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Catching up from Dublin

Published on November 7, 2008 · 12:09 pm UK · 11 comments

in Communication, Events, Experiences, Presentations, Professional Development, Social Media, Technology

topgoldscreengrab Not the most flattering photo of me that I’ve seen but quite a good one to illustrate animation in conversation.

Either that or the ‘trapped in the headlights’ perspective. :)

This is a screengrab by Bernie Goldbach, taken in Dublin, Ireland, on Wednesday during a meeting of the Irish Internet Association at the Digital Hub, at which I kicked off a discussion about social media and business.

I think the scene Bernie captured was a moment during a lively exchange of views between Damien Mulley and I about the Brand/Ross/BBC fiasco and what the driver of public complaints was: the media and Daily Mail in particular (Damien’s view), or the tech that enabled people to share their opinions with anyone with a net connection (my view). We didn’t agree; the right answer is probably both.

In any event, it was a great meeting, one that Bernie video-streamed live to people who were participating remotely. Thanks again to Brendan Hughes, chair of the IIA’s Social Media Working Group, and the IIA’S Roseanne Smith,  for enabling me to take part in such an interesting session.

Before the IIA meeting, Bernie and I had lunch with a group of entrepreneurs and talked about Qwitter, among other wide-ranging topics. That was an especially interesting conversation as one of the group was Eoghan McCabe of Qwitter (or, more precisely, Contrast, the company behind Qwitter).

Others in our conversation group were Campbell Scott, CEO of IGOPeople, Per Jacobsson, MD of nimble.ie, and Simon Fitzgerald from Text100.

I recorded much of our conversation which will be up as an FIR Speakers & Speeches podcast as soon as I get a moment to edit and produce it, likely this weekend.

That evening, I delivered a guest lecture to many of the students of the post-graduate Master’s degree course in public relations at the School of Media at the Dublin Institute of Technology, thanks to the kind invitation to do so from the DIT’s John Gallagher.

My contribution to yesterday’s FIR was some thoughts about the events of Wednesday which I recorded really late that night while they were fresh in my mind.

On Thursday, I led a one-day workshop on social media and PR for the Public Relations Institute of Ireland, which was the prime reason for my visit to Dublin. I hope to post some specific thoughts about that workshop (and the DIT lecture) a bit later. Thanks again to PRII Chief Executive Gerry Adams and Marketing Manager Cyrilla Costello for their terrific hospitality and welcome.

It’s been a busy week! And I want to especially thank Bernie Goldbach – Topgold indeed – for his selfless connectivity and enthusiasm. Krishna De, too, who added major value to the PRII workshop with her participation in the afternoon.

People like all those I’ve mentioned are reasons why I really like visiting Ireland.

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