Russell Davies

Semi-retiring
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lyddleend2050

Lyddle_2

Blimey. Well Lyddle End 2050 seems like a popular idea. How exciting. Loads of people have got in touch, all have promised not to be slack and I'm excited to find myself at the nexus where the world of futurism connects to the world of model railways. It's the kind of place you'd find a gigantic interdimensional shiftship.

The first lot of buildings are ready to go out to people, I shall be enveloping tomorrow. And I'm going to try and find local Hornby suppliers for all of you not in the UK. And, so we can all see work in progress, I've put a tumblr here. It should aggregate any flickr picture and any delicious bookmark tagged lyddleend2050.

More soon. And if you'd like to join in please email specmod@russelldavies.com

November 20, 2008 in slow projects | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

speculative modeling

Beachhouse

A few things collided in my head a while ago:

* How much I like model railway lay-outs (a lot)

* A wondering about why model railway lay-outs always evoke the past - rarely the future

* A thought about the possible power of modeling and thinking with your hands

* Utter joy in the face of the splendidness of this.

* The discovery of the Lyddle End range of Hornby products.

And I had an idea. But I did nothing.

And then, Matt started his cattle-drive. Which proved the enormous value of the internet folly. And I saw this Pete Waterman quote in the paper at the weekend: "I don't mind people thinking we're daft. HG Wells was wrong. We do have a time machine, with models."

And all this culminated in an idea for another silly project; speculative modeling.

How about I get a load of Lyddle End properties and we try and build a version of what we think Lyddle End might be like in 2050? Everyone who wants one gets a little building and they have to alter it, mod it, change it, play with it, to reflect how they think the world will be in 42 years time. Then, we'll put them all together, either physically or through the magic of photography, and see what it might tell us about our visions of the future. I can't help thinking we might be able to build ourselves a rather intriguing speculative diorama.

Anyone up for that?

If you fancy it send me an email at specmod@russelldavies.com and I'll sort out getting some buildings. I'll pay for them, and the shipping, but you have to promise to have a go at the modeling and not be slack. Otherwise I'll feel a fool. (More of a fool.)

November 10, 2008 in slow projects | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

it's like a library for analogies

Informationtunnel

Since a couple of people seem to have liked the Analogy Library idea I thought I'd try and build a prototype. So I reached for tumblr, the papers and glue of the internet, and made analogylibrary.tumblr.com. All it does is aggregate things that are tagged analogylibrary on delicious or flickr. So if you see half an analogy somewhere please tag away. That seems like enough really. I guess you could add more sophisticated things at some point, but let's see if anyone uses it first.

October 30, 2008 in slow projects | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

slow strategy

Strategy

Warning - regular people might want to avoid this one. It's a rather pompous and oblique post about 'planning'.

One of the smartest things Richard ever said was that he didn't read all the books planners normally read, your Gladwells etc. 'There's no competitive advantage in it', he'd say. And he's completely right because planning isn't a body of knowledge to be absorbed, it's more like a act to be developed, like a comedian. You don't want to be doing the same jokes as everyone else. Even if you do them really well.

So, with the second IPA Fast Strategy conference happening tomorrow, and Fast Strategy starting to become an orthodoxy. Maybe it's time to examine the wisdom of all this speed. It's often good to be kicking against the orthodox.

Dsc01449

Firstly, whenever you hear mention of speed, it's worth remembering the eternal Project Triangle. That would suggest that if you're going to be quick then you're also going to either bad or expensive.

That might be worth worrying about. And does that seem true? Well, yes. A fast strategy is likely to explore fewer possibilities, will consider fewer contingencies. It will gravitate towards the obvious. This might work out well. But it is less likely to uncover the unexpectedly brilliant solution. Or the cheaper, less obvious one.

Secondly, going fast will tend to reduce the amount of collaboration you do. Fast strategy is perfectly possible, but it's best done in the head of a single person, or the heads of a really tight team. Not necessarily a bad thing. But not always the right thing. Sometimes strategy needs to be mulled over by an organisation. Nike used to describe it as 'socialising' an idea. It needs to be walked round the corridors, knocked around a bit in meetings, examined by different disciplines. Fast strategy might yield a big idea, but a slow strategy, a socialised strategy is maybe more likely to yield a rich one.

Fast

Thirdly, are we sure this isn't all just a cost-saving thing anyway? I'm convinced that planning was mostly invented because it was cheaper to have a planner thinking about something for half the process rather than having the creatives thinking about it the whole time. Are we sure that Fast Strategy isn't just a way of selling a process to a client as an innovation when it's really just a way to eat up less agency resources. Do Fast Strategies cost the client less?

Fourthly, and I know this is a bit tedious, it might be worth wondering whether we really want Fast Strategy or Fast Tactics. I'd argue that strategy should be a slow, evolving, socialised, collaborative, gradualist process. It should grow out of business decisions, the purpose, the values, the conversations of an organisation. Warren Buffett should be your strategy role-model. Tactics might be the place where speed is valuable. The smaller, more frequent, more granular manifestations of your strategy are when the risks of doing something expensive or bad are mitigated by the opportunity to do something timely and appropriate.

And maybe that's where advertising's tendency to elevate it's own importance is allowing me to poke these holes. Because planners don't really do strategy do we? We do tactics. And maybe admitting that will make it easier for us to do it well.

Fifthly, should we even be talking about stuff in this linear way anyway? Wouldn't the best way to do this stuff be to evolve your strategy slowly but punctuate it with regular, informative bits of execution?

