Tag Archive for Battle of Big Thinking

Buzz Library at the MRS Conference 2011

I’m not going to be able to add much in terms of take outs from the conference – largely because Elle has done an amazing job of summing in a much cleverer way that I will.

Just wanted to add in (yes, not subtle) some thoughts about the session that I was chuffed to bits to chair – Buzz Library. The format was simple (despite my early attempts to over complicate it) – 4 speakers were given 3 minutes (timed) to tell the audience about a book that had influenced their work lives in some way. After that, eschewing the typical ‘audience question time’ I asked for volunteers to plug a book that had influenced them (and in return, they were given one of the 4 books as a prize).

I was lucky that the 4 people I most wanted to speak all said yes…Alison Winter is a client I’ve worked with at the BBC, Caroline Hayter Whitehill sits on the AQR committee, Tom Woodnutt is a new friend who has struck out on his own and who I’m keen to work with and I saw James Mitchell on the stage at the Battle of Big Thinking and I took the brave step of tweeting him afterwards…and then there he was on the stage.

The session itself went well but to be honest, my favourite bit was the meetings we held to discuss their book choices. We don’t often get the chance to just chat about clever-stuff and it was an honour and privilege to do so.

Anyway – I’m hoping to start an MRS Book Club at some point in the future and you never know, maybe the session could become a regular fixture at the conference.

Icing on the cake – a nice review by Teresa Lynch of MRWeb. Thank you to anyone who came along and thanks to the MRS for the opportunity. Baby steps into conference land…next year I’ll toddle.

Chloe

*****

Over the last few years the Research conference has organized quite a few ‘stunt’ sessions. These are designed to show that researchers are also interested in things other than research and that they can be a bit wacky. Teresa Lynch looks at this year’s entrant in the category.

Who can forget, in 2009, ‘The Research X Factor’? Or last year’s ‘Research Dragon’s Den’ and ‘Big Thinkers’? Very few of these sessions in the past have achieved lift-off or been repeated the next year. However this year’s ‘Viewpoints – This Book will Change Your Life’ was an exception.

It wasn’t particularly high concept, which may have been an advantage since it was on at 2.15 on a day when a large percentage of the potential audience had been up till the early hours the previous day. Introduced by Chloe Fowler of Razor Research, four young researchers gave a three-minute pitch for a business book which had changed their working lives.

Tom Woodnutt, a freelance Conversation Strategist picked the somewhat predictable What Would Google Do? by Jeff Jarvis. Woodnutt mentioned all the regular things people say about Google: the twenty percent time for individual project and the ‘dare to fail’, but he still managed to make the book sound like a good read – which having battled through it myself, it really isn’t.

Next up we had Alison Winter of the BBC on Orbiting the Giant Hairball: A Corporate Fool’s Guide to Surviving with Grace by Gordon Mackenzie. According to Winter this is the book for all those worker ants slaving in the big colony, hemmed in by the inflexibility of historic systems, and unable to break free. Winter spoke well about the book’s advice to try to change small local things rather than whole monolithic organizations like, for example, the BBC.

Caroline Hayter Whitehill of Acacia Avenue followed with a Q and A for the audience. We had to put up our hands if we agree with various marketing mantras such as ‘20% of your customers give you 80% of your value’ and ‘certain types of people like certain brands’. Given that all of the statements were deemed to be wrong by Byron Sharp, author of How Brands Grow: What Marketers Don’t Know, the audience learned pretty quickly not to make twits of themselves putting up their hands.

Lastly we had James Mitchell of BBH singing the praises of Mastery by George Leonard, a book applying the principles of Aikido to achieving life goals. Mitchell proved a very engaging performer and used some very basic hand drawn visual aids to draw us into what was essentially a self-help book.

However the best part of the session was still to come. The audience were asked to make a one-minute pitch for a book they felt had changed their lives, the reward being their choice of one of the platform books. This was a fascinating exercise and the audience, caught off-guard, were shown to good advantage as they responded. Your correspondent’s favourite of all these instant summaries was not one of the many management or infographic books mentioned but the lady who stood up and said reading novels not manuals had made her a better researcher since they gave her insight into the human condition.

In all about 12 members of the audience went out clutching an unexpected prize. This was a good session, well conducted, with good speakers and no razzle dazzle. It would be easy to repeat next year instead of trying a new borrowed-from-TV format. After all, everyone loves a book club.
Teresa Lynch, MR Web

 

Thinking about Big Thinking.

On Thursday 26th November, 2010, at the British Library, a Clash of the Titans took place. The APG’s Annual Battle of Big Thinking has created a fabulous format in which the titans of planning battle it out to come up with the biggest, most game-changing provocative thoughts.

The format this year was different to previous years. The entrants were those selected from the winners of previous battles…and included Fru Hazlitt (ITV), Greg Nugent (London 2012), Robin Wight (Engine), Russell Davis (Ogilvy), Guy Murphy (JWT) and no less than 3 entrants from BBH (Jeremy Ettinghausen, James Mitchell and Peter Sells).

First things first, it’s a great format. 7 sessions comprising of 2-3 chunks of 15 minute presenting. No-one is allowed to run over and though there was a threat of a vuvazela for over-running – not one did. No questions sessions, no lengthy introductions – just get up and go. The audience voted electronically after each session to choose a ‘winner’ and then at the end of the day we voted amongst all winners to crown the ultimate Titan. Having attended a few conferences this year which spanned 2 + days, every session ran over so time for questions was always truncated, introductions are longer and more sycophantic than the sessions themselves, the AV didn’t work…well, it was refreshing and enviable.

Another ‘big’ lesson was that I was reminded, once again, that ‘people in advertising’ are just, quite simply, better presenters than most researchers. They present without notes, they move around the stage, they are confident with microphones. They get their swag on. They bring it. Is this just confidence? And if it is, how can we help researchers get a piece of it?

There were themes that cropped up time again during the day: sex and death, behavioural economics, get with digital or get out, collaborate or die, neutrality, etc. and to bang on here would probably mis-represent many of the other nuggets of genius… but they were there.

But ultimately, what I came away with was a sense of WHY ad agencies are able to charge Titan-like fees…they make you feel, believe and want. They’re confident, they’re not afraid to provoke, challenge, argue. They’re stylish, they’re cool. They’re mostly under 40.

Note to self: bring it.

Chloe