Category: Social Media Surgery

Need a Fairy Blogmother? Fancy being one? Read on…

Since the beginning of the Birmingham Social Media Surgeries lots of people have taken their first steps in blogging and have done fantastically well (here is a list of the ones we know about)

But blogging can be tricky to begin with and after the surge of excitement of getting your first post up, sometimes it’s hard to know what to do next. The good news is that among the Birmingham Bloggers Group there are some kind folks who can help.

So if you’ve been to a surgery and started a blog (which means you’re a Birmingham based community oor voluntary group)  and would like a volunteer ‘Fairy Blogmother’ to give some extra tips and keep an eye on your blog while you get going – all you have to do is:

Write a post on your blog saying you’d like some help and link back to this post

link button(To make a link, copy the address (URL) of this post and write some text that you want to make into the link. If you’re using WordPress, highlight the text and click on the link button) then paste in the address.

You can just ask for help or if you’ve got a question, write about it and someone will try and head over to you blog.

How does it work?

Just by linking to this post (as if by magic) a little trackback will be created and that will let the Fairy blogmothers (and fathers) know that you need some help.  It won’t necessarily appear like magic, but hopefully some Fairy Blog Father or mother  will then leave a comment on your blog post saying they’re willing to help.  With that comment you will get their private e-mail address, which you can use to keep in touch with them.

What is a Fairy Blogmother?

From time to time we get people who would like to help at the social media surgeries saying they can’t make it.  We hope that some might be willing to offer you advice etc by e-mail.   They’ll be doing it out of the goodness of their hearts, so take care not to overburden them.

For more Social Media Help have a look at these guides and if you want help – link here!

For face-to-face help check out details of the next surgeries at Paradise Circus or  BeVocal or the wonderful Digital Brum.

New Birmingham Social Media Surgery June 17th 2009

Nine months on from the very first Birmingham Social Media Surgery and Fazeley Studios hosts another session of free help and advice for Birmingham based voluntary and community groups wanting to get to grips with social media.
Chris Ivens and Mary Horesh at the last socila medis surgery

When & Where

Next Surgery: Wednesday, June 17th, 2009 drop in anytime between 5.30pm to 7.00pm at Fazeley Studios, 191 Fazeley Street, Digbeth, Birmingham, B5 6DR,  link to map. (not BVSC) It’s opposite the Bond and a go kart track. Push the large pale blue door with the silver door knob.

To sign up please go here.

What are they all about?

Volunteers from the Birmingham bloggers group are offering to show voluntary and community groups in the city how you can make best use of social media. It doesn’t matter if you are the head of communications at a major charity or an active citizen in your neighbourhood, if you’re at all curious come along.

More about what has gone on over the past nine months and what you can expect at a surgery here.

The surgeries have been nominated for the Digital Press Awards People’s Choice along with brilliant local activity like Rhubarb Radio, the Big City Talk site and the 4amproject.

In mean time, if you want to come along or know someone thatcould use the free help get them to sign up here so we have an idea of numbers.

Birmingham Social Media Surgeries – taking stock.

Later this month a group of enthusiasts will get together to run another one of Birmingham’s Social Media Surgeries.  It wasn’t supposed to be like this. The original idea was just one as a practical contribution to Blog Action Day, set up by volunteers and run by volunteers.

So far we’ve done five, (I counted wrong before!)  three at BVSC and Two at Fazeley Studios.  The results:

  • At least 60 people from probably 50 organisations – helped.  That’s based on numbers for 3 surgeries, because for two of them we were so busy we all forgot to record who was there and where they were from.
  • At least 33 volunteer surgeons involved, many of them repeat offenders.  They probably average about 5 hours of effort each, plus the organisers,  means a minimum of 175 hours of high quality, highly skilled voluntary effort.
  • Since that first evening – a number of sites have been set up or emerged. For example:

    Birmingham’s Jubilee Debt Campaign came out of that first night and Audrey and Duncan Miller have kept on using it, because they prefer it to their old site.

    Court Lane Allotments blog popped up shortly after the first surgery.

    Birmingham City University Student’s Union is already planning to develop surgeries of their own, inspired in part by their visit to ours.

    The Digbeth Trust is switching it’s web platforms to use more social media after being helped to appreciate the benefits as a surgery patient on a couple of occasions.

