Archive for Interests

An entirely British occasion

Rachel Barkley PRThe Royal Family are never far from British culture and lifestyle, however in the last couple of years they seem to have grabbed more attention than normal. The highly anticipated wedding of our future king to a “commoner” and now the celebration of 60 years of our Queen’s reign.

The bunting is up, the events are planned and, in keeping with tradition, the weather is not looking promising. The Jubilee weekend is nearly here, an opportunity to celebrate our British heritage, traditions and our Queen. It appears we are playing ball, according to internet searches we are embracing the Jubilee.

My three favourite Jubilee-related campaigns:

  1. Heathrow create royal runway
  2. Union flag sausages
  3. The Royal Sims

If nothing else, the Jubilee has gifted us an extra long weekend, so pray for sun and enjoy everything British.
For Nottingham readers keen to meet our monarch, the Queen will be visiting our city on 13 June. Read about the Queen’s previous visits to the city here.
Rachel Barkley PR

Source: londonist.com via Rachel on Pinterest

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Three avoidable student situations

Surviving students life: Hangovers, overdrafts and all-nighters

Student Life (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

University has become an accepted rite of passage into adulthood, three years of independent living, self-motivated learning and enriching opportunities. Inevitably this experience comes with a fair few bumps and bruises, but as long as there is no serious damage then it is all part of the learning process.

I take a look at three uncomfortable, but usually avoidable situations in which students can regularly find themselves.
The Hangover
Alcohol plays a huge part in student culture, from booze-fuelled freshers weeks, to visits to the union between lectures. The subsequent hangover can steal away entire productive days, even interfering with education. The easy cure would be to give up alcohol, which is what I chose to do, but that can be seen as not embracing the student spirit. So what else can you do?
  1. Know your limits, if you have an important morning then be sensible with your drink.
  2. Find your hangover prevention or cure, it may be a big fry up, or drinking raw egg before bed, or maybe one of these.
The All-Nighter
There are time where despite your best intentions you find yourself stocking up on high-caffeinated drinks and sugary snacks in preparation for an all-nighter. These are not fun experiences, forcing yourself to work very hard mentally when usually you would be relaxing. Having said this, they are not an indication of failure, my best essays tend to be written the night before hand-in. So how can you turn an all-nighter into a success?
  1. Prepare, by having an essay plan, plenty of reading and detailed notes you make the essay process much more simple. Without this preparation you make the chances of writing a good essay significantly lower.
  2. Find the right environment, usually a case of home versus 24 hour library. Personally the library offers less distractions, shelves full of books to reference and is far enough away from bed I can forget about it for a while.
  3. Avoid following all-nighters with busy days. If you haven’t had the sleep you usually need you will struggle the following day.
The Overdraft
Budgeting is not unique to student life, but often it is one of the first experiences of managing money effectively. Sometimes a visit to the overdraft can be the only way to afford food and electricity. Top tips:
  1. Know your income and expenses then budget around these.
  2. Do not treat your overdraft as free money. This is often a sales tactic used by banks when getting you to sign up for student accounts. Your overdraft should be a last resort if possible.
  3. Don’t panic if you are in your overdraft, ensure that you are managing your money responsibly and have a plan to pay it back.

So there’s a little snippet from my personal guide for surviving student life, it may not suit everyone but so far it hasn’t done me any harm.

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Hello summer

Summer field in Belgium (Hamois). The blue flo...

A summery picture

Recently I have found myself a little bit quiet on this blog and Twitter, even Facebook has taken a hit in the final weeks of university. Instead of scanning the web, my nose has been buried in text books. Now I have only 3000 words until I have officially completed second year.  

So what will I be doing over summer? My plans include:

  • Lots of reading, nothing is better than reading.
  • Learn to run, because I always avoid running and I can’t afford the gym.
  • Organise all of the stuff I have accumulated, Oxfam will soon be receiving a new shops worth of stock.
  • Gain some more important work experience.
  • Prepare for the next part of my adventure, down in Berkshire, this includes finding a place to live, suitable transport – I don’t know how to be a grown up!
  • Writing exciting blogs!

So that’s what I have been doing and planning to do.

What are your plans for summer?

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Three online tools to make your life easier

Isn’t the internet clever? Perhaps not, but clever people out there have used the internet to create clever little tools to make our lives so much easier. As a friendly, giving person I have shared three of my current favourites below.

Right Inbox

It is all well and good being a night owl, but sometimes you do not want to share this fact with the world! As I attribute many of my best ideas to appearing during the night it is when I am keenest to send out emails, however filling people’s inboxes at 3am is not always appropriate, so what is better than scheduling your emails.

