Apologies in advance to all the clients and colleagues who will be subject to my rekindled enthusiasm for what it is I do, when we finally return to the shaky city - IABC world has got more excited about the wonderful world of corporate communications than I have been in years. And we all know how unbearable I can be when I'm over excited...
The International Association of Business Communicators hold their world conference every year, pulling together communicators (this time 1400 of them) from around the globe.
This year's theme was The New Normal - which couldn't have been more fitting for a Cantab - covering every conceivable angle of channels, content and strategy as we sit at the cross-roads of the old/new media divide, and all of us come to grips with a new generation of media consumer, with a whole raft of different expectations and needs.
By far my favourite sessions - containing by far the biggest of the Big Ideas for me out of this conference - was Shel Holtz, a digital strategist from San Francisco, who talked about Communication 3.0 and its focus on curation, creation and sharing. The slides alone won't do it justice, and unfortunately there's no video of this session. But you can listen to the audio here.
Your Company Must Become a Media Company
It was the sort of presentation that had me frantically scrawling ideas for GT and clients alike, all through the session, until I'd run out of space on my note pad and had to start writing on the back of stuff.
A close second was BJ Fogg, a Stanford University academic described by Fortune Magazine as one of '10 new gurus you should know'.
BJ is bringing science to the art of marketing, developing systems to change human behavior. Much of it is based around the creation and maintenance of habits (I know, scary, huh?), and he talked about the way that social media tools like Twitter and Facebook clues to marketers looking to create connections between ideas/products/services and people.
I tried to get a balance between PR, marketing, internal comms/engagement and social/digital media, but to be honest, I only felt like I managed to scratch the surface.
Not looking forward to touching back down in liquefaction central. But very much looking forward to further exploring the ideas I've had the privilege of being exposed to and sharing them with everybody I work with.
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