    Some have become serial bloggers:

    City Centre Neighbourhood Forum was set up by Karen and Geoff Caine, spurring Geoff on to create Canal Scene a brilliant combination of a blog with Google maps – (Geoff can you switch comments on for me please!)

    The Ramblers locally is now using this blog to explain how they’re getting people walking in  the city and Mohini, who works for them, has already started a blog about Mangoes!

    Other place based sites pop up.

    Acocks Green Neighbourhood Forum has started with this site and already begun connecting with other very local sites.

    East Yardley Neighbourhood Forum (nearby) has also begun the process of shifting their website onto a more social platform.

    Tony at www.cannonhillpeoplespark.net has been along looking for advice on how else they can use the web whilst John Heaven, from well established Lozells.info, also got some great advice on what they can do next.

    These are just some examples, I’m pretty sure there is stuff I’ve forgotten or don’t know about.

    Some people didn’t want to plunge straight into using social media for a charity, their neighbourhood or work and so we have helped create at least half a dozen personal blogs. Some have fallen silent, others are used with great passion.

    This video helps show how much people enjoy the surgeries, and that they are not always the folk you most expect:

    We don’t expect it to stick first time and we encourage people to come back. When they book for the second time, it is their comments that encourage us.

    They include the very practical: “So useful last time, need a little more help with developing the blog lay out,” and “just a matter of fine tuning my site to send it public” or “thanks to the brilliant advice and support we got last time it inspired us to put our website up (just), and we’ll be along to discuss building on our social support!”.

    Notice the language. These people feel like they own these bits of the web. In the past efforts like this have been more likely to lead to moribund pages on communal portals.

    Sometimes people come back already comfortable with the basics and hungry to understand  more technical aspects of how the social web encourages conversation: We want to “extend our blog skills to improve how we use trackback and linking” or: “placing of images within text. What are pingbacks?”.

    Over time they are encouraged to use video, host images in more social places, perhaps even experiment with twitter.

    Aspirations vary.  Some want to “promote our government funded service to the local community.”  Others “as a fundraiser for this organisation , I really need to know how to use social networking sites, develop a blog for former members and to learn about keeping a website up to date. Not all at once!”

    “Not all at once” is important. The one to one (or almost) surgeries mean that people learn what they need as and when they need it.  It is also less intimidating for anyone to go from learner to teacher, so the number of potential volunteer surgeons grows all the time.

    It ain’t broken really.

    I’ve been thinking of ways to change or improve what we do, but mostly people don’t want us to meddle:

    May 2009 Birmingham Social Media Surgery – feedback from Podnosh on Vimeo.

    To the best of my counting,  so far 33 different people have been volunteer surgeons. Some have been at every event, others have come to one and helped hand out tea.  They are not all from Birmingham, Paul Henderson has come from Warwickshire,  Paul Webster Yorkshire (yes, Yorkshire on 2 evenings) Philip Oakley, Kate Spragg, Kasper Sorensen and Simon Howes wend their way from different spots in the Black Country.

    I am going to try and name everyone, because no blogger will shrink from being thrown a link and each deserves credit and thanks.  Rob Annable, Pete Ashton (the orginator of the surgery concept), Jon Bounds (huge levels of effort) Karen Caine and Geoff Caine (who began as patients, set up a blog then became surgeons).  Abby Corfan, Joanna Geary and Nicky Getgood have helped alongside Julia Gilbert (also a passionate organisational helper), Anthony Herron (I think), Jon Hickman and Neil Houston.  Also on the list, and remember these are all volunteers, is Chris Ivens,  Webby award winner Stef Lewandowski, Andy Mabbett and another learner turned surgeon Leonardo Morgado.

    So more than half way through we can add father John Mostyn and son John Henry Mostyn, then Stuart Parker, Antonio Roberts, Danny Smith and Mark Steadman.  That leaves ‘just’ Chris UnittBenjamin Whitehouse, Simon Whitehouse (another who turned up thinking he was there to learn and has been teaching ever since) and finally (apart from the people I’ve inevitably forgotten) Gavin Wray – charmingly popular with the ladies.

    Diane at Fazeley Studios has worked as a volunteer receptionist for us and Candy Passmore at BVSC gave us immediate and generous help with a venue and  support for the first three surgeries.  Digital Birmingham and Be Birmingham have also given us great support by passing the dates around to their networks and encouraging active citizens to come.

