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GLH2020 London – and the winner is…

March 9, 2020 By David Terrar

GLH2020 London – and the winner is…

Last night we completed the third London edition of The Global Legal Hackathon.   As you may know, this is annual event that happens in over 40 cities simultaneously every year, on the same weekend in either February or March.  It’s organised by Rob Millard of Cambridge Strategy Group, me (David Terrar) of Agile Elephant, and Fraser Matcham of the University of Westminster.    The goal is to bring lawyers, coders, designers and marketers together to improve the practice and business of law, and better access to law for the public.  This year the weekend coincided with International Women’s Day, so we added the GLH Inclusivity Challenge, an additional stream to reward ideas that improve equity, inclusion and diversity in the legal profession.

Like so many recent and planned public events, we were affected by the Coronavirus.  In the previous two years around half of our signups for the event came in the last week, and almost everyone who registered actually attended.  This year we only had 2 signups in the final week (when we were expecting to add over 100), and in the end only half of our registered attendees actually came.  However, the 50 that came on Friday evening were the right 50!  Full of commitment and enthusiasm.  It was notable that everyone was shaking hands, keeping calm and carrying on, as well as following NHS guidance on hand washing, sneezing, face touching and the like.  We had a great atmosphere at the start on Friday night and all weekend in our new venue, the Marylebone Campus of the University of Westminster – a big shout out to them for providing us their premises and doing such a great job of hosting us!

On Friday we had 12 really great ideas, some real innovation and great use of technology pitched to the group, which quickly combined and  coalesced in to 7 teams.  The teams occupied 7 classrooms up on the second floor, and we had a big space for food, drink, networking and the ideation stage on the ground floor, as well as the Hogg Auditorium for Sunday’s presentations and judging.  

Sponsors and Supporters

We must thank law firm sponsors BCLP and White & Case, and our technology sponsor BRYTER for paying for the food, drink, prizes, trophies and other logistics for the event.  Nothing fancy – lunches were meal deals from local supermarkets, and evening meals were from Dominos.  You can’t have a hackathon without beer and pizza (although wine and soft drinks were provided too).  We would also like to thank our supporters – The Law Society, SRA, disruptive.liveand Techcelerate.   

Judges

We must thank our fantastic team of highly respected judges, who had such a difficult job this year:

  • Jenifer Swallow (Director, LawTech Delivery Panel)
  • Mo Zain Ajaz (Global Head of Legal Operational Excellence National Grid)
  • Elizabeth Duff (Dean of Westminster Law School)
  • Rosemary Martin (GC, Vodafone)
  • Priya Lele (Legal Operations Lead, Client Solutions, UK, US & EMEA, Herbert Smith Freehills)
  • Nicola Tulk (Programme Manager, Better Markets, Nesta Challenges)

Teams

In no particular order here are the teams who participated, with their ideas explained in one sentence:

Team NameTeam RepMembersProduct/Service
WayfarerKiran DhootKiran Dhoot
Dan Simpkin
Elizabeth Zang
Kallun Willock
Theofili Elenoglou
Steven Rajavinothan
Emily Pica
Rajdilair Rai
Virtual legal guide aimed at startups who don’t know what they don’t know.
Sharmant Trevor OakleyTrevor Oakley
Atis Gailis
Antonio Di Angelo
Dipal Thakker
A framework for provenance and safeguards in Import and Export trade 
 HomiieTatiana BotskinaTatiana Botskina
Musleh Kahn
Alice Abiola
Hugo Cheyne
Homiie is a platform that makes the complicated business of buying and selling a house faster, more collaborative and more transparent.
The Magic Box Liz Wong Liz Wong 
Giulia Carloni
Simon Cheung 
James SylvesterGuy Stern
Merve Ugurlu 
An autonomous work allocation platform that ensures efficiency and inclusivity. 
Team CDAdam FordAdam Ford
Geraint John
Alec Alston
Empowering small business to solve their debt problems without the need for  lawyers. 
VirtuoMichael FatungaseMichael Fatungase
Omar Salem
Waverly Chmura
Joe Reeve
Klaudija Brami
Danae Balcells
Greg Fylaktou 
THE virtual office. 
Easy Rail Rights Raphaël BastianRaphaël Bastian
Théo Bernier
Laetitia Jacquier-Stefanou
Ioannis Stefanou
It is an online platform for claiming refunds for passengers experiencing train cancellations and delays in Europe.

