Category Archives: Social Media Club Vancouver

A message from SMCYVR President

Posted by on January 12, 2012 at 3:23 pm.
SMCYVR Nokia Digital Scavenger Hunt at Trout Lake Park

SMCYVR Digital Scavenger Hunt, Trout Lake Park

In 2011, social media came of age. In 2012, it will become even more a part of mainstream culture. Most of us in the social media world can live in a bit of  bubble. In this bubble, we begin to think that everyone is using Twitter daily and signing up for Google+ wondering what to do. In reality, about 10% of online users in North America use Twitter; and Google+ only has 2.5% of the user base of Facebook.

Each and every member of the Social Media Club is a powerful evangelist for this world changing technology. When we describe social media to newbies with #hashtags and @mentions, we miss an amazing opportunity to tell the real story.

The story of families reunited by Facebook, high school sweethearts reconnected and new friends married by a connection made on Twitter. It’s not the technology that inspires people to join the revolution; it’s the human storie. The connections and the friends we make through the new social telephone are what will inspire those on the fence to join the new human collective. Share the stories, spread the love, and join Social Media Club Vancouver as we work to bridge the digital divide and turn followers into real friends.

I want to personally invite you join Social Media Club HQ and Social Media Club Vancouver this year as we share, learn and grow together in the true spirit of open community.

Kemp Edmonds

President, SMCYVR

@kempedmonds

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Recap of Projecting Change Through Social Media (Club)

Posted by on May 25, 2011 at 1:31 pm.

Yuri Artibise gives a recap of last week’s Projecting Change Through Social Media (Club) event we co-presented with Projecting Change Film Festival on Tuesday, May 17th. (Cross posted on ProjectingChange.ca)

Last Tuesday’s Projecting Change Through Social Media was an incredible event. A partnership between by SMCYVR and the Projecting Change School Media team, it was held at the soon-to-be finished HiVE Vancouver.  The HiVE is a 9,000 square foot collaborative workspace for sustainability and creativity focused people located at 128 West Hastings Street in downtown Vancouver.

65_RedRoses

The evening kicked of with a welcome from Rebecca Peel, our social media director. Rebecca introduced the first plenary speakers, Nimisha Mukerji and Kat Dodds who talked about the experience with the 65_RedRoses project. Nimisha is the co-Director, of 65 Red Roses a documentary film. Kat is the founder of Hello Cool World, a communicate agency specializing grass roots campaigns for non-profits and independent films.

65_RedRoses is a documentary film on the lives of Eva Markvoort and her two online friends who all battled Cystic Fibrosis (CF). CF is a fatal genetic disease affecting the lungs and digestive system. The name “65 Roses” comes from what children with cystic fibrosis (CF) call their disease as the words are easier for them to pronounce.

Without fully realizing it, Eva Markvoort started a global campaign for organ donation by writing about her experiences with cystic fibrosis on her Live Journal site. Sadly, on March 27, 2010, while waiting for a second transplant, her breath ran out. She was 25. The documentary, website and campaign site is her legacy. 65_RedRoses aims to leave viewers with a new appreciation of life and the digital world. To keep up to date on the latest developments, search for #4Eva on Twitter.

With Glowing Hearts

Next up was Jon Ornoy, the producer of With Glowing Hearts, and social media educator Kemp Edmonds, who spearheaded the social media efforts to raise funds and promote the film. With Glowing Hearts tells the story of the 2010 Winter Games’ effect on Vancouver from the perspective of people directly impacted by the Olympics: downtown eastside residents, bloggers, photographers, activists, proponents and opponents.

In order to complete the film, Jon, Kemp, and director Andrew Lavinge created the “Tweet and Toonie Torch Relay.” This was a crowd-sourced social media campaign to promote the film’s message and help raise the $10,000 needed to complete the film, $2 at a time. Special props were given to east-side resident and citizen journalist, April Smith.  April is still drawing attention to the film through her social media activism in the DTES.

