Holy Bones, Leicester

The news that Amplified Leicester is now looking for participants came through today. Sign up below if you want to get involved..

Holy Bones, LeicesterPhoto by Stuart Glendinning Hall

Holy Bones, Leicester
Originally uploaded by Stuart Glendinning Hall

Brighten up the winter in an exciting Leicester experiment and learn some 21st century skills. We’re looking for people who are open-minded, enthusiastic and curious.

Amplified Leicester is a city-wide experiment to

– explore diversity and innovation

– build a network across diverse communities

– create, share and develop new ideas

– use social media like Facebook and Twitter as an amplifier

This is an opportunity to work with people you might otherwise never meet and learn how to:

– benefit from Leicester’s huge diversity of people and cultures

– generate lots of new ideas quickly

– think like a futurist and see the bigger picture

– organise and collaborate better

– be persuasive in different social situations

– share and develop creative ideas

– manage the stream of information which bombards us every day

– choose the best people to collaborate with

– make the most of different kinds of resources – social, economic, creative

Participation is free of charge but places are limited. Deadline for applications Friday 11th September 2009.

Find out more and download an application form from http://www.amplifiedleicester.com

For an informal chat, please contact Sue Thomas or Thilo Boeck:

Sue Thomas t: 0116 207 8266 e: sue.thomas@dmu.ac.uk
Thilo Boeck t: 0116 2577879 e: tgboeck@dmu.ac.uk

Amplified Leicester is managed by the Institute of Creative Technologies, De Montfort University in partnership with the DMU Centre for Social Action and Phoenix Square Digital Media Centre. The project is commissioned and supported by NESTA, an independent body with a mission to make the UK more innovative.

“A group that thinks in diverse ways will address a problem from many angles.” Charles Leadbeater, The Difference Dividend

Simple twitter measurements

Linked to the Twitter policy objectives in this new doc for UK Government departments, I like the range of methods to gather evidence of effectiveness:

  • Web analytics for [dept].gov.uk and clickthroughs from URLs in our tweets (using bit.ly) – to track referrals from Twitter to our web pages
  • Twitter surveys – regular ‘straw poll’ surveys on Twitter to ask for feedback
  • Twitter data – the follower/following data presented in our Twitter account
  • Third party tools – analytics tools including measures based on re-tweeting (Retweet Radar; Twist); online reputation (Monitter, Twitter Grader); impact and influence (Twinfluence, Twittersheep); unfollowers (Qwitter)
  • Alert services – tweetbeep.com and other methods for tracking mentions of our stuff
  • Real time observation – http://twitterfall.com/ and similar tools

Template Twitter Strategy for Government Departments