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mesh is Canada's digital transformation and innovation event taking place in Calgary and Toronto each year.

Speaker Spotlight: Mark Surman, mesh2011 Business Keynote

By mesh news

“If we take ‘social mission’ as the first element, then a hybrid organization looks a lot like a traditional charity or not-for-profit. Public benefit is the core reason that these organizations exist… On our increasingly digital planet, we clearly need public benefit organizations that care about such things.”
Source: commonspace by Mark Surman

We chose Mark Surman as the keynote for our business stream at mesh2011 for one simple reason: more than just about anyone, he knows what it is like to try and run a distributed organization that not only encourages but is dependent on engagement and participation from its members. The Mozilla Foundation, of which Surman is the executive director, needs this because it is a largely volunteer organization, the community behind the open-source browser Firefox. But the reason we chose Mark to keynote mesh2011 is that there’s a case to be made that all businesses need to adopt more of the organizational structure — and thus also some of the motivational and administrative approaches — of open-source and volunteer agencies like Mozilla.

The reality is that in today’s hyper-connected, real-time and increasingly web-powered world, companies of all kinds are struggling with the same issues: how can a large company manage a distributed workforce, many of whom are freelancers, contractors, part-timers or other non-permanent staff? In a world where younger employees are free to move from job to job — and in many cases will do so dozens of times, drawn by factors other than just monetary compensation — how does a company motivate its employees? How can companies competing in a global environment get the best contributions they can from their staff?

All of these issues are ones that freelance and volunteer organizations like Mozilla deal with directly, and that’s why the lessons that Mark Surman has drawn from his years of work with the foundation — as well as a career of social and community activism and engagement that spans almost 20 years — are worthwhile hearing for almost any company that wants to become more competitive, regardless of what industry it is in.

Before joining Mozilla, Mark was an open philanthropy fellow at the Shuttleworth Foundation in South Africa, where he invented new ways of applying open-source thinking to social innovation. Prior to that, he was the founding director of telecentre.org, a $26-million effort to network community technology activists in countries around the world. Mark has also served as president of the Commons Group, Director of Content and Community at Web Networks and senior advisor to the Volunteer @ction Online grants program team. Mark’s first real job was training social activists to make their own documentaries in the early 1990s.

Read more…

“A Digital Age” The European Magazine
Mark’s Blog: commonspace
LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

Speaker Spotlight: David Armano

By mesh11

Within the social media world, there are a handful of people who talk the talk and walk the walk. These are people who provide information, insight and perspective about what’s happening with social media and get their hands dirty with clients.

One of them is David Armano, EVP, Global Innovation & Integration with Edelman, but he’s probably better known for being the guy behind Logic + Emotion, one of the most popular marketing blog.

Armano’s strength is how he explains many of the theories, processes and trend within social media and digital marketing in a way that is smart and accessible. It makes David stand out in a marketplace in which there are more people talking about what’s happening.

After some juggling with his schedule, we were excited that David will be able to join us at mesh, along with Valeria Maltoni, for a panel looking the growing role of influence.

The panel will explore the why influence has become so important and why influencers are regarded as a valuable and necessary asset. We’ll also look at how “influence” is measured, and how influencers should be approached.

mesh, by the way, happens on May 25 and 25 at the Allstream Centre in Toronto. You can purchase tickets here.

Speaker Spotlight on Janice Diner: F-Commerce, Anyone?

By mesh11

One of mesh’s programming goals is presenting a wide variety of speakers, particularly people who haven’t appeared in Toronto or don’t speak often. To keep things fresh, we try not to have speakers make repeat appearances.

Of course, there are a few exceptions. One of them is Janice Diner, who made her mesh debut last year with a standing room-only presentation about Facebook. There was so much enthusiasm for Janice’s presentation we invited her to do a presentation at meshmarketing. And there was so much interest that we felt compelled to invite Janice to do a workshop at mesh ’11.

So why has Janice become a rare three-repeat presenter? As much as many people use Facebook, there is so much to learn about how Facebook is evolving and the different things that brands can do with it. Janice has a unique combination of insight and hands-on experience that makes her presentation “must-attends”. If you look around the room during one of her presentation, the amount of furious note-taking is impressive.

At mesh ’11, Janice is going to cover some new ground with a workshop focused on the growing amount of e-commerce happening on Facebook, aka F-commerce. Analysts predict commerce from Facebook stores will hit $30 billion by 2015 as more companies look at how to turn conversations into commerce.

“Businesses of all sizes are building and testing commerce solutions inside Facebook and are looking at how they can turn conversations into conversions,” Janice says. “Coca-Cola, Barneys, Sears, Pampers, Dove, Sephora, Lands End and many others pages have built “Shopping” Tabs in their Facebook pages. Facebook is launching, local group buying with its Deal platform and going head to head with companies such as Groupon. Facebook Credits will become the mandatory currency for Facebook games and applications as of July 1 2011.”

For anyone looking for real-world insight into where Facebook is going with e-commerce, you won’t want to miss Janice’s workshop, which happens during the afternoon of May 26.