GetAmbITion

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

  1. Make It Count Google Analytics Workshop

    AmbITion Scotland are excited to announce a partnership with Culture24 and National Museums Scotland on an intensive Google Analytics workshop in the new year. It is specifically designed to support the cultural sector better understand how their online visitors use their websites.

    Learn more and register now.

    Date: 7 February 2012

    Venue: National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh

    The workshop is designed to offer both strategic and practical advice and will focus on the use of Google Analytics and how best to relate the information it can provide to your overall business development strategy. There will also be several other inspirational sessions relevant to the cultural sector during the day.

    For more information and to register your interest in this event please visit Culture24′s information and registration page. To be eligible to attend you will need to meet a set of simple criteria, be open to sharing your data with others and be willing to put in some time for preparation.

    Workshop details

    How will the workshop be structured?

    During this workshop we will go through the steps to build an ‘analytics strategy’ so that you can implement that strategy in your own Google Analytics account. To help you begin to build an analytics strategy for your site, we will discuss your organisation’s objectives and how this can be translated to the goals of your website. We will look at the types of visitors that come to your site and how they find you online.

    We will then delve into the Google Analytics tool itself, whilst touching on its technical implementation. We will finish the day talking about how to deliver insights from the data GA gives you and how to relate this to all parts of your organisation.

    Ideally, attendees for this workshop should have a good understanding of what their organisation is trying to achieve, what the website is used for, what online marketing is done (if any) and, if possible, an understanding of how the website is built. A little web development and technical knowledge wouldn’t hurt either, but is not necessary.

    Who is involved

    The workshop will be hosted by Culture24′s Jane Finnis.

    Workshops will be led by Clancy Childs who manages the Google Analytics Media and Platforms Support team for Europe, the Middle East and Africa. He has worked with many of Google’s top advertisers to help them implement and derive business insights from Google Analytics. He has previously worked on other Google products including AdSense, Maps, Apps (Gmail) and Checkout. Prior to joining Google, Clancy was one of the first web programmers hired by McCann Erickson at McCann Interactive / Thunder House New York.

     

     

     

     

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  2. Getting Digital Webinar 2: Talking Online 25.03.10

    Hannah Rudman and Chris McGuire’s's presentation slides are also available on the network under Rich Media > Slides.

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  3. Roll up, roll up… it’s the virtual book tour

    {Article originally posted to AmbITion Extranet by Adrian Slatcher}

    Fed up standing in the rain to see J.K. Rowling? Annoyed at having to travel miles to hear what Jeremy Archer has to say? Concerned that you’ll never write another word because of all the Waterstones signings your publisher is insisting you do. All of these are now things of the past thanks to Salt’s Virtual Book Tours. Selected authors will go on a tour of blogs and other literary websites over the next few months.

    Find out more here…

    http://saltpublishing.com/cyclone/

    It’s either a brilliant idea (low carbon footprint, catching bookworms when they’re at their computer just an inch away from the “buy” button) or utterly insane (Google the phrase “trying to get bloggers in line” comes up with the response “you might as well try herding cats”) – either way, it’s a cheap, innovative way of getting a particular author out via new media. The only thing is…on the web, you can’t recycle the same old anecdotes time after time!

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  4. Wikinomics at work: collaborative policies, economics and projects

    {Article originally posted to AmbITion Extranet by Hannah Rudman}

    Virtual collaboration tools, and their strength to make a difference to politics, economics and projects by enhancing knowledge transfer and innovation, are in the news.

    Collaborative politics

    Yesterday, The Observer reported Barack Obama’s internet strategy as being key to his winning of the election: I reported his own social network about 18 months ago, and since then, his campaign has used 3.1m “netroots” – people hooked into Obama’s facebook, MySpace, Twitter and YouTube channels, who effectively pump his messages back out to their own networks and discuss them. Obama has given politics back to the people and invited them into a discussion directly with him: the media sit outside that relationship as they can’t control it. Promising a big investment in the US’s broadband infrastructure, and a YouTube broadcast each week, lets hope we’ve finally got a President who will practice 21st century politics.

    Collaborative economics

    Which brings me onto 21st century economics – Google’s quarterly profits have risen 26% over a period of economic meltdown. The Guardian’s Jeff Jarvis reflects on this today saying:
    “Google’s first advantage is being digital. Who wants to be in the business of stuff any more – building cars, printing newspapers, selling CDs, growing food? Owning and controlling stuff was the basis of most business. And the reflexive response to a collapse in finance and equities used to be to return to the real: buy property. No more. Now the best retreat is to the value of knowledge”..

    Google is based on creating an abundance of data about data, and a platform for countless businesses to be created using that information for niche markets. Similarly Facebook is based on sharing data – with friends and family, but also and more importantly, with a wider network of contacts you wouldn’t normally share so much with. Sharing more has led to more connections, more knowledge transfer and more innovation. Mark Zuckerberg, founder of Facebook and this weekend interviewed in The Observer Magazine says: “Facebook [is] not such an amazing technological feat – it’s just a group of tools and platforms – an evolution of communication”.

    Collaborative Projects
    Ed Mitchell and Clare Reddington of Watershed’s iShed have just launched a really interesting report called “Which Widget For What?” that explores – through measuring a real and virtual project – the different strengths and weaknesses of virtual and physical working as well as the effectiveness of digital web 2.0 widgets to support the knowledge sharing and innovation. The headlines are that physical meetings work best for encouraging people to share ideas and make connections; blogs work well to follow the development and ongoing analysis of a project (its a narrative form); and tools like MindMeister (online, editable, collaborative mindmapping) work well as virtual collaborative tools, pulling together the wisdom of the crowd after the physical event.

    Collaboration and transparency – wikinomics – are clearly working as 21st C business tools for growth.

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