World Malaria Day 2010
April 25, 2010 by Huxley
Filed under Giving Back, Social Media
Today is World Malaria Day. It seemed appropriate to share this interview I had with Adi Galokopoto, health worker with UNICEF Pacific Islands and member of the Solomon Islands Emergency Response team. Here Adi talks frankly about living with malaria, putting into context the nature of the disease, effective treatment, and how together we can help eradicate it. Please buy a net today via the UNDERCOVER widget on my blog (below). Funds go direct to UNICEF to buy nets. This simple action will save at least four children’s lives.
Some Facts About Malaria…
Malaria is a deadly mosquito-born disease, which takes almost one million lives each year and afflicts as many as half a billion people in 109 countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America.
Malaria plagued Europe and North America as recently as 60 years ago. Simple public health measures were crucial to eliminating the disease and helping those regions achieve growth, prosperity and stability.
Today, for the first time in 50 years, the international community is poised to win the fight against malaria worldwide.
Effective, low-cost tools exist to prevent and treat the disease and new and improved tools are currently being developed and tested. A consensus global action plan has been put forth to guide a coordinated international effort to control, eliminate and eventually eradicate malaria. A robust Partnership, uniting all key actors and stakeholders in malaria control, is in place to respond to challenges that no organization or government can face alone.
The next year presents a rare window of opportunity to save a million lives by rapidly delivering malaria interventions – protective nets, diagnostic tests, antimalarial drugs and indoors spraying – to all people at risk of the disease and to pave the way towards virtually ending deaths by 2015.
Each 30 seconds, a child dies from malaria. Each of these deaths is avoidable. Join the world’s largest international effort to end malaria deaths. The countdown to 2010 continues.
Social Media Altitude, New Order & Chicago Nights
December 18, 2009 by Huxley
Filed under Social Media
A few weeks ago I made the trans-hemispheric haul from Melbourne’s sultry beginnings of summer to Chicago’s sub-zero emerging winter. A brisk minus 17 degrees Celsius to chill your bones and for the uninitiated (like me) a chance to test whether or not one’s ears do in fact ‘burn off from frostbite’ if walking more than three blocks without a hat! (please, don’t ask).
Chicago is an enchanting city and ‘must see’ destination. As I was only in town for eight days I had little opportunity to really explore, nonetheless I was determined to make the most of it. I managed to steal away from the office for a few hours to visit The Chicago Art Institute and with snow everywhere on the street, decided it made more sense to lose myself amongst the warmth and inspiration of the windy city’s amazing art collection.
Prior to leaving Melbourne I connected with internet entrepreneur Bradley Will, having seen an Unstrappd interview he did recently with Gary Vaynerchuck. Knowing he was based in Chicago it made sense to look him up, however what unfolded was a totally spontaneous series of events which I could never have predicted and to say the least, was totally awesome!
I met Bradley and his business partner Gabe Strom on the night I arrived in Chicago and there was instant rapport and lot’s of ‘aha’s’. Over dinner we talked about the future, the challenge to businesses to become more social (and I don’t just mean managing a Twitter persona but genuine, real-person dialogue and connection online); and the notion of ‘trusted influence’ and all this entails as businesses learn to leverage new digital economics beyond social media… to be more transparent, authentic participants with the online community.
We decided to meet again at the end of the week in the lobby of the James Hotel, where I was staying. I was invited to guest present on their show which led to a Ustream internet broadcast of Social Media Altitude live from my hotel room. All in a day, I say…
The guys are awesome and the videos below are well worth viewing, at times funny, and you may even learn something. I sure did! Oh, and following the show I embraced Chicago’s ‘Bizarre Love Triangle’ with friend David Armano who we joined for some die-hard popstar antics. But that’s a whole other story.
Ubiquity Never Looked So Sweet!
July 1, 2009 by Huxley
Filed under Social Media

I met up with a good friend this week who works for one of Australia’s large food manufacturers. Our conversations always inadvertently resolve into a heated debate about the pro’s and cons of new marketing and Monday was no different. Our focus was on co-creation systems this time, which just so happens to be one of my key areas of interest.
My friend, let’s call him Joe, is experiencing the challenges associated with a campaign that calls upon consumers to participate in the evolution of an existing product. Whilst the co-creation approach he’s adopted isn’t new, it demands a level of commitment and transparency it seems his organisation wasn’t prepared for. Unlike many of his peers, Joe has bravely entered into ubiquitous territory; a place where he no longer has control. When I questioned the approach his answer was simple and direct. “In a connected economy success and transparency are intertwined. Australian’s own this brand, not our company, so it makes sense to get their buy in.” This totally surprised me, not because I disagree but because in the same breath Joe likened the experience to ‘stepping out onto the ledge of a 30 story building without a harness’. Let’s pause for a moment and focus on that.
Being a champion of such behaviour I am often met with the argument that it’s a risky business to be fully transparent, that losing control of your message is the next best thing to committing brand suicide. Perhaps? But equally I’d pose the question – are we ever really in control? In a poignant post titled ‘On Falling and Flying‘ Chris Brogan highlights what many of us feel but never talk about, that for every win there is almost always failure and that ‘there are no blueprints’ for success. We are all making them up. We will fall. But then, we will fly.’
Having had my share of professional failures I can attest to this. Learning to navigate the ever shifting landscape of new media has taught me some invaluable life lessons, so much so that I’d go as far as saying that it’s no longer about control anymore, the learning is in knowing ‘when to let go’. Instead of expending valuable energy on being ‘controllers’ of communication, the full measure of success can be realised via the collective if we become ‘facilitators’ of it. It’s a subtle shift but one that creates a dynamic interplay and ongoing cycle of open innovation between brand and consumer, enabling a brand to move from being a static entity to an active participant with the potential to shape the conversations and interactions around it.
Like most industries impacted by the global recession, Joe understands that his company needs to evolve to survive. This is no small feat for an organisation of his calibre but he’s bravely taken the first step by acknowledging the need for authenticity and transparency with consumers. He also recognises the old systems and processes for marketing his brand no longer work and that a whole gamut of opportunities for value-based engagement and shared ownership exist. Whilst some people may think he’s crazy being out on the ledge – Joe is absolutely committed to redefining the brand-consumer relationship by involving consumers in the evolution of his product.
In an article which I wrote earlier this year for a DRAFTFCB thought leadership publication I discussed the ‘connected agency’, a hypothesis first presented by Forrester’s Mary Beth Kemp in 2008. It suggests that in the future agencies will evolve to nurture communities and then ‘match make’ them with brands. I elaborated on the strength of weak ties, drawing upon the notion that the influence of strangers plays a crucial role in forming a bridge between clusters of strong ties (our close friends). My intent was to reinforce the relevance and power of social networks to connect people, resources and ideas, to drive creativity and innovation forward.
In the context of Joe and his campaign one could argue there’s a paradigm shift taking place, toward a community whereby everyone participates, everyone contributes, to foster the best possible outcome. He understands this and respectfully so, has called upon consumers to become a voice for his brand and to make a difference. Does this make him crazy? I think not. But whilst he may not have all the answers (and the community is still reeling in shock at being asked) I commend him for his courage to step out onto the ledge into a situation where his peers would otherwise shrink back into a typical, known campaign trajectory. I wanted to share his story with you because I think there are some valuable lessons to be learned from Joe’s experience.
Chris Brogan talks social media at Marketing Now! NZ
April 21, 2009 by Huxley
Filed under Social Media
In April at the Marketing Now! social media conference in New Zealand I had the opportunity of having a quiet chat with Chris Brogan. We talked about a lot of interesting stuff, such as how social media is redefining commerce, society, and culture. It went like this…










