Thursday, October 26, 2006

the best cufflinks in the world

I have to hand it to the BA Interactive Design students at the London College of Printing... I popped into their studio at about 4:45pm to say hi and see if they wanted to take on a quick creative challenge. The thing is, tonight's the annual MacUser Awards ceremony when companies get Maxine trophies if they've made outstanding stuff. Anyway, I took my dress suit to college (teaching all day) but forgot my cufflinks.
About half an hour after suggesting that they come up with a creative solution to my problem - a pair of LED lights were being fashioned into cuflinks for me!
I'm now sitting on the Tube (typing into my phone) with glowing LED light, very slick, cool things, holding the cuffs of my dress shirt together. The wires run up each sleeve and down the inside of my shirt into small battery holders, one in each pocket. Altogether it took Min (who is now my interactive tailor) about an hour to fashion the electric cufflinks, test them, and put them into my shirtsleeves. I am so delighted that I can't think what to say! I can hardly wait to get to the event... Just another three stops.

Keith

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Magazines and blogs: friends or foes?

Blogs are odd beasts. I mean, they are often just a form of editorial, an 'op ed' item or a column, to use a slightly more traditional term.
They are like a magazine column without the magazine itself! They are also frequently cited as one of the main suspects in the decline of the print side of magazine publishing.
But can this format be used to enhance a magazine title's presence in the market, both for readers and for advertisers? These are the sorts of questions publishers are - or should be - asking themselves: should blogs form an important part of a magazine brand's online presence? How about in print... Can they be integrated into polite print society, or are they irredeemably gauche?
On the technical side, there's not a lot that needs to be done. Integrating a blog into a mag's web site is child's play and obviously will help promote reader interaction.
For blogging into print, scheduling becomes an issue. Do you hold back blog article release dates so print readers aren't getting it many weeks after the online readers? What about comments? Should these be encouraged and included in print in some way? Again, scheduling is the key here.
Another question sometimes asked is whether blogs are important to magazines. Are they worth the effort? The answer to this lies in what sets blogs apart from print publication columns and editorials:

1) they are open to all; anyone can blog. It is a highly democratic medium.
2) Readers can (usually) leave their own comments for others to read.

1 + 2 = boom! Viral marketing.

And in these trying times when finding the RIGHT new readers is even more important than basic readership boosting, viral marketing is a great way to gain and keep specific reader attention.