HiVE Vancouver

HiVE Vancouver LogoThe last plenary speaker was Jeremy Murphy, the man behind HiVE Vancouver, our hosts for the night. The HiVE is an up and coming sustainability and creativity co-working space in downtown Vancouver. It will be home to non-profit organizations, small businesses, social entrepreneurs and independent contractors all working in creative and sustainable industries.

The HiVE will provide co-workers with a great work space, awesome networking opportunities, and access to the knowledge, capital and resources that will help them project change. Check out Rebecca’s interview with Jeremy for more information on him and HiVE Vancouver.

You can’t project change without the right tools!

The second half of the evening was dedicated to workshops. There were two sessions of there concurrent workshops. Since I wasn’t alble to be three places at once. I’ll rely on some notes from my friend, Tracy Bains and the twitosphere. Here are some key takeaways from each workshop:

Being Strategic Using Twitter

Stephanie Michelle Scott of Wildfire Effect and Monica Hamburg led back to back workshops on Twitter basiscs. Their discussion was truly old school as Stephanie and Monica illustrated their points with stand up board twitter signs! Through their workshops, Stephanie and Monica created a few new social media converts, who will now go out and project their own change through social media!

Part 1:

Part 2:

Inside HootSuite

Kemp Edmonds led another set of back to back sessions on how to maximize what Hootsuite—a Twitter dashboard—has to offer. Kemp offered his insider expertise on how to use Hootsuite to help even most the most advanced twitter user improve theirability to project change Some of his most useful tips included how to use Hootsuite analytics tools, the geo-location search function and how to mass schedule tweets. You can find out more about these subjects and more at http://learn.hootsuite.com.

Transforming the dialogue: How questions & media can create change

Camille Jensen from Axiom News led this workshop. Axiom News is and organization “committed to sharing stories about movements making a difference.” Camille illustrated how the questions we ask will create thr stories we tel. She refered to Peter Block, a writer and consultant, who noted that: “If you want to change the world – or the culture – all you have to do is change the conversation.”

Camille also talked about generative journalism: telling positive stories to support positive change.

Camille Jensen from Axiom News leading a workshop at Projecting Change Through Social Media

Photograph from @check_your_head on TwicPic

Taking offline community organizing online

Ajay Masala Puri led this session that was based on the question: What is the purpose of engaging on social media unless you can make a difference? His main take aways were to avoid the temptation of “over-institutionalising” your message and instead take complex issues and make them simple for your friends and followers to digest. Doing so will allow many more friend and followers to connect with your message.

Ajay suggests creating your ideas offline, take them online to gain momentum, then back offline for execution. He talked about how, by following thrice strategy he was able to leverage just 15 of his Facebook friends to attract thousands of people to an event.

Part 1:

 

Part 2:

Part 3:

Final Reflections

All in all this was an incredible event that taught something to everyone who attended, regardless of their level of social media knowledge. It was great to see people completely unfamiliar with social media, not only being invited to attend an event, but being welcomed and guided. It is always cool to see somebody learn what a # is for the first time.

 Team picture from our Projecting Change with Social Media event

Photograph from @smcyvr on YFrog

—Yuri @yuriartibise

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Projecting Change Through Social Media (Club)

Posted by on May 5, 2011 at 12:17 pm.
Projecting Change LogoSocial Media Club Vancouver is a proud community partner of the Projecting Change Film Festival Projectingchange.ca, May 26-29, 2011 and we’ll be kicking it off with a distinctively social twist. Join us on Tuesday May 17th for your choice of 2 of 6 Workshops focusing on assisting social change makers to better share their work through social media channels.  This event will be highly interactive focusing on giving attendees tangible skills and knowledge to apply to future efforts at projecting change. The workshops will focusing on answering our attendees questions while exploring powerful tools and techniques in new communications.