And the winner is

Inclusivity Challenge winner: 

The Magic Box – with their innovative, use of a “blind” mapping algorithm to take gender, ethnic and other biases out of a law firm’s work allocation, aiming to help utilisation and efficiency too. 

The Magic Box with the Judges

The main event:

Third: Team CD – with their Cockroach Debt solution helping small businesses with automation to improve their cash flow around bad debts, reducing the need for lawyers in many circumstances.  

Second: Sharmant – helping international trade with blockchain and other technologies in their solution connecting buyers and sellers to address the labour intensive Letters of Credit process.

First – the overall Winner: Homiie – with a solution combining chatbots, AI and blockchain to address the nightmare of the conveyancing process for buying and selling houses.  

Homiie with the Judges

We have a worthy winner, and speaking as someone who is in the thick of buying and selling, just a few weeks before exchange of contracts stage – I want their product right now please!

Homiie and The Magic Box will go forward to the semis and we really hope both London teams make the finals.  But the great thing is that all 7 ideas address real pain points, and all got to a position where they really should follow through and get to market.  We’ll be encouraging that to happen, and we really want to see some new companies formed out of GLH 2020.  We had a blast!

If you want to find our more about the Global Legal Hackathon, or to join our new LinkedIn community, then please contact us.  

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Filed Under: #GLH2020 Tagged With: AI, blockchain, chatbots, emerging technologies, Global Legal Hackathon, hackathon, legaltech, London, University of Westminster

Lawyers + Coders + Beer + Pizza = Global Legal Hackathon London 2020

March 2, 2020 By David Terrar

Lawyers + Coders + Beer + Pizza = Global Legal Hackathon London 2020

The third Global Legal Hackathon starts this Friday.  When you put lawyers, marketers, designers, consultants and developers in to room with beer and pizza what do you get?  If the last 2 years of this event are anything to go by, we’ll get something really special!  And by the way, other food and drinks will be available.

GLH2020 is happening over the weekend of 6-8 March.  Back in 2018 40 cities joined in simultaneously across 6 continents.  In 2019 we had 47 cities, and this year, even with the Caronaviris scare, over 40 cities will be involved and teams will be able to participate remotely if they want to.  We aim to make London bigger, better, and even more fun.  First a disclosure – Agile Elephant and I have been part of the organising team since the start.  Actually, the idea for this event was formed when Brian Kuhn, who at the time ran IBM’s Watson Legal business, met David Fisher, CEO of Integra Ledger, at a workshop Rob Millard of Cambridge Strategy Groupand I ran back in 2017.  Rob and I have hosted the London edition ever since, with a lot of help from our friends, sponsors and the University of Westminster.  This is a not for profit event, free to enter for the participants, with our sponsors covering the cost of some prizes, as well as lunches, evening meals, soft drinks, coffee, tea, beer and wine.  A hackathon wouldn’t be a hackathon without beer and pizza!

Here I am explaining it in a bit more detail:

David Terrar explains why GLH2020 needs you!

What’s the objective?

To progress the business of law, or to facilitate access to the law for the public. Ideas will be pitched on the Friday evening, and teams of 3-10 will form to work over the weekend to create an app or a service.  We expect ideas using technologies like AI, Machine Learning, Chatbots, Blockchain, or the Internet of Things.  Our 6 judges will deliberate and pick the winning team for London. That team will enter the virtual semi-finals with all the winners from the other cities on 22 March where 10 teams will be chosen to compete in the grand final in London on 16 May. 

What’s this Inclusivity Challenge you mentioned?

“Participants and teams around the world, in every Global Legal Hackathon city, are challenged to invent new ways to increase equity, diversity, and inclusion in the legal industry.” 

