It is with almost heart thumping glee that I get to write about the first use of a social mediasurgery in Africa (at least the first I now of).
I met Marlon Parker when he visited Birmingham last year. He taught us really interesting stuff about using mobile phones and went back intent to get a social media surgery started in South Africa.
Today was no ordinary day for the RLabs team as they launched the first African Social Media Surgery. The idea was to take Social and New Media to the public in an open space providing them with basic skills on getting started on this exciting journey. The launch was hosted by Vangate Mall in Bridgetown (Setting up of equipment above), Cape Town and 47 people actively participated by spending at least 15 minutes each with our Social Media Surgeons. These included people signing up for email accounts (gmail), Facebook as well as Twitter accounts. There were people also interested in sharing sites such as Flickr and Youtube with also the occasional person asking about blogging. Below we see Clive, one of our Social Media Surgeons, helping a couple with an email account that could be used for their small business.
The surgeons included some people who had previously learned about using social media from Marlon. One of them, Craig, sums of the group of teachers as:
ex drug addicts and ex gangsters that have completed the course: Social Media for Social Change and various other training at Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT).
Judging from this tweet surgeon and patient appreciated it (which is what we find here).
Birmingham’s Central Surgery carries on in a new venue tomorrow night. The folk at The Studio have kindly offered to host it. For more please look here.
Things sound different in the fog. (Image Beardy Git on Flickr. Click on the Picture to go to his flickr page)
The core piece of advice for any public service on how to make good use of social media is “learn to listen”. It’s the one part of the conversation that sometimes gets lost in the rush to publish.
That’s why I was pleased to find West Midlands Police considering recruiting someone who’s job it is to help them do just that. I’ve already done a little work with WM Police and genuinely admire their determination to value social media for how it connects them to the public through conversation.
Big Brother Watch (a sister organisation to Tax Payers Alliance – very adept users of the social web) raised a number of concerns about this, including:
that this role is designed to prevent criticism of the police from taking place online. Those with understandable grievances should be free to air them in a democratic forum without fear of reprisal. We would appreciate the West Midlands police giving assurances that there will be no black-list created as a result of the web cop’s work.
I can say with absolute certainty that this is not about jumping on people who are criticising us. We sometimes get things wrong, even when we are trying to do the right thing. Policing is a hugely complex business, and it is inevitable, that we will upset some people. If this is the case, we want to hear about it, warts and all. At least if we know, we will have opportunity to put it right, or do better next time.
As I said at the top, listening is the core skill in using social media well.
Having somebody who has an in depth understanding of how to to do that, is experienced in how to respond to what they find and can help others understand the social web is a good idea for an organisation the size of WM Police.
What was curious about the Big Brother Watch piece was the apparent assumption that police listening to the web is automatically a menacing thing. That in turn got me thinking about listening itself. Can it ever be a neutral process?
I think not.
Any professional organisation does have to listen with intent and how you do that depends on a number of factors:
Partly it’s a question of where you stand to listen. If I chose to stand on the balcony I’ll hear one version of a party. On the dance floor I’ll hear another. That can also be true of the net – how you filter what you’re listening to is a conscious decision. My feed reader has some feeds in folders I happily ignore – others get my early attention.
What are you listening for? There are officers who are very skilled at listening to the the net to detect crime. Comms teams listen for reputation. The social web type can also be listening for public feedback or practical neighbourhood problems. They may use similar techniques but with different intentions.
Familiarity matters. We tend to hear what we are used to. In a crowded room I’ll tune out your child but hear mine. I’ll not notice someone use your name but my head will turn at the slightest mention of mine.
We are sensitive to criticism. Sometimes we hear it when it isn’t there. The web is full of good advice for public services, often this is heard as criticism rather than constructive help.
We always filter everything we hear through our own prejudices. Some professions (I presume including detectives and Judges) should have experience/training in listening in a more open fashion, helping them see a truth rather than the patterns which reinforce their assumptions. For most of us though listening is a wholly subjective process.
So listening with a purpose is exactly what this person should be doing, otherwise they would be wasting public money. It doesn’t follow that this will be a malign purpose. Listening to the social web can help the police improve the way they spend public money rather than waste it.
These are my links for January 12th through January 14th:
John Popham’s Random Musings – "I have been quite annoyed by some of the accounts of “heroic” struggles to get to work through the snow, because, it seemed to me, that some of them just weren’t necessary." John on why the web doesn't seem to make it easier for people to work without traveling through snow.
Building the “reusable video” player « Carl’s Notepad – "What i’d like is a player which has the ability to pull content from any source, youtube or vimeo or a traditional video storage platform – I’d also like to add value by providing a feature that allowed me to layer content, questions etc over the top to gain additional benefit from the original content. I’d like to be in a position to reuse our existing video archives and repurpose them, or use other public material from either central government or other local authorities providing the content was reusable”"
Official Google Blog: A new approach to China – "we have discovered that the accounts of dozens of U.S.-, China- and Europe-based Gmail users who are advocates of human rights in China appear to have been routinely accessed by third parties."
I was just talking to someone who’s work overlaps with mine and has just joined twitter. “It’s granny watch really”, she said.
Her grandchild is new and, like all new ones, quite demanding. So her son/daughter need a simple way to communicate with anyone who’d like to know how things are. Doing this on twitter allows the grandparents to keep in touch, share but give the parents a little peace.
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