WHEN: Tuesday May 17, Starting at 6:30pm

WHERE: Hive Vancouver – HiveVancouver.com - #210 - 128 W Hastings St in a larger map

HOW MUCH: $20 (ALL proceeds to Projecting Change Film Festival 2011)

GET YOUR TICKETS NOW! - Very limited seating
**All proceeds to Projecting Change Film Festival 2011

————————

This is how the evening will run and what you can expect:

6:30pm- Welcome & Intro from Rebecca Peel
Speaker – Kemp Edmonds & Jon Ornoy, Producer, With Glowing Hearts
Speaker – Nimisha Mukerji, Co-Director, 65 Red Roses
Speaker – Kat Dodds, Founder, Hello Cool World

Sessions:

Session 1: 7:15pm Session 2: 7:45pm

Room 1 – Being strategic using Twitter basics

We will start with Twitter basics followed by open mike where Twitter Strategist, Stephanie Michelle Scott of Wildfire Effect Consulting will facilitate the re-wording to make your messages highly effective in only 140 character’s.

Room 1 – Welcome to the Twitter Parlour “Secrets revealed”

If Twitter is your tool for change, or if you know that leveraging Twitter is the powerhouse that you need then, Welcome to the Twitter Parlour.  Monica Hamburg and Stephanie Michelle Scott will reveal their tricks to use Twitter effectively to grow, humanize and share your message.
Twitter for Business

Room 2 – HootSuite time management skills

HootSuite is a social media dashboard that makes managing social networks easier than ever. Learn how HootSuite can help you manage your time effectively. Some tools are created for people who want to make change. HootSuite is one of them.

-Kemp Edmonds, Coordinator of HootSuite University.

Room 2 – Advanced HootSuite

Did you need more HootSuite time?  We are leveraging Kemp Edmond’s insider expertise to offer skills in advanced HootSuite and social media optimization. If you use HootSuite this session is a must because chances are Kemp will make sure that you get schooled; in a good way.
learn.hootsuite.com

Room 3 – Transforming the Dialogue: How Questions and Media can Create Change

Questions are powerful social change tools. The questions we ask inform our conversations, the stories we tell and become the context for the future we envision. Camille Jensen from Axiom News will be exploring how asking the right questions and writing with a focus on strengths can lead to transformational outcomes.
AxiomNews

Room 3 – Taking offline community organizing online / Using social media for social change                                      .

What is the purpose of engaging on social media unless you can make a difference? Use this interactive workshop to help guide in building your social movement.

Facilitator: Ajay Masala Puri, MHA Movement Builder, Grassroots Organizer + Health Researcher (http://about.me/ajaypuri)

You can’t project change without the right tools.


SMCYVR wants to aid change makers and content producers in all of their work and we hope to see you on Tuesday May 17th at Hive Vancouver!

 

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Today’s Event: March Mixer and Historical Mash-up

Posted by on March 28, 2011 at 12:08 pm.
March 28th, 2011 (5:30-9:00 pm)
Location: Ceilis Irish Pub (@CeilisVan)
670 Smithe St. Van BC V6B1E3 (Google Map)

For event registration, check out our EventBrite page (http://smcyvr.eventbrite.com/)

The event is free but keep a FIVER (or more) aside for The REDCROSS. We will collect at the door. Our Heart goes out #Japan

The hashtag for this event is #smcyvrMM

We look forward to seeing you all later today!

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We asked…

Posted by on February 28, 2011 at 3:18 pm.

On the “Social Media Club Vancouver” Linked in Group we asked:

In ONE word describe Social Media in 2011

We are hearing:

SHARING

EMPOWERING

FOCUSED

What do you think?

————————–

Our e- newsletter with the SMCYVR Spring kickoff event details is going out soon. If you want to be in the know- Just join the membership  (FREE, at this time)

Deets released on “TWTTR” today   – MARCH 28 – 5-9PM  - @SMCYVR

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Share the love, Share the social!

Posted by on February 14, 2011 at 12:00 pm.

Happy Valentines day all,

Hey it might not be much but the SMCYVR Board wanted to share this little Valentine message to you.

We have been working hard – thinking of ways to make the SMCYVR all that YOU want it to be.