At the conclusion of the GLH weekend, a local winner of the GLH Inclusivity Challenge will be selected by each city alongside the main winner and will progress to a global semi-finals too. This will be an extra stream and, like the main stream, finalists will be invited to the GLH Finals & Gala, to be held in London in mid-May. On top of that, the overall winner of the GLH Inclusivity Challenge will be invited to present its solution during a diversity and inclusion summit that BCLP is planning to host in September, where leading figures from the industry will be asked to commit to ensuring the idea is brought to life and scaled up to deliver a lasting impact on the legal industry as a whole.

#GLH2020 London is bigger and better

The London stream of the Global Legal Hackathon is being co-hosted by Cambridge Strategy Group, Agile Elephant and our venue is kindly provided by the University of Westminster, Marylebone Campus at 35 Marylebone Road, London NW1 5LS (near Baker Street station).

All of the details, latest news and how to register are at: https://www.legalhackathon.london and follow #GLH2020 with #London on social media.

Who are sponsoring this?

This year the bills are being paid by law firms Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner, White & Case and software company BRYTER, who are providing access to their low-code platform for participants.    The Law Society, Disruptive.Live and Techcelerate are supporting us too.  

How can you get involved in the GLH?

  • Hacker teams and team members – Anyone involved in the law, interested in the law, involved in technology for the law, developers, marketers, graphic designers, app designers who want to join the fun.  We know some firms will submit teams, and new teams will form on the first evening around a great idea at the GLH.
  • Helpers – We need volunteers over the weekend to make it happen and keep everyone happy.
  • Mentors – We need subject matter experts and technologists who can mentor the teams over the weekend to help crystallise their ideas, challenge them, or keep them on track.
  • Judges – We’ve got 6 great judges.
  • Sponsors – It’s not too late to get involved and spend some of that marketing budget you had planned for big events overseas.  This is a ‘not for profit’ exercise for the hosts, but we need to cover our costs.

We think this is going to be something special.  What really happens when you get a bunch of lawyers, coders, designers, consultants and marketing types with their laptops and cloud platforms together over a weekend? Please register, come and join us and find out!

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Filed Under: #GLH2020 Tagged With: AI, blockchain, collaboration, consultants, designers, developers, Global Legal Hackathon, lawyers, legaltech, London, marketers, mobile, no-code, social media

Enterprise Digital Summit London in tweets and photos

November 26, 2016 By David Terrar

Enterprise Digital Summit London in tweets and photos

Here is a first taste of the story of last Thursday’s Enterprise Digital Summit London in tweets and photos. Our aim is to put on London’s most enterprise oriented event on digital transformation, helping organisations change mindset to deal with the incredible technological and competitive pressures of the 21C world of work. Here is the day from the audience’s perspective. We’ll publish posts, an event report, videos and more photos soon:

This gallery of photos below are all taken by our friend across from Germany Ellen Trude:









More content coming soon.  If you want to find out more about our approach, or you need help with your digital strategy, then please contact us.

 

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Filed Under: #EntDigi conference, agile business, corporate culture, digital disruption, digital transformation strategy, events Tagged With: British Academy, digital transformation, London

SMILE London Workshops 2016 – Enterprise Social Networks and more

May 29, 2016 By David Terrar

SMILE London Workshops 2016 – Enterprise Social Networks and more

Back on 12 May, Marc Wright of Simply Communicate kindly invited us to join in the latest version of his Social Media Inside the Large Enterprise London Workshops. The new format has 4 time slots each with 3 choices of workshop, so you could attend 4 out of 12. They covered a varied set of topics and case studies aimed at giving practical advice and helping large organisations in their journey with internal social collaboration and social media communications. Speakers included our good friends Luis Suarez on adoption (and adaptation) of these tools, Faith Forster talking about her product Pinipa and making projects more engaging, and Michel Ezran over from France to present the latest version of Lecko’s annual research report analysing what is the best collaboration & social toolset. This is the second year we’ve partnered with Lecko to extend their research in to the UK and make their report more International. There was an interesting mix of sponsors, a good venue, good food, and enough time between sessions to catch up with friends and do some networking. One important aspect – some good bean to cup coffee machines were on hand to put this a cut above the average event on caffeine delivery!

