Archive for the ‘User Experience’ Category

MercerBell a Webby Award “Honoree”

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Webby Awards Logo

In the words of Mr. Sheen (not the table-polishing pilot), today we’re “Winning!” having been selected as an “official Honoree” at this year’s Webby Awards.

An OTP we developed for the MasterCard Moments program is what got us the accolade, and a damn fine piece of work it is too…even if I say so myself.
The word came through this morning via email along with a PR Kit for “making the most of your achievement”. A nice touch.

I’ve posted the official notification below for posterity.

“It is my pleasure to inform you that MasterCard Moments Space Ad has been selected as an Official Honoree for the Banner Singles category in The 15th Annual Webby Awards.

In recognition of the exceptional quality of submissions received this year, the Academy has acknowledged outstanding entries as Official Honorees, alongside our Nominees and Winners. With nearly 10,000 entries received from all 50 US states and over 60 countries, the Official Honoree distinction is awarded to the top 10% of all work entered that exhibits remarkable achievement.

Congratulations – this is an outstanding accomplishment for you and your team!

Again, congratulations!

Executive Director”

So great work team! A digital creative accolade to be truly proud of.

3D ads arrive on the iPad

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

I saw this on Digital Buzz Blog and had to share.

While ad response rates seem to be dropping (depending on who’s reports you take seriously), advances in creative innovation like this hint at a change in thinking from some platform developers. Where ads have traditionally been about serving sales messages, adding a layer of product interaction like this could start turning them into genuinely interesting (and useful) content areas for users to interact with.

Early days, but hopefully an exciting glimpse into the future of online advertising.

New showreel finished at last

Friday, February 25th, 2011

Finished at last! The MercerBell 2011 Showreel.

Life beyond the browser

Monday, January 17th, 2011

The Wilderness Downtown (Arcade Fire + Google Chrome) won Site of the Year of The FWA (Favourite Website Awards). It’s a beautiful mash-up of Google Maps and Google Street View with HTML5 canvas, HTML5 audio and video, an interactive drawing tool, and choreographed windows that dance around the screen.

If you thought this was awesome, Sour’s new music video will make you want to expand your vocabulary to include the word awesomer.

Emerging web standards are opening endless possibilities in digital storytelling, replacing standard websites with powerful personalised multimedia experiences.

If you have Chrome, go to the Chrome Web Store and explore new ways to read news, watch multimedia content, or simply play with these experiments.

If you have Firefox, try Mozilla projects.

It will change the way you see the web.

Reflections and Projections

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

What better way to kick off the new year with a look back at the past 12 months and some predictions for the next 12.

Here’s a few of the aforementioned that I’ve been reading.

2010 year in reviews

Twitter’s year in review 2010
http://yearinreview.twitter.com/

YouTube’s 2010 year in review (naturally Antoine gets a mention)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RUzLhHH7gHg

The top brands on Facebook in 2010
http://www.good.is/post/year-in-review-2010-the-top-brands-on-facebook/

ZDNet Australia’s top viewed reviews in 2010
http://www.zdnet.com.au/2010-the-devices-you-wanted-339308203.htm

Dan Calladine – Media Milestones of 2010
http://digital-examples.blogspot.com/2010/12/media-milestones-of-2010.html

…and some predictions for 2011

A nice list of “must-read’s” from Gavin Heaton (@servantofchaos)
http://www.servantofchaos.com/2011/01/five-must-read-predictions-for-2011.html

Soap’s Digital Predictions for 2011
http://www.slideshare.net/soapcreative/soap-predictions-2011-wip

Mashable’s ten sites to watch in 2011
http://mashable.com/2011/01/03/websites-to-watch-in-2011/

Why Virtual Meetings can’t beat Face to Face

Thursday, December 16th, 2010

Last year I heard Bob Greenberg, founder and CEO of R/GA, give a speech on ‘the next big thing’ in digital.  Among several (since proven accurate) predictions, he suggested that video conferencing would become big in 2010.

He cited spiraling fuel (and so travel) costs and an ever-growing desire for meeting convenience within businesses as the driving factors.

Advances in online communication technologies and ever-increasing network speeds globally would soon result in a virtual experience that would satisfy what you need to get out of a meeting.

For some time now, chatting to someone face to face over a telephone line has been rife with issues. Whether it was the sheer cost to set up video-conferencing facilities within an office (not to mention the price of a call), or the freeze-frame, echo-ridden  online experience caused by insufficient connection speeds, joining people via video was has not become accepted the norm.

However (as Bob rightly stated) ADSL2 is becoming the ‘standard’ across most of the globe and the proliferation of applications such as Skype, Google chat and MSN messenger is widespread (not to mention advances in mobile handsets).

Add to this the common integration of decent web cams in most personal computing screens (try and find a laptop without and in-built camera and microphone) and we’re on the verge of the death of international business travel right?

I’m not so sure I agree.

You see the thing that’s missing in this tech-driven solution is the human experience. We’ve virtualised your face, and your voice, but what about the rest of you?

Now there’s been a lot written about the importance of body-language in the face to face conversation. Being able to see how a person is reacting to what you are saying (and not saying) is a vital part of effective communication, and one that isn’t as fully captured by a person in a frame.

For instance, one of the most accepted body language concepts is ‘mirroring’ – the unconscious assumption of similar body poses. When your conversation flows with someone, your gestures will mimic. This results in a simpatico with your conversation partner, and unconscious signaling that you’re in sync.

Try doing that with someone you’re Skyping. Apart from barely being able to see their gestures clearly, as well as the minute – but significant – lag time, you can only see 50% of their body. And if you don’t think that your feet and legs are communicating right along with your mouth, then go and watch a couple on a first date.

The point is, physical presence – while sometimes inconvenient – allows for the comfort factor of “chatting”. A successful meeting will often be successful, because you’ve achieved that comfortable presence.

And then we come to the point of spontaneity. I have long found that popping over to someone’s desk for a chat (and vice-versa) will often produce more useful results  than the scheduled meeting.

Sure, the same argument can be made about email today, but the point is that the virtual will create a better excuse for the remote workplace.

Imagine a world where a hologramatic version of you could talk directly to a close friend overseas after appearing on their couch in their living room. Then consider how you would interact with each other if you were face to face. Being with them has a certain magic, doesn’t it? That magic is your brain rewarding you for remembering that you’re a part of a community. That you’re loved, and valued.

While you may not be in that same intimate relationship with your work colleagues, its crucial to remember that businesses are built on that sense of community. The chemistry that results from people working in synch, in proximity.

And that’s the unimagined downside of virtual conferencing.

So while I agree with Bob that virtualising the face to face conversation is the future, I don’t agree that we should rush headlong to embrace that bit of the future.

There’s more to cracking virtual meetings than getting a face up on a screen, however clear the picture.

Welcome to The Coop

Sunday, December 12th, 2010

Hi and welcome to The Coop.

Marketing is changing fast. As a result, what’s way more important than book-learnin’ is being able to form an opinion, and then being brave enough to see if it flies.

At MercerBell, we feel that opinions are a bit like chickens. They should be able to roam free, be fed liberally, and never have their wings clipped.

The Coop is our place for making a statement about anything that strikes us as interesting. Sometimes it’ll be about the marketing communications business; often it won’t. We’ll all do a bit of contributing, and hopefully you will too.

So again welcome to The Coop: the place where our opinions come home to roost.