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Month: May 2016

Developing my offer: what I’m planning for the next few months

Time horizons are funny things. For example, I don’t know about you, but I like to plan a few months ahead. However, there’s a couple of times of year when this feels more difficult. The most obvious of these is Christmas; in December I still find it hard to make plans for January of the next year!

Another of these times is thinking about beyond the ‘summer holidays’ This is partly because I’ve been conditioned all my life to think in terms of the academic year. This year, we’re planning to go away as a family for a good chunk of the summer, but as a consultant I obviously need to think about business continuity and paid work that I’m going to be coming back to afterwards.

Hence this post! I like to think out loud and show my work.

Since setting up by myself, as well as shorter-term work for other clients, I’ve had a steady stream of work with City & Guilds. That’s tapered off from initially working on a full-time basis with them, down to two days at the moment. It’s been great and, as all good teachers do, I’ve greatly enjoyed making myself progressively redundant. So from the end of August I’ll be working with City & Guilds on a per-project basis.

This, of course, means I’m looking for ways to make myself useful to other organisations. I’ve got a few things scheduled but, right now, lots more availability from September onwards than I’ve had previously. Given that so far all of my consultancy work has been ‘inbound’ (i.e. people and organisations have approached me, instead of me approaching them) I’m thinking about ways of packaging up what I do in ways that make immediate sense to people.

One such way that I’ve highlighted before is an approach developed by Bryan Mathers and the good people at wapisasa: the Thinkathon.

Ordinarily, Thinkathons last from 10am until about 4pm, with a break for lunch. The facilitators will have done some preparation beforehand, then on the day they meet with three or four people from the organisation who has requested the Thinkathon. Afterwards, the facilitators package up what was captured during the day into actionable next steps.

The great thing about Thinkathons is that they’re simultaneously ‘off-the-shelf’ (i.e. they’re a fixed price, you know the format of the day, and there’s an output) and bespoke (i.e. what we discuss and sort out is entirely dependent on your organisation and context). They’re also a great way to provide value in a ‘bounded’ way. The Thinkathon by itself could be all that’s needed, or it lead to further work. It’s up to the organisation.

Rocket (CC BY-ND Bryan Mathers)As I’ve mentioned before, we’re currently revving-up weareopen.coop, a co-operative consortium of limited companies including mine and those controlled by John Bevan, Laura Hilliger, and Bryan Mathers. The deal is that anything we do individually goes through our respective businesses, but anything we do that requires more than one of us goes through the co-op. That means Thinkathons are something you should approach the co-op about: [email protected].

For the avoidance of doubt, the things you’re likely to hire me individually for as Dynamic Skillset are things relating to education, technology, and productivity. For example:

  • Digital skills/literacies keynotes, workshops, and curriculum development
  • Open Badges keynotes, workshops, and system design
  • Productivity and workflow analysis, coaching, and report-writing
  • Critical Friend services
  • Analysis (desk research and in-person) around use of technology in learning and training contexts.
  • Desk research, synthesis, and report-writing relating to anything I tend to talk about here or elsewhere.

In terms of weareopen.coop, it’s a case of ‘watch this space’ to some extent as our first planning meeting is next week). However, as our name indicates, we’re interested in all elements of openness, including Open Badges, but also helping organisations work more openly and transparently.

The Essential Elements of Digital LiteraciesThere’s plenty of other things I want to start offering as well as the above. One of these is a short email-based course based on my ebook The Essential Elements of Digital Literacies. This would be a paid addition to the ebook, which (in line with my ‘OpenBeta’ approach) will decrease in price next month to ‘pay what you want’. Do let me know if you’d be willing to be a guinea pig for that. I’d like to do some testing before it goes live for everyone.

Another thing I’d like to offer is the kind of five-day sprint as outlined in the recent book from Google Ventures entitled Sprint: how to solve big problems and test new ideas in just five days. This would be an a large undertaking for an organisation, but likely to be hugely valuable. I’d be willing to do this at a 50% for my first one, in return for detailed feedback.

And finally (although I’ve got plenty more ideas in my notebook) I’m wondering if it might be worthwhile to build an extremely lightweight badging platform. I’ve had this idea with the codename ‘Self-Badger’ which would provide a much-needed antidote to some of the unimaginative approaches to Open Badges I’ve seen recently. I’ll may need some funding for that, however…

In terms of upcoming speaking engagements, I was supposed to be in South Africa this week speaking about badges and blockchain at the Groningen Declaration conference. However, having withdrawn from the BadgeChain group I felt that my presence there would have been somewhat disingenuous. Instead, I’m planning to use my Badge Summit keynote next month in Aurora, Colorado to ask some hard questions about all of this.