The content was a mixed bag – some very good sessions, and some not so. There are some key themes that we noticed aggregating what we gleaned from the various talks:

  • The increasing importance of tackling mobile, but the the solutions aren’t fully there yet
  • Tensions and differences in approach between out of the box solutions and the bespoke developed enterprise social networks
  • A difference in mindset between those companies that are using Sharepoint at the heart of their office infrastructure, and those that aren’t
  • The importance of linking collaboration to legacy systems and business process.

ELSUA at SMILE London 2016One other strand from various discussions at the event – quite a number of organisations are using Yammer but reckoning they are having problems with adoption. Something to explore later, and I see Marc has already promoted a simply yammer workshop to address that issue.

Some of the sessions used the MeeToo app on your smartphone for real time polling and chat. I didn’t see much use by anybody of the messaging, but bringing in the poling to some sessions was a good addition to making things more interactive. A note to self on this – if you do this kind of Q&A poll, make sure you’ve thought through the answer options fully.

We Are Social ESN case study

I watched Peter Furtado of Simply Succeed and Emma Cumming of We Are Social talk through the launch of their SHIP enterprise social network (ESN). We Are Social are a great story of a UK social media marketing agency startup. Founded by 2 people in 2008, they now have over 600 people across 8 countries and count major brands like Adidas as their customers (We Are Social were responsible for their #bethedifference campaign). Emma told us they weren’t practicing what they preach and using social media consistently internally. Skype was their first client and they use Skype a lot themselves, but they had siloed groups, and knew that knowledge was getting lost, never to be found again. They put together a steering group for governance, and set up a virtual task force of about 10% of the company to make a new approach work. It was the task force who decided on a name for their ESN, chose a particular platform, and put together a plan for launching it across the company. They called the network The SHIP which comes from the company’s core culture and values – social, honest, inspiring, passionate. They put together a fun home page and a whole set of launch material using ship and nautical themes to tease people before the launch, and then encourage people to join in – using the kind of ideas they usually sell to customers, but on themselves – an excellent story. The SHIP network has groups, activity feeds and great search capabilities. During the launch phase they emphasised the importance of people completing their profile, adding a proper avatar photo, and adding their skills and languages. Finding native language speakers to help on projects is now much, much easier across the company. Emma said they have 631 people on the SHIP and on average 80% of those access it once a week. 30% of those are engaging every week, with 15% contributing – those are good numbers. They use it to generate ideas for a new brief, to work on projects, to communicate across the organisation. One of the founders, Robin, got actively involved in the launch and early adoption and it’s clear that commitment and leadership from the top is a factor in making this kind of network successful. That means you have to sell the value to top management to get them involved early on. One of the unusual things they did at launch was to use targeted Facebook advertising, selecting for people who said they worked at We Are Social – I think thats a very neat, cost effective idea. Peter Furtado, who was called in to help them launch, talked about the Simply Suceed approach of putting 60% in to planning and identifying the business case, 25% in to planning the launch and the rest of your time and resource in to drive adoption within the community. The particular social business platform We Are Social used was Telligent (formerly Zimbra) with custom development from an outfit called 4 Roads to get the look and feel they wanted, integration with Google Drive and the like.