It surprises me that this is not a common feature of Gmail, in my opinion it should be! This can be changed with Right Inbox, quick installation and it gives you the option to schedule what time your message should be sent. There is an alternative tool, Boomerang, but I personally prefer this one as it integrates itself so well with Gmail.

You may also notice the Track button, I have not used this tool, but it lets you know when people open your mail, if they click links in your mail, then only slightly creepily, their location. This video explains all.

 

Pearltrees

Think Pinterest but for websites. Bookmarking every interesting page, article or post can mess your browser up, so if you are like me and have everything sorted into folders, then you may like this tool. All you do is install the little tool into your browser (I use Chrome and do not know how well it works with other browsers), then every time a page catches your interest for later, ping, and it is saved forever on your pearl tree.

Bloglovin

If you are the sort of person who likes to read everything, but then gets a bit overwhelmed with keeping up with everything, then Bloglovin is for you.

Basically it is a blog reader, let it know what blogs you want to follow and ta’da! all the latest posts from your followed blogs are there for you to read. It is not the only tool which does this, and perhaps it is not the greatest, but, excusing the omission of a certain G, it is the one which suits me best. It looks clean, it is very user-friendly and has a great mobile site. I wrote my original post about the site over a year ago and since then I have used the site on a daily basis and now never miss a post from my favourite blogs without the hassle of checking them regularly or subscribing by email.

Finally, if you do sign up, don’t forget to follow this blog!

bloglovin

 

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What is $1 billion?

If 1,000,000,000 people gave you $1 you would now be a billionaire. Where would you find these people? Well, if you speak to the whole population of the United State, Brazil, Japan, Russia, Mexico, Germany and France, then you might just about be able to scrape that kind of money together. It is a huge number.

1 billion is equivalent to one thousand million and not quite the million millions that some would expect. Does this particularly reduce the enormity of the sum? Yes and no. A million millions would be an even more ridiculous number to comprehend, but the current billion is still hugely grotesque as a number.

The average UK salary is about £25,000 p/a, if you did not spend a penny of your wages it would take 25222 years to save a billion dollars.

You could buy this rather smashing 10 bedroom, detached, late Victorian residence in a desirable area of Birmingham 1096 times. They were only asking for £575,000, that would be sure to keep one estate agent rather happy!

According to other sites on the internet, you could also treat yourself to 285,714,285 McDonald’s Big Macs. 6 F22 Raptor fighter jets. 1,177,856 iPhone 4S. You could also feed 682,583 malnourished children in Africa 3 meals a day for a whole year. (Thanks to Infobarrel for the facts!)

In basic terms it is a lot of cash!

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Happy mother’s day: How my Mum inspired me

Something a little different for mother’s day, I try out a bit of v-logging. Please excuse my poor camera quality, but I hope the message is strong enough to overcome it, my mother’s support inspires me to succeed.

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Save the Hobbit

I visited the Hobbit in Southampton some years ago, and while the night itself is hazy (not necessarily as a result of alcohol, rather the length of time that has since elapsed), the place made its impression on me and I was enchanted. So, when I heard that the pub was facing legal action from the Saul Zaentz Company, a Hollywood company holding the rights to many of  Tolkien’s works, I was as shocked as many of the other fans of the pub were. They were being to asked, or should I say told, to rebrand an image they have had for 20 years, an image key to the identity of the pub.

The support for the Hobbit has been remarkable, from almost 50,000 fans on their Facebook, over 6,000 on their Twitter and several celebrity supporters including Gandalf (or Sir Ian Mckellen to non-middle earthians) and Stephen Fry.

According to reports the Saul Zaentz Company is willing to offer a licensing agreement to the pub. However the campaign clearly is not over according to their own page.

It seems that this whole thing could turn out to be advantageous to the pub, as long as they are able to retain their name. With new support from huge celebrities and new UK/Worldwide coverage, they could see themselves benefit from a boost to business, particularly with the release of the Hobbit film. As a one-time customer who fell slightly in love with the place I completely support the success of this campaign and I hope that the hobbit succeeds versus the evil of Mordor! Now excuse me as I start a 12hour LOTR marathon!

Update:

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How to follow up #Kony2012

Only last week #Kony2012 took over Twitter. One video created the single biggest response that I personally have ever seen from the online world, so strong that there were claims that this was an example of social media’s power to change the world.

A week later it is no longer trending on Twitter, but people are still talking about Kony. If I was in charge of the campaign, this is what I would be doing now.

