Church Twittering Encouraged

Posted 20 Mar 2009 — by admin
Category Technology, social networking

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Churches in Northern Ireland are rarely different from churches to be found anywhere in the world. Traditional methods of doing church have been established over many years and there is a mentality that if it is not broken then don’t fix it.

So anyone trying to bring about change in the way things have been done, like installing modern equipment such AV equipment, projector and LCD screens or the really big no no, the style of music would quickly find opposition. But the thing is, most church denominations are keen to share the Christian message and make the church experience relevant to those coming into the church.

So take the Seattle church that encourages Twittering during the service. Imagine churches here in Northern Ireland or the even on the mainland introducing and encouraging parishioners to tweet with followers about the sermon while in the service, but that is exactly what happens at Mars Hill Church in Seattle.

The church promotes twittering throughout the service. Imagine the picture, at any time dozens of churchgoers are typing brief messages, of 140 characters or less, for the church’s own Twitter page. The idea is that church members are conveying their feelings about the sermon as it’s taking place. They are trying to get back to that basic sense of feeling how the service impacts them, what the worship feels like, what thoughts the sermon provokes and they take all this outside the building to their friends and the world in general

Lichlin Payne an Australian traveling the US to experience the different church services available, welcomes technological adaption to the new media by churches to communicate worshipers’ feelings. He quoted as saying “I remember 10, 15 years ago you couldn’t wear a hat in church, and now you can get out your mobile phones and twitter, so these things change and you’ve got to move with the times”.

I don’t know about the church you attend, but I can’t see many of our congregation rushing to grab their iPhones to tweet a thought about the sermon. Perhaps I should try it this Sunday and see what type of response I get, but I am interested in how tweeting effects the experience.

View Mars Hill Church Story: Twittering-encouraged-at-seattle-church

Tweeting B2B

Posted 19 Mar 2009 — by admin
Category Branding, Technology, social networking
EO Tweeting

EO Tweeting

Probably like a lot of people I started social networking with BEBO until the mighty Facebook caught my attention and it was clear that BEBO was a child’s toy in comparison.

Last year I was introduced to Linkedin which is powerful business networking site, though I found it very restrictive after being familiar with Facebook. However it had advantages of reaching the people you wanted to have in your network, you could say more quality over quantity. I suppose we at EO Creative have enjoy since conception marketing tool of social networking, but Linkedin appeared the only real option for B2B networking.

Then I started exploring Twitter and like many others, first viewed Twitter as a fairly useless marketing tool in the business to business marketing box. How could a few words telling people what you are ‘doing now’ help grow your brand or build your reputation? But, I have to eat my words, I was wrong. As many of you who know us, we are not likely to sit by the sideline, instead we dived into the Twitter pool a little while back and swam with the Tweeters. And now we are converts to the marketing potential for B2B through the Twitter platform. There is a lot to be gained from twittering and much for business marketing.

Feel free to follow our tweets on Twitter and see what we mean at http://twitter.com/EO_Creative

Team Fergus To The Rescue

Posted 05 Feb 2009 — by admin
Category Animation, Illustration, Marketing

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As many know illustration plays a large part in what we offer as a design consultancy. Where many other agencies would buy in animation and illustration skills we have the benefit of being able to create original artwork in-house.

As part of a children’s illustrated book based on the adventures of ‘Fergus the paramedic goose’. Along with a flash animated Fergus website and promotional short animated cartoon, showing the humorous flight launch of Fergus the Paramedic goose to the skies during his rescue adventures across the north of Ireland.

Check out the animated short and website at the following links:

Teamfergus Video Short

www.teamfergus.com

www.eo-creative.com

Celebrating Whiteabbey Village

Posted 06 Dec 2008 — by admin
Category Branding, Creative Team, News

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On Wednesday 4th December Newtownabbey Council celebrated the completion of the Whiteabbey project with the Mayor, Alderman Victor Robinson speaking at the launch ceremony in Whiteabbey Community Centre.

Residents and businesses in Whiteabbey Village joined with local councillors to celebrate the completion of the “Sharing a Vision for our Coastline Project.” A project supported by EU INTERREG IIIA, providing funding for 14 towns and villages across the East Border Region including Whiteabbey, to carry out environmental improvement schemes. EO Creative as a local company was delighted last year to have been appointed to carry out consultation with local residents and traders as part of the re-branding exercise of Whiteabbey Village. Creating an identity that promotes the villages many businesses, services and leisure facilities available (detailed in previous post).

All commuters driving from Belfast to Carrickfergus will have seen the new sculpture on the roundabout at the bottom of the Station Road in Whiteabbey, which has become a real talking point for passing motorists and local residents. The sculpture’s sailing theme celebrates Whiteabbey’s strong links to the nautical trade, ships and maritime passage and has been put in place. The finishing touch to Newtownabbey Council participating in the EU Interreg coastal towns and villages’ regeneration project and the developing of the brand identity for the village and marking the completion of the overall village project.