    What do the surgeons have in common?

    As far as I can tell nothing more than a desire to help and a belief that social media can advance community groups and community activity.

    We are also all connected to each other through various online and real world networks formed or nurtured in Birmingham over the last couple of years, some further back than that. Without those networks being both online and real world we may not have got to know each other well enough to be happy to collaborate like this.

    What keeps people coming back to give their time?  My guess is that most found that being a surgeon helped them learn faster and learn more.  They also care about Birmingham as a place. It can be exhilarating.  In fact, it  makes me feel great.

    Why else would we do it?

    Birmingham Social Media Surgery No: 6 – May 13th 2009

    So we’ve made it to a full half a dozen  surgeries, cracking. Scroll down for a report on Surgery no 5.

    If you belong to a Birmingham based community or neighbourhood group or charity please Come and join us for the May 13th 2009 Surgery.

    When & Where

    Next Surgery: Wednesday, May 13th, 2009 drop in anytime between 5.30pm to 7.00pm at Fazeley Studios, 191 Fazeley Street, Digbeth, Birmingham, B5 6DR,  link to map. (not BVSC) It’s opposite the bond and a go kart track. Push the large pale blue door with the silver door knob.

    To sign up please go here.

    Social Media Surgery in Birmingham, from HNM_1977 on Flickr
    Social Media Surgery in Birmingham, from HNM_1977 on Flickr

    So what happened last time?  Well, Paul Henderson took the photo above whilst Chris Ivens summed up the point of the surgeries rather neatly:

    Q: What is a Social Media Surgery?  A: With an abundance of buzz-words at every tick and turn and an almost daily mention of twitter in the news we try to look at what technologies could really help your organisation and we’re here to explain in plain English what they are. It’s not a sales pitch nor are you obliged to do anything after the meet, I guess it’s the old cliché; ‘Giving Something Back’. If you come and find the session useful, please pass on the word so more people can benefit.

    As with most of our surgeries, people went away having set up new blogs or picked up tips about how else they can use the social web to help their project, programme, campaign or neighbourhood.

    Cannon Hill People’s Park came along for the second time. Tony Fox said of his first surgery:

    Thanks to the brilliant advice and support we got last time it inspired us to put our Net.website up (just), and we’ll be along to discuss building on our Social support!

    Tony and his team have now begun making good use of google maps.  Karen and Geoff Caine are the first people who’ve made the move from patient to surgeon, having now made good use of their newish blog for the City Centre Neighbourhood Forum, explored with google maps and begun to encourage people to use services such as the excellent fixmystreet.

    It was a good evening for neighbourhood groups.  Ged Hughes of the Acocks Green Neighbourhood Forum came along, her first time at a surgery. She left saying she would love to come again and the following day created a blog for the forum. (Hurrah!).  The first post tells us that their AGM is on May 14th, the day after the next social media surgery. It also pointed me to another local group already using social media, the Acocks Green Focus Group.

    Other neighbourhood interest came from the East Yardley Neighbourhood Forum who went away with a head crammed full of ideas and established this starting point for conquering the social web world. Also John Heaven was with us looking for help on how to build on what is already being achieved at Lozells.info.

    Laura Creaven  of LUCIA Charity set up this personal blog and has got off to a roaring start. Her take on the surgery:

    I have to say it was a fascinating meeting and I’m really glad I went. I’m all a bit keen about what we could achieve with it. So I’m a little excited about going to work tomorrow – sad isn’t it?!

    Also with us was Mary from Birmingham Friends of the Earth and Attiya from the Health Exchange who left having set up an experimental personal blog.

    The ever brilliant all-volunteer surgeons were Ben WaddingtonNicky Getgood, Chris Ivens, Pete Ashton, Paul Henderson, Gavin Wray, Daniel Davis, Simon WhitehouseNeil Houston – who blogs about food – joined us for his first session and Rob Annable gave some great help on open source mapping. I love the way the people who help at the surgeries vary from month to month, so endless thanks for their help and a particular thank you to Diane from Fazeley Studios who also volunteers her time to keep the place open.   I always forget at least one person when I list these, so apologies in advance and please just tell me and I’ll put it right.