Follow up on the original hype

With over 72 million views on the original Youtube video it is clear that Kony 2012 grabbed the world’s interest. Facebook, Youtube and Twitter all went crazy with reaction to the video, it sparked passion from its audience and left millions of people wanting to help make a difference. A week later, people are still interested, the original video gained their interest but it is important to follow that up, continue to send information to those people interested about the campaign and what they can do to help. Once you have got their attention, make sure you use it!

Respond to the critics

With the buzz caused by the video came many critics, with claims of Kony 2012 being irrelevant, out of date and the work of privileged foreigners, including critics from Uganda. One of the best criticism, or at least one of the most relatable ones, I read was not directed at the #Kony2012 campaign but at the earlier work of Invisible Children but remains relevant, it came from Ilto blog:

“Imagine that today you heard about what happened in NYC and Washington DC on September 11, 2001 for the first time. You were shown a video of footage from that day. You saw the planes hit the towers, you heard President Bush’s address, you saw the Pentagon wreckage, you watch in horror as you see people plunge to their death, jumping from the burning towers. Now imagine that you are inspired by this disaster. You want to something to help. What if you went to NYC today, expecting to see piles of rubble to clean up? What if you went, expecting that there would be thousands of people in the streets crying, looking for loved ones? But what would happen when you arrived and discovered that there was none of this, but a whole host of other problems?”

Some people were convinced by the story, but wanted to know how they expected social media support to help the issue. People also questioned what was happening with the money!

The best way to respond to this is through being open and honest with the interested publics, and while researching this post I found that Invisible Children had done just that, they created a brilliant video full of information about how the organisation works.

Thank you, KONY 2012 Supporters from INVISIBLE CHILDREN on Vimeo.

This video is a brilliant PR response to the criticism and I think it is important to continue sharing this information with interested publics.

Continue hype over event

An important part of the campaign was the Cover the Night event, the Leeds event alone has 7,500 confirmed attendees, now it will be interesting to see how this turns out. A lot of people signed up in the full buzz of the campaign, but this event has the potential to be an important and exciting part of their campaign. I would work to continue to create a buzz around the event to keep people interested in the whole campaign.

From a strategic point of view, this campaign is in a brilliant position and they seem to be doing everything right at the moment. As long as they continue to capitalise on their current success and develop this to support their campaign then it could be an example of one of the biggest successful social media campaigns.

Who is Kony?

We can write for years about the potential of social media but every do often along comes an example which demonstrates the power and ability social media has.

We all know social media has changed modern communications. When my parents were at university they used a phone box and letters to speak to their parents. I send texts, Facebook messages and Skype my parents. I do not often read actual newspapers (should a PR student admit to this?), I get my news online, from Twitter links, newspaper website, news agencies, blogs, Facebook. Our lives have been changed by the internet.

I think social media has a lot of power, much of which we have yet to recognise and release. It relates to our need as humans to connect and helps pull down barriers caused by modern life and far away families and friends.

Last night #Kony2012 took over my Twitter feed. I had no idea what it was, where it came from, who was behind it. I had heard of child soldiers, but never of Kony, and I do not think I ever understood the reality of the situation. I am not alone, most people do not know who Kony is, what he does and who he does it to. That is the point of #Kony2012. A campaign designed to educate us about this situation and help us change it.

It took over Twitter. It took over Facebook. It took over Youtube. It took over blogs. Its popularity was such that its website crashed!

The campaign appeals to human behaviour and motivations. As a species, despite all our faults, morally we cannot accept injustice and harm to people. We want to change it and give everyone the chance of a great life. The campaign video hits people where it hurts, it is emotive, shocking and inspiring.

Let us hope that #Kony2012 does not disappear overnight like so many previous trending topics, but that the campaign’s goals are realised. That will show us the real power of social media.

Want to find out more about the campaign? Visit the website, Kony 2012.

Ode to the ‘To-Do’ list

L is for Lists

L is for Lists (Photo credit: Swiv)

In times of chaos, you settle me.

For cannot you see, without you I be, a catastrophe.

In times of quiet, you inspire me.

A buzzing bee? A new born tree? Not for me!

My imagination as ink and paper.

The insight into my thoughts.

You bring my ideas to life.

No matter the result nor strife.

You take a peek into my dreams

Craziness, disaster and all they deem.

I rely on your structure to steady me.

I rely on your promises to create me.

Without you, I am lost. Cannot create! Cannot design! Can I even be?

Oh cannot you see? I do need thee? To complete me.

You are me.

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