  • A March event is being Planned.
  • Volunteers are being recruited (interested? contact me at sm@wildeffect.com, @SMCYVR)
  • You will see more opportunity to connect on SMCYVR social networks.
  • We are Holding true to “If you get it, Share it”, and our members-got MAD skills to share.
  • Remember, as members you can guest blog about your events here.

2011 is exciting.  Do you want to reach out in a different way?

http://smcyvr.com/join (become a member)
http://ow.ly/3Wgpl (Linkedin Group)
“if you get it share it”
- Thanks all, Stephanie Michelle Scott (Communications)

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Online Privacy Policy and Ethics Tonight with Christopher Parsons

Posted by on October 7, 2010 at 11:46 am.
Privacy International 2007 privacy ranking; se...
Image via Wikipedia

I hope you caught a preview of tonight’s speaker, Chris Parsons, on CBC radio and television earlier. Tickets are available at the door for tonight’s event on internet privacy: your rights, your responsibilities, and your opportunity to use a privacy policy for a positive business advantage.

$20 includes networking, appies and a highball or glass of beer or wine. Doors open at 6pm, downstairs at the St. Regis Bar and Grill, 602 Dunsmuir Street, between Granville and Seymour.

There has been a lot of media interest in this talk, so come out and participate in what is sure to be one of the most controversial presentations of the social media year!

Details:

The Internet has us hooked. We’re immersed in online shopping, banking, gaming, and dating and sharing our lives on social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook and Flickr. And increasingly, we have no choice but to share our personal information. Like it or not, that means we have to trust online businesses to protect our data.

But are we happy about that? Not really. Research suggests that we all care deeply about our privacy and dislike and distrust the ubiquity of online surveillance, especially in the spaces they communicate and play. Our daily experiences all those privacy statements and policies seem unapproachable, awkward, and obtuse. And, as businesspeople, we’re concerned with acting ethically and within the boundaries of the seemingly ever-changing law.

Online privacy expert Chris Parsons will lead a discussion on why online businesses don’t have our trust and how they can earn it. His advice? Businesses need to develop privacy ethics to supplement legally required privacy statements. By adopting clear statements of ethics, supplemented with legal language and opt-in data disclosures of personal information, operators of social media environments can be part of the solution, not the problem .

Christopher Parsons is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Victoria, a member of the New Transparency Project, and lead researcher of Deep Packet Inspection Canada. He is interested in how privacy (particularly informational privacy, expressive privacy, and accessibility privacy) is affected by digitally mediated surveillance, and the normative implications this has in contemporary Western political systems. His research currently focuses on the technologies facilitating digitally mediated surveillance, such as deep packet inspection, behavioral advertising, and radio frequency identification. He is particularly curious about how these technologies influence citizens in their decisions to openly express themselves or engage in self-censoring behaviour. His research is funded through a Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarship.

See you there!

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SMCYVR October Event: Online Privacy Policy and Ethics with Christopher Parsons

Posted by on September 29, 2010 at 2:24 pm.
'No photos' tag at Wikimania
Image via Wikipedia

There’s just over a week left till our next event, and this should be another hot ticket: Online Privacy Policy and Ethics with Christopher Parsons. Looking at the issue from both the point of view of a business, which wishes to collect information, and an individual, who wants to protect his/her privacy, we are definitely in for a fascinating, and contentious, evening.

Register in advance and save $5:

The Internet has us hooked. We’re immersed in online shopping, banking, gaming, and dating and sharing our lives on social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook and Flickr. And increasingly, we have no choice but to share our personal information. Like it or not, that means we have to trust online businesses to protect our data.

But are we happy about that? Not really. Research suggests that we all care deeply about our privacy and dislike and distrust the ubiquity of online surveillance, especially in the spaces they communicate and play. Our daily experiences all those privacy statements and policies seem unapproachable, awkward, and obtuse. And, as businesspeople, we’re concerned with acting ethically and within the boundaries of the seemingly ever-changing law.