So, if you think I can help you and your organisation, get in touch! I respond to emails sent to [email protected] within 24 hours, and I have a discounted rate for charities, non-profits, and educational institutions.

Images CC BY-ND Bryan Mathers (originally developed for the Community Alignment model)


Doug is a very creative, motivated and talented individual, who inspires others around him to think from different angles and to challenge constructively. — Patrick Bellis (Deputy Director, Jisc group customer services)

Always quick with a witty riposte—usually in animated gif form—or willing to dive into a philosophical conversation, Doug excels at his work. — Carla Casilli (Consultant & former Mozilla colleague)

Doug’s deep expertise in digital technologies for learning, productivity, change and teamwork together with his ability to coach and challenge, has really helped us develop as an education organisation. — Sarah Horrocks (Director, London CLC)

???? Weeknote 19/2016

Inspired by the newsletters of Dan HonChristian Payne, and Warren Ellis I’ve tried something different for this week’s update. I’ve even used an emoji in the title of this post to be down with the kids. ????

Don’t like it? Prefer it? Let me know!


TIDE

(image CC BY-ND Bryan Mathers)

Monday

07:56
I’m sitting at the table in the kitchen/diner drinking camomile tea and listening to BBC 6 Music playing one of the tracks from Radiohead’s new album. I read a great post this morning about the how the band take their time to develop songs, meaning that fans hear iterations over the course of years, if not decades. The emotional resonance of songs changes of time with repeated listening, maturity, and life events we experience. The equivalent for me would be tracks by Massive Attack, Oasis, and Jamiroquai – although just in terms of the album versions, not with demos turning into songs performed live, turning into tracks on an album.

I’m very much enjoying listening to BBC 6 Music. We made the decision to get out the DAB digital radio we had stowed away since we moved house a couple of years ago. As Lauren Laverne (one of the DJs) mentioned in a post this morning, while we live in an age of information abundance, sometimes it’s good not to know, and not to choose what’s coming next. I particularly enjoyed her mention of “playing charity-shop roulette” with her reading material.

I’ve now been off alcohol and coffee for over a week, and I have to say it feels good. Of course, this has coincided with May bringing much better weather to my corner of the UK. I appreciate stability in life as it allows me to choose where to mix things up a bit, both in terms of the things I do physically (e.g. going up mountains) and the places I go mentally (i.e. new ideas).

I’ve got a couple of meetings today, but I try to take it easy one day between Monday and Friday each week. That’s usually a Friday but, because of the Thinking Digital conference I’m down in London at the end of this week. So this day will be all about going out for lunch with my wife, enjoying the sunshine, catching up with the ‘unread newsletters’ email folder, and editing the 50th episode of Today In Digital Education (TIDE), the weekly podcast I record with Dai Barnes.


The Sage, Gateshead

Wednesday

08:01
I’m on the train on the way to the Thinking Digital conference (#TDC16). I went to the conference dinner last night and serendipitously sat next to a guy from the Co-op Digital team. We started off talking about weareopen.coop, a new co-operative consortium that I and a few friends / ex-Mozillians have set up recently but quickly moved onto to discussing all sorts of other things, including philosophy, shared connections, and so on.

The great thing about this conference in particular is that it gets me out of my filter bubble, but in a way that still remains directly relevant to what I do. The venue is The Sage in Gateshead, a beautiful building both inside and out. The acoustics are amazing, and the room with the main stage is wonderfully intimate. I bought an early bird ticket as soon as they were released last year.

At the moment I’m listening to Seth Godin’s Startup School which is a free podcast series released in 2012. You can search for it on any podcast client. Each episode is 15 minutes to 30 minutes long and contains such great advice from recordings made during a face-to-face summit Seth held that cost a lot of money. It’s worth even just listening to the first one about the important difference between being a freelancer and an entrepreneur. But the whole thing is exceptional and will bear repeated listens. I’m getting a lot out of it.


Thinking Digital badge

Thursday

08:54
I was up at 05:15 this morning to head to London. Arriving at the train station in Morpeth, the 06:37 train was cancelled. The train afterwards was massively delayed, so I went home instead of standing on the platform for over an hour. Right now, I’m sitting waiting at Newcastle station for the delayed 08:59 train to London. Delays like these is why working from home is so awesome.