Slow

Sixthly (?) we should acknowledge that this is all a bit silly anyway. It's just an excuse for a conference and a blog-post. We tend to advocate the processes that suit us personally. When I was in agency life I was all about the fast strategy. Loved it. Couldn't get enough. Because it meant that I could get stuff off my plate really quickly and get back to blogging and sleeping. Now I'm more responsible for delivering actual projects I like the idea of 'slow projects' because it helps to rationalise my failure to deliver. (And, should you wish, you can see video of me and Matt rationalising failure like crazy at the Do Lectures here.)

I guess the real answer, as always, is the shoddy compromise; make sure that you can think and do both quickly and slowly. And then work out which suits you and your circumstances more. Because doing strategy happily is probably more important than doing it quickly or slowly.

September 30, 2008 in slow projects | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

the internet cupboard

Dsc01422_2

I did this silly project a while ago. I made some physical tapes of various muxtape mixes. And, as is the way of these things, quite a few people never got in touch so I could send them their tape. (Or I forgot, which is more likely). So when I was reading this sad, thoughtful, intelligent piece about the death of muxtape (by its creator) I was staring at these physical incarnations of it. A pile of muxtapes.

It occurred to us later on on Friday that more of the internet could benefit from being preserved in this way. Wikipedia should be kept in a ring-binder, flickr should be in a shoe-box. Just in case. Haha. You know. Funny.

Lexmarkaioscan39

But I've not been able to get this idea out of my head. Maybe it's because I've been going through a bunch of stuff from storage recently but I like the idea of bumping into old physicalised bits of the internet in ten years, behind a sofa. Not a determined, rigourous, purposeful archive, but a haphazard collection accidental bits that you come across while living a life. Like collecting the bus tickets of the web. So I've got a ring-binder, I've written 'wikipedia' on it. I've stuck a print out of this in there. And I'm putting it in my internet cupboard. You wait, you'll all be coming round for a look at it soon.

(Incidentally, if you'd like your muxtape now, now it's a priceless historical artefact please drop me an email.)

September 28, 2008 in slow projects | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

topsecrethowiesproject news

Instorematic

Matt and I did a bit of talking about the Instorematic at This Happened last week, and mentioned that we were going to be trying a bit of a barn-raising to get it finished this weekend. Unfortunately, and almost inevitably, we can't do that now. Things have intervened. Huge thanks to the people who volunteered to help us out and watch this space for news of the next planned date.

June 11, 2008 in slow projects | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

muxtaping news

Handmade

A couple of people have asked what's happening with the muxtaping, more than reasonably. The ups and downs of muxtape slowed  me down a little but I think they're all finished now. So, if you left a muxtape address you now need to send me your postal address and I'll get your tape to you. (send it to russell at russelldavies.com)

June 02, 2008 in slow projects | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

dawdlr ticks over

Dsc00671

I just updated Dawdlr. I've realised how happy it makes me that there's this lovely little job to do every six months until the end of time. W have a small but perfect selection, nicely stretching time out. Someone writes from before Christmas, hoping they've got a new job by May. And someone writes from Chicago, hoping they're pregnant. There are thoughts about moving long distances, and about lunch. That's what we're doing, more generally. I hope everyone got their wish.

I guess this update represents about minute 5 at the origins of twitter, so if I wanted to accurately replicate a slowed-down twitter experience I could take about 10 years off now. But I'm enjoying the pointlessness too much so we'll be back, regular as clockwork, on November 21st.

May 21, 2008 in dawdlr, slow projects | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

muxtape tapes - ready to go

Dsc00466

I'm about halfway through the muxtape project, there's a pile ready to go. So, if I'm doing you a tape could you please email me your postal address, so I can get it to you. (russell at russelldavies.com)

April 30, 2008 in slow projects | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

slow project resonances

One of the things I like about slow projects like the Instorematic is the way it extends that window where you see the world through the filter of your project; the way that when you're working on / thinking about something you see echoes of that thing everywhere you go. Which makes you think again about what you're doing.

Automatic

For instance, we were at Drayton Manor Theme Park last week and wondered away from Thomas Land and all the scary, young people attractions to look at The Bryans Penny Slot Machine Museum. (I love the way Theme Parks always have these eccentric little corners). And saw this Automatic Postcard Vendor, a lovely machine which never made it into production. It hadn't really occurred to me before seeing this that the Instorematic is basically, an automatic postcard vendor (without the vending), so I did some searching and discovered that the very first vending machines were built to dispense postcards. So we don't just have a heritage of pointlessness, but also a noble one of mechanics.

Postcards

It also turns out that the way the machine dynamically creates a unique postcard on each occasion isn't so novel either. I found this patent from 1973 for a sort of combined photobooth/postcard machine which makes a postcard of you and yours standing in the view you've come to see. Surprised that didn't take off. Of course, we're not really doing the same thing, we're taking pictures from the flickr group. But, you know, it's interesting.

Then, in other, but related news, Ed was kind enough to send me this video of a machine in a German restaurant which delivers food down a track rather like the machine will deliver postcards. You can see some common inspiration in the Emett breakfast machine from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.


emett breakfast machine from russelldavies on Vimeo.

But, comparing the two videos/machines, you realise what makes one just fun and the other slightly magical. It's the danger. It's the fact that the Emett is always balanced on the edge of possibility. It might not work. And that's one of the tensions in the Instormatic, the joy isn't just that it's doing a delightfully pointless thing, it's that it's doing it in a pointlessly risky way. This, is frustrating, when we know it can do this. But securing the postcard with clamps or something would take the delight out of it. (Anyway, Henry reckons he knows what the problem is, he thinks it's postcard fatigue, postcards only last about three spins down the spiral before their aerodynamics change.)

As Matt says, we're down to the difficult last 5%, but I suspect that the decisions we make here, to preserve the pointlessness, or to maximise efficiency, will really determine whether the thing's as properly playful as it should be.

April 21, 2008 in slow projects | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

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