OOTB platform for SharePoint & Wiggle ESN case study

Brighstarr sesson at SMILE LondonNext I was off to see Martin Perks and Hannah Unsworth of BrightStarr. They are an experienced SharePoint developer and consultancy who have developed an out of the box ESN solution that sits on top of SharePoint called Unily. There are an increasing number of this kind of platform within the Microsoft ecosystem. Martin talked of the rise of the platform approach. In the past there might be a 24 month project to develop and launch an Intranet. In today’s environment we just can’t wait that long, our business might have changed completely in that timeframe. Added to that we are inundated with choices for sharing content, sharing documents, or different ways of instant messaging. He talked about pressure on the bottom line to get results, and the rise of mobile and the smartphone. He talked of custom IT projects being dead, team sizes having halved, and a significant decrease in a solely IT-led approach. He suggested build time has dropped by 79% in 5 year and that 80% of companies have the same requirements for an internal social network in any case. Hence the creation of an “out of the box” solution, branded as Unily and already an award winner (their customer DORMA was one of Nielsen Norman’s 10 Intranet Design Annual Award winners of 2016). Martin suggested budget is still with IT and not internal communications and so there can be a battle of wills where nobody knows where the Intranet project sits. Actually that is because it needs to be owned by everyone, and not just by IT or Comms. Brightstarr’s Unily supports this approach by creating an easy to use digital workplace with all of the required ingredients to help employees connect, collaborate and be more productive in their jobs. It provides a staff centric view to show that person the news that’s relevant to them and where they can contribute. Martin talked about mapping the requirements of communication, productivity, collaboration, knowledge, (and importantly) value over time. He agreed that it’s not just about technology and that the project has to be maintained, managed and led properly. Hannah talked about an agile approach and 4 week sprints developing the functionality. I found it interesting that the language and terminology leans towards the world of the programmer. They talked in terms getting things done in weeks not months and then introduced a customer to tell his story. Panos Mitsikis talked about implementing Unily at Wiggle. Interestingly, he described himself as a SharePoint developer. Wiggle, is a sports retailer, started back in ’99, who focus on triathlon – cycling, swimming and running. They outgrew an Intranet based on WordPress and realised that were spending too much time inside email communication. They needed a one stop for consuming information for each employee to surface what they care about. There are just under 500 Wigglers, as they call themselves and on a bad day, only 80% of them use the new ESN. It’s been designed to be employee centric, giving them important news, announcements, and videos with the aim of empowering them. It highlights trending documents, and they host events, or highlight sponsors They wanted an easy way for everything to be in one place, and so all the most commonly used apps are on a single page. It helps them form teams, manage projects, build communities, or follow external sites and blogs. So far they have around 45 project sites and every department has its own community. putting the site together took 4.5 weeks from start to finish with just Panos and plus two experts from Brightstarr.  They suggested that you shouldn’t be so precious about your requirements, and with this speed of implementation and success I can see why. They’ve decentralised content management and they suggested that Uniliy makes it much easier than vanilla SharePoint for creating that new content. The CEO was project sponsor and that was another key to success. The system handles multiple languages, supports everything Microsoft Office365 supports. You access Yammer from a social tab so you don’t even have to leave the platform to use that too. They carried out an aggressive campaign over a 3-4 week period to get everyone on board. Because Unily is provided as a Cloud based SaaS solution, it came with features Panos didn’t even think about, and Panos didn’t need any IT involvement to get it off the ground.

@ELSUA on Adoption/Adaptation

ESUA Final TipAfter lunch I joined the Luis Suarez session on adoption, or rather adaptation of social collaboration tools. Luis was relating his long experience in this field from his time in knowledge management, famously living inside IBM without email, and most recently as one of the best independent consultants in the social business space. He talked about identifying the business problems, making sure you have a governance model in place (that should be guidelines, not rules) and building a solid library of use cases. He talked of the importance of enabling your early adopters so that they can be effective champions and change agents. He offered ideas around education and enablement. A regular theme in any of Luis’s talks is highlights how 87% of the workforce is disengaged, and in this session he quoted figures country by country with the surprising fact that Costa Rica has the most engaged employees! On governance he told the story of the IBM Social Computing Guidelines, created in 2005 by employees on a wiki page – actually it was the prolific bloggers who, in 2 weeks, created something that was subsequently checked by IBM communications and legal but not changed. That 2005 set of guidelines became the blueprint for many of us! He talked about working out loud, and leading by example. About removing “reply all” and attachments from the mess of email and content trapped in the inbox. About asking open questions and shifting the mindset from knowledge is power. He believes finding experts in your organisation is the number one use case! He suggested we need to become people centric organizations, not document centric. He worried about the need to nurture early adopters because so often we don’t have budget to do it properly, so we need to crowdsource the help. He talked of giving them a sense of purpose to help them transform the way people work. He explained how he believes the narrative matters and his dislike for the term community manager, preferring to use facilitator. His final tip was:

“Get started! Stop thinking, start doing! (today!)”

