GetAmbITion

Get AmbITion! Communicate, collaborate, create and celebrate getting digital in the arts.

  1. 5 minute theatre, Timespan and Sadler’s Wells – all performing well online!

    5pm 21.06.2011 – 5pm 22.06.2011: http://www.fiveminutetheatre.com – a virtual live theatre project powered by webcasting and standard Scottish bandwidth! Join the National Theatre Scotland’s 5th birthday celebrations, showing online 24 hours of live 5 minute pieces of theatre by anyone for everyone. Hannah’s other company Envirodigital have been the technical consultants, and producers. To provide an insight and case study of the complex process of creating the ievent, NTS have built up a video blog over the weeks.

    Also in this blog: an update on the digital developments of Timespan Museum, Arts and Heritage Centre, Stellar Quines theatre company and Sadler’s Wells.

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  2. Nielsen’s latest survey: most online content should be free, but some should be valued (case in point: NT Live!)

    With the San Francisco Chronicle’s online offering today reporting on Nielsen’s new survey that 85% of internet users want online content to be free, cultural organisations could begin to panic about what the business model is for digitising their product…

    However, as ever, I’m not panicing, and am quietly confident :-)

    Nic Covey, Nielsen’s director of cross platform insights, wrote in a blog post about the report, “Changing Models: A Global Perspective on Paying for Content Online.while there were no clear-cut categories of content that will successfully sell online, there was a “definite maybe,”

    “When asked to focus on specific types of content, survey participants are more willing to at least consider paying for particular categories, especially if they have done so before,” Covey wrote. In four categories – theatrical movies, music, games and professionally produced videos – 50 percent or more said they would consider paying or have already paid for online content. At the other end, less than 30 percent said they would consider paying for social networks, podcasts, news-talk radio, consumer-generated video and blogs.

    The idea that quality content – whether that quality resides in the value of the content or the aesthetic – concurs with the new report from NESTA on the Royal National Theatre‘s NT Live! productions. “Beyond Live: digital innovation in the performing arts” proves that not only did NT Live! productions sell out; they also sold to a different demographic (and so created new audiences for the work); and audiences valued the shared experience of seeing something live and with other people – going against the perception that on-demand entertainment is preferred for digital delivery.

    This is excellent news for the RNT, and great news for the rest of the cultural sector. The new work appears to be sustainable in that a new, wider audience is being reached without impacting the environment by requiring them to travel to a London-based venue. Although NT Live! is a hybrid between a live performance and online experience, the lessons are universally applicable to culture. What we can aim to create digitally is special, unique, contextualised experiences, that new and existing audiences will pay for. They will pay for what is scarce online: meaningful experiences (content and context) and relationships based on something real and trusted (curation and community).

    The artistic/cultural product has become more than just the product. Its become a service! Discuss :-) .

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  3. Re-Rite: get yourself into the Rite of Spring!


    If you’re not sure about orchestral music, or about going to a classical concert, the the Philharmonia Orchestra’s Digital Residency is FOR YOU :-) Opening at the Bargehouse on London’s Southbank on 03.11.2009, the Re-rite project will:
    “reveal every section of the orchestra performing The Rite of Spring simultaneously “as Live” thoughout a four-storey warehouse building. The public will be able to sit amongst the horn players, perform in the percussion section and take up the baton and control sections of the Orchestra as they play”.

    Says the Philharmonia’s Principal Consuctor Esa-Pekka Salonen, who developed the concept with AmbITion champion Richard Slaney – also the Philharmonia Orchestra’s Digital Department boss:
    “Being inside an orchestra, experiencing the sensation of 101 players taking on this iconic music is one of the biggest adrenalin rushes and one that I want to share with the world. Now we’re doing just that.”
    Re-Rite will be open 3-15 November from 10am – 6pm (8pm Thurs & Fri).
    You’ll also be able to experience it online from 3rd November onwards!!

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  4. Social Media – your audiences are aggregating and syndicating their content

    Wave4Wave 4 is the latest in a series of reports from Universal McCann (ummm… the fourth one… see what they did there?) about how people are using social networks, especially in relation to aggregating digital content together that they’ve created – like vids and pics, newsfeeds and chats, etc. This reflects my experience – all my specialist online storage facilities (flickr, blip.tv) send feeds of my stuff to my Facebook profile, which in turn updates my Friendfeed, which in turn updates my blog. As far as Twitter and my delicious bookmarks go, those feeds update everything!! Sometimes I read my Tweets on Facebook before I’ve even tweeted them! [Joke].
    Anyway – the report indicates:
    nearly two-thirds of internet users around the globe have managed their personal profiles.

    • 71.1% have visited a friend’s social network page.
    • In the U.S. 60% have managed their profiles in the last six months, up nearly 50% from 43.2% the previous year.
    • 76% of social network members upload photos, up from 45% the previous year.
    • 33% of social network members upload videos, up from 16.9% the previous year.
    • In the Philippines, more than 98% of active internet users* have watched video online; in Korea, Spain, and the U.S., the figure is more than 8 out of 10.
    • The number of people reading blogs has started to stagnate, with 71% of active internet users reading blogs, up from only 70% the previous year.
    • 17% of active internet users access online content through mobile devices as well as home, work, or school computers.
    • 83% of active internet users view video online.

    So that leaves cultural organisations with some decent evidence that investing in social media is worthwhile, particularly if you can be up-to-the-minute with your news and offers, and porous in your attitude to sharing content with users who are increasingly acting like online digital content experts. If they’re free and easy about letting it all hang out, you should too. It all started here, remember :-)

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Creative Scotland Lottery Fund Culture Sparks Rudman Consulting Arts Council England