Online privacy expert Chris Parsons will lead a discussion on why online businesses don’t have our trust and how they can earn it. His advice? Businesses need to develop privacy ethics to supplement legally required privacy statements. By adopting clear statements of ethics, supplemented with legal language and opt-in data disclosures of personal information, operators of social media environments can be part of the solution, not the problem .

Christopher Parsons is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Victoria, a member of the New Transparency Project, and lead researcher of Deep Packet Inspection Canada. He is interested in how privacy (particularly informational privacy, expressive privacy, and accessibility privacy) is affected by digitally mediated surveillance, and the normative implications this has in contemporary Western political systems. His research currently focuses on the technologies facilitating digitally mediated surveillance, such as deep packet inspection, behavioral advertising, and radio frequency identification. He is particularly curious about how these technologies influence citizens in their decisions to openly express themselves or engage in self-censoring behaviour. His research is funded through a Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarship.

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Meet the Geek dinner September 21st!

Posted by on September 6, 2010 at 6:52 pm.
My archaic telecommunication medium

You could show me anything you wanted, Trent

Social Media Club of Vancouver, in association with Vancouver Food Tour, is very proud to invite you all to a Meet the Geek dinner on Tuesday, September 21st.

A portion of the proceeds will go towards a very good cause: completing the post-production of the independent documentary With Glowing Hearts, which focuses on the way activists and artists in our city used social media during the Olympics. Did they change the world? Did they even change themselves? Can they change London before 2012? A selection of geeks including SMCYVR members will be in attendance and ready to discuss the issues, network, or just to demystify the cloudy world of technology.

Details:

  • $40 includes tax, tip and a contribution to the charity. Of course, you’re free to donate more if you like, and everyone who donates a Toonie or more is listed as an official Producer of the movie, which surely has got to be worth some bragging rights.
  • Register at least three days in advance with our sponsor Vancouver Food Tour to ensure that you have a spot; we expect this to sell out completely!
  • Start time is 7pm, and all participants must be of legal drinking age
  • Meet at Salt Cellar, 45 Blood Alley in the basement banquet room of Salt.

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Tech Karaoke: Oh What a Night!

Posted by on July 13, 2010 at 3:12 am.

Yes, it’s a bad 70′s song but everybody likes it, so there!

Guacira, Dennis, and Raul

A Brazilian, an American, and a Mexican walk into a bar...

Guacira, Dennis, and Raul again

and walk out two hours later as friends

That’s how it went, folks. Sure, it was nice having the government declare Tech Karaoke night a national holiday (fireworks? really? you shouldn’t have!) although it did leave attendees a little thin on the ground. It was great to see the usual suspects displaying some unusual aural talents, in particular Kemp Edmonds, who apparently knows the lyrics to every song ever written and CANNOT BE RESTRAINED in the presence of a karaoke machine. That alone makes it a cinch we’ll be doing this again.

Heather Watson

Heather Watson sings the grand finale at Tech Karaoke YVR

We also have to give a shout-out to the lovely and talented Miss Heather Watson, who is known up and down the East Side as the queen of Vangroover’s most competitive karaoke-fests, and for good reason. Where Kemp got the party started, Heather sang our grand finale, leaving the crowd somewhat speechless in appreciation; nobody expected real pipes on karaoke night!

I think Dennis (Tuffy) said it best: that’s the thing about Canada. You see people from all different backgrounds, all different races getting together and just having fun. Dennis joined us from the toasty environs of Phoenix, Arizona, while I think the next farthest-traveller only came from Steveston, but all were welcome, and a good time was had by all, except maybe the few who had to read their lyrics in white six point Times New Roman against a purple and black background of a crowd at a disco. Yeah, maybe not so much fun for them.

Till the next time! Tech Karoke: be there, or be…bi-laterally congruently rectilinear!

STOP! in the name of love!

STOP! in the name of love!

pix courtesy Guacira Naves of OnlineStrategy and Cathy Browne

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