The importance of Company Culture & EY case study

For the final segment I chose Lawrence Clarke, one of the founders of Simply Succeed, with Steve Perry, EY Community Implementation Leader. They were using EY as a case study and talking about how your social intranet holds up a mirror to your business culture. How your business culture ends up defining the ambitions of your social intranet. Steve talked through what they were trying to achieve with EY’s collaboration community in terms of understanding, engagement, satisfaction, recognition and openness. He talked about the levels of culture and artefacts in terms of the organisational language being used, the physical structures and decor of the places and the stories, ceremonies and rituals. Lawrence used the Zappos culture book as an example. Zappos is the successful online shoe retailer, acquired by Amazon in 2009 although it still operates independently. I have to agree that they are a great example in this context as their early investor, Tony Hsieh (pronounced Shay) who subsequently became their CEO says:

“Our number one priority is company culture. Our whole belief is that if you get the culture right, most of the other stuff like delivering great customer service or building a long-term enduring brand will just happen naturally on its own.”

Lawrence went on to spend some time talking about their shift to holacracy as an organisational structure. Actually I believe that’s a distraction, as it’s well known they are having problems with it, and anyway their core culture that created their success was in place well before that shift in management approach. He talked about the most important elements in managing culture being what leaders pay attention to, how they react to crises, how they allocate rewards and how they hire and fire individuals. Steve talked about the importance of how people are recognised and incentivised, how the rewards systems is created, and how visible and effective people are. He highlighted some of the issues around ensuring metrics that can’t be gamed wth an example where people were renaming documents to post them 10 times to improve their contribution statistics. You have to think through the behaviours you will trigger. They finished with an interesting contrast of the culture of Regus, the serviced and virtual office company, versus a startup competitor coming along to disrupt them called NearDesk. They pointed us to Regus Sucks, a review website created by angry ex-regus customers, along with employee reviews for Regus on GlassDoor. NearDesk is being crowdfunded as a pure digital business many of the 500 investors are customers. We’ll watch the progress of these two with interest.

So a good event, some good case studies, and the new format seemed to work well. We’ll be blogging some more about our key take aways and conclusions, and looking forward to doing more wth our friends at Simply Succeed & Simply Communicate.

BrightStarr session photo courtesy of a Bastien Le Lann tweet

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Filed Under: collaboration, corporate culture, Enterprise Social Network, events, social business Tagged With: enterprise, ESN, London, Simply Communicate, Simply Succeed, social media

A new Combined Social Business Meetup for London (with free beer and pizza)

April 2, 2014 By David Terrar

A new Combined Social Business Meetup for London (with free beer and pizza)

When we formed Agile Elephant, we had always wanted to start a regular series of monthly meetups around “what works?, what doesn’t?, what next?” in the social business space.

There are plenty of meetups that cover use of social media for marketing and promotion. We wanted something different. Something that covers the use of social tools inside the organisation, between teams and partners and customers to get work done more effectively, as well as for communication and outreach. We want to discuss topics like community building, barriers to adoption, employee engagement, new management structures and the future of the workplace. We’ll discuss social business platforms of course, but we plan to spend more time on behaviour and the culture required to make collaboration really make a difference to the bottom line for an organisation

Will McInnes started a like minded Meetup group in 2012 called Social Business Sessions London where we both have a lot of themes in common. Will has since moved to New York, and we have just taken over running that group on Meetup.com. We plan to run the meetup on the first Wednesday of each month (except for the summer holiday season) and there is a specific reason for that. We also hope to attract the champions of wikis and social software who used to attend London Wiki Wednesdays a few years ago – a group that we used to run. Their core theme is also the same as ours, and so we plan on incorporating that group too. However, we want to combine the best ingredients from each community, and continue the open spirit of all of the groups.

We are also delighted with our new partnership with Kongress Media.  They run the well-known, annual Enterprise 2.0 Summit in Paris as well as other Social Business events in Europe. They have offered to sponsor the beer, wine and pizza at each event. They will include our group in the promotion of their similar #e20s meetups in Paris, Brussels, Berlin and Zurich which connects us directly to an active Europe wide social business network.