The Thinking Digital conference yesterday was great. I met some really interesting people and the talks, while not uniformly amazing, were so varied that I was hooked even if the presenter got in the way of the content. There was everything from how IBM manage to provide real-time data from Wimbledon, through to the ways technology has helped us identify the ways the microbiome in our human gut can affect our mental health!

I skipped the after-party as I had to get home to watch Sunderland thrash Everton 3-0 to stay in the Premier League. It was a magnificent performance and I accurately the score before the game started! I’m not a betting man, and there’s only my family to back me up, so you’ll just have to trust me on that…

Today it’s going to be a glorious 24°C in London, if the BBC weather forecast can be believed. That’s probably another thing the Tories want to cut along with the 11,000 recipes that BBC Food provide. It comes to something when the worst thing about the country you live in is your government. Needless to say I, and no-one that I know, voted for them.


Avocado on toast

Friday

12:31
I’m sitting at a table in Ask For Janice a wonderful café / bar around the corner from my client’s offices (City & Guilds). As usual I’ve had the avocado on toast with spiced ricotta and pomegranate molasses. It’s amazing!

I’m working on some hush-hush stuff with City & Guilds at the moment (to be revealed soon!) as well as helping them with upcoming events. One of these is the Festival of Skills for which City & Guilds are the headline partner. It’s going to be a bit an Open Badges extravaganza! Bryan Mathers and I will be doing all sorts of stuff, including building on our OB101 course.

I’ve now moved onto an extremely chocolatey brownie. Well, if I’m not having coffee or alcohol this month, I’m not avoiding sugar, too!

17:45
Now in the newly-refurbished lounge at Kings Cross reclining while typing this into my Chromebook Pixel. I’m listening to the Stone Roses as their new track All For One came out today. I hope there’s a new album! I’m amazed a reunion has happened given the animosity of the split, and the biting follow-ups (e.g. the lyrics to Ian Brown’s Corpses In Their Mouths). I don’t care what The Guardian say about the track, it’s exciting!

This afternoon, from about 4pm onwards, I kind of fell down BetaList. It’s literally just a list of new startups or services that are currently in ‘beta’. But because I haven’t visited the site for ages I went about 20 pages deep. There’s so much cool stuff in there! I found Selfism, GretaScript, EverSeller, and Hippo (to name but a few).

I’ve just had to fire off an email to a client informing them that, no, I can’t really do an all-day workshop in a basement room with no natural light. Given that they’ll probably use fluorescent tubes down there, the energy will be low both in terms of lighting and human participation. Also, I’m likely to get a migraine. I’ve asked if, at the very least, they can book some break-out rooms for short periods of time.


Next week

On Monday I’m heading to London to spend part of the afternoon with NCUB, then staying down to work with City & Guilds from Tuesday to Thursday. On Friday I’ll be in Cambridge. So away all week with no ‘Doug day’. The week after I’ll be away for four days as well. Oh well, this is a busy time of the year…

A walkthrough of 9Sharp, a new platform for personal branding [SPONSOR]

I met Safwan Hak, founder of 9Sharp when chairing a panel at BETT earlier this year. As part of the session, I asked the panellists, “who inspires you?”

Safwan, by his own admission, struggled to answer the question. However, a few days later this post popped up on my radar. It ends like this:

Doug, it took me 3 days and your question was “the name of someone who inspires me?” I don’t have a name of one person but I have their job title:

“Teachers”

Read the post, it’s great. I was very impressed with Safwan, and we kept in touch afterwards. When it came to me asking for sponsors for Thought Shrapnel, my weekly newsletter, 9Sharp grabbed three months’ worth!

The following video is a demo of 9Sharp as it currently stands in May 2016. It’s come a long way since Safwan first showed me in January. It’s very slick and seems more focused on the kind of profile I want to show the world. As I say in the screencast, if you’ve ever found LinkedIn a little stifling, this might be a good option for you.

(can’t see anything? click here)

Overview

00:00 – Why Safwan built 9Sharp (audio only)
02:20 – Demo of what 9Sharp looks like
05:05 – Premium plans, advertising, custom domains
06:55 – Editing your 9Sharp profile
08:00 – Automatic translation
09:20 – Discussion of main audiences
10:45 – List of social integrations
12:50 – Where the name ‘9Sharp’ comes from
13:45 – What’s on the roadmap?
15:45 – How to get started with 9Sharp (and suggest new features!)


Check out my brief 9Sharp profile I created in double-quick time!

 

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