Paris, at the Place du Palais Royal.
I’m thrilled to tell you today that the “Water talks” installation designed for NGO Solidarités International by BDDP won a Gold Award in the Outdoor Display category at the Cannes Lions 2010 international advertising festival.
Congratulations to the French agency BDDP Unlimited and its team.
Here’s the full video of the installation, from setup to display:
Here’s again what I’d captured ad hoc on my BlackBerry:
Technology Design vs Usability
Posted: June 23, 2010 in Branding / Content, Communication, Content curator, Design, Digital, impact, influence, Inspiring, marketing, Public relations, Reputation management, Social MediaTags: design vs usability, sign, usability
A Tuitive overview… by Jonathan Arnold to give us some perspective on a few aspects that we tend to take for granted (at least, I do).
Is that going to change your perspective on design vs usability?
Search Marketing News Roundup – Week June 14th-18th
Posted: June 21, 2010 in Branding / Content, Causes, Communication, Content curator, Deals, Digital, Global, impact, influence, Innovative, Inspiring, marketing, Public Affairs, Public relations, Reputation management, Social Media, Unexpected, useful, viral / buzzTags: Ace Metrix, Adwords, Analyze Competition, Annotations, AOL, Apple, Bebo, Bing, BLiNQ Media, Boston Globe, BrightRoll, comScore, Covario, Ernst&Young, Experian Hitwise, Facebook, Foursquare, Google Commerce Search 2.0, Gowalla, Kenshoo, Localeze, Magnetic, Microsoft, OpenBlock, Softbank, TomTom, Twitter, Twitter Places, WebVisible, Yahoo, zynga
Here’s a summary of what you need to know in search marketing from last week, in order of recency… Click on headlines to read stories.

Friday, June 18th
Search Agency Update – What Are Companies Up To?
Search Seen As Biggest Single Winner Of U.S. Online Ad Spend In 2010 [Study]
Thursday, June 17th
Boston Globe Adopts Open-Source Neighborhood News Mapping Platform OpenBlock
Google Commerce Search 2.0 Means On-The-Fly Customization For Shoppers And Retailers Delight
AOL Dumps Bebo For Reported $10 Million
Wednesday June 16th
AdWords Now Tells Advertisers About Competitors’ Performance
Facebook Is A Major Video Ad Player And Zynga Its Secret Weapon
Tuesday June 15th
Twitter ‘Places’ Bold Move Towards Paid Search With Foursquare, Gowalla, Localeze, TomTom Ties
Zynga To Boost Asian Presence With $147 mln Investment From Softbank
Monday June 14th
Yahoo, Microsoft U.S. Search Market Shares Grew Fastest in May – comScore
Google vs Bing On Maps And User-Content Overlays
Happy reading !