Our working title is the Combined Social Business Meetup, but participants at the first session will have the job (fun?) of agreeing a better name.

Here is our initial, proposed format (which will no doubt be modified by group consensus):

  • Usually the first Wednesday of each month
  • Start time 18:00
  • Venue – Yammer’s EMEA HQ at 80 Gt Eastern Street, London (if you’d like to host a meetup please contact us)
  • One themed presentation of around 20 minutes – the first one will have Jon Mell of IBM as main speaker
  • Any attendee can speak on any social business related project or topic of their choice for up to 5 minutes, followed by 5 minutes of questioning from the floor – you book your place on the agenda by adding a post to the Meetup.com page – agenda sequence first come first served after the main speaker
  • Sales pitches are allowed, but we’ll make sure there aren’t more than 1 or 2 each week
  • An unconference panel of up to 5 volunteers will take questions for 30 mins
  • Kongress Media will sponsor the beer, wine and pizza and encourage everyone to promote the event using #e20s

The first event will be on 7th May. You can book your place on Meetup.com.  The main speaker at this first event is Jon Mell, Social Leader of IBM UK, and the venue will be Yammer’s EMEA HQ, 80 Gt Eastern Street, London (opposite Hoxton Hotel).  Contact us if you have suggestions or you want to find out more.

UPDATE:
The Meetup.com page for the event is now live. Go to the event page and RSVP.

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Filed Under: events Tagged With: collaboration, enterprise 2.0, London, londonwikiwed, meetup, open business, social business

Agile Elephant partners with Kongress Media for events and meetups

April 2, 2014 By David Terrar

Agile Elephant partners with Kongress Media for events and meetups

The Agile Elephant team are delighted to announce a new partnership with KongressMedia logoKongress Media, the organisation that runs the well-known, annual Enterprise 2.0 Summit in Paris.  We are combining our approach with their successful #e20s Conference to create a regular focal point in London for anyone interested in social business, social collaboration, enterprise 2.0 and the future of work.

We had already announced that we planned an Agile Elephant, one day, social business conference with Jon Husband and Euan Semple coming on board as speakers, assuming we could work out the right timing and logistics for them.  The agenda, topics and speakers at the Enterprise 2.0 events that Kongress Media have run in Germany, Switzerland and France for more than 5 years are very closely aligned to our core values – we’ve been involved in keynote and panel sessions for them before.  It makes perfect sense to partner with them for the UK. We’ll be working together to make a great London Conference about the use of social collaboration tools inside the organisation, between teams and partners to get work done more effectively, as well as for communication and outreach.  We want to discuss topics like community building, barriers to adoption, employee engagement, new management structures and the future of the workplace.  We’ll discuss social business platforms and technology, the practical side of making a social Intranet work, but we’ll spend more time on behaviour and the culture required to make collaboration really make a difference to the bottom line for an organisation.

Update: The Enterprise 2.0 Summit London will take place on September 9 November 26 2014 at The British Academy for the humanities and social sciences, Carlton House Terrace. We believe this is an ideal Central London venue. It’s a beautiful building, with a great history, and views over The Mall with Big Ben and The London Eye in sight.

We are combining the conference with monthly Meetups. Will McInnes started a very similarly themed Meetup group in 2012 called Social Business Sessions London.  Will has since moved to New York and we’ve taken over running that group on Meetup.com. That group’s core theme is very similar to ours, as is the London Wiki Wednesday group that we used to run, so we are combining those groups with Agile Elephant in the Room and Kongress Media’s #e20s meetups that already run in Brussels, Paris, Frankfurt and Zurich.  We plan to hold the first combined Social Business Meetup session on Wednesday 7th May starting at 18:00 at a venue to be announced shortly. We are also delighted to announce that Kongress Media will sponsor the Beer, Wine & Pizza and that IBM will be the main speaker.  Contact us if you are interested, but more details will be available soon.

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Filed Under: events Tagged With: #e20s, conference, enterprise 2.0, London, meetups, partnership

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