Case Study

If looks could kill

Posted 01 Dec 2008 — by admin
Category Branding, Design Projects, Marketing, News

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We are excited with the all the interest in our brochure. We began life as EO Creative in 2006, and have worked hard to be a part of the right projects and thus resulting in have a diverse range of case studies. Our creative team is drawn together from a wide range of backgrounds enabling design to be tailored to match specific needs, influential branding strategies, providing digital solutions along with in house illustrating.

EO Creative Brochure PDF

We are proud of many of our recent projects due to the social impact they have brought to the organisations they represent, along side seeing many new businesses or SME’s improve their marketing position. Our business is at its best when our work helps our clients, and betters our world around us.

We like to integrate ourselves into our clients’ businesses and build good relationships. We do not like to be pushy or arrogant, and we value people-centred approaches. Constantly challenge ourselves to stay at the cutting edge of new media development and we like to think that we are leading artistic design trends rather than simply jumping on the bandwagon. We are creative thinkers and like to work efficiently, striving to create original ideas and concepts.

We enjoy what we do so feel free to get in touch to discuss what you do.

EO Creative meets The Apprentice

Posted 16 Nov 2008 — by admin
Category Creative Team, News

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As part of Enterprise Week EO Creative has been invited to participant by Newtownabbey Borough Council in their programme ‘Make Your Mark Challenge’. My role is to judge a competition being held for 15 local schools. It will happen in the Northern Regional College on Monday 17 November. The panel will consist of 3 judges including Jo Cameron from TV show The Apprentice.

The Apprentice star Jo Cameron will be in town on during the week for Newtownabbey Borough Council’s Business Networking Event, which is running as part of the Enterprise Week (17-21 November). Jo will be sharing her extensive business knowledge and providing advice on how to survive adversity, through her unique ‘Bouncebackability’ process. Guests at the event will have the opportunity to network with representatives from other local businesses.

I am looking forward to being apart of the week and meeting with Jo Cameron, so check back as I will post an update of the ‘Make Your Mark Challenge’ and Jo’s ‘Bouncebackability’ event.

http://www.jocameron.co.uk/

http://www.newtownabbey.gov.uk/news/article.asp?id=762

History Made in the USA

Posted 06 Nov 2008 — by admin
Category Branding, Marketing, Technology

obama-mobile

Barack Obama was elected the 44th president of the United States on Tuesday, sweeping away the last racial barrier in American politics with ease as the country chose him as its first black chief executive.

“If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible, who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time, who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer,” Barack Obama told a crowd of 250,000 on Tuesday night in Chicago who gathered to hear his historcial speech.

But how did Mr. Obama — the 47-year-old, first-term senator from Illinois — do it?

Times are quoted in saying Obama fought an almost flawless campaign run by the Obama Team.

“Taking the tightly run Bush 2004 campaign as a model, Mr. Obama’s campaign did not waver from its core theme of change. It tolerated no drama and did not endure a single staff shakeup, in contrast to the turmoil that marked the Clinton and McCain campaigns. Mr. Obama kept himself, and his team, on an even keel — a character trait that paid immense dividends in the closing stages, when his understated approach to the economic crisis came off to many voters as steady leadership.”

Mr. Obama and his aides believed from the outset that it would have to be nothing less than flawless if he was to overcome obstacle that this was a black man with an unusual name and exotic past, someone dogged by a stubborn and inaccurate belief among some voters that he is a Muslim, who began plotting his presidential run less than two years after moving from the Illinois Legislature to the United States Senate.

But what is very interesting to us at EO Creative is the use of the newest technology and old-fashioned organizing skills to harness the grass-roots enthusiasm his candidacy generated to help raise record sums of money and build a volunteer army to turn out the vote. They carefully researched how to handle the issue of race, and worked at making voters comfortable with the idea of putting a black family in the White House.

Maybe, just maybe, something new has arrived: a post-partisan approach to governing, founded on the Obama Coalition, fuelled by young and minority voters, powered by the 21st century technologies that helped turn a first-term senator from Illinois into a historic lodestone.

Did Obama really receive a mandate, or was he the beneficiary of the nation’s disgust with President George W. Bush, and its unease with America’s course?

These are the questions that will be answered over the next four years. But for the moment, some astounding things are certain:

The next president is a man who identifies himself as black, but was raised by his white mother — a man who reflects the multiracial society America has become.

He was born in the 1960s, and was too young to experience the Vietnam era that left scars on the nation’s psyche for decades. And his lack of experience, central to his opponents’ campaigns against him in the primaries and general election, means that he is not necessarily invested in the way things have always been done.

Exit polls indicated that Obama’s triumph was built on his overwhelming success with blacks, Hispanics, 18-to-34-year-olds and new voters.

This is the future of the U.S. electorate.

History shows that once a young voter casts ballots twice for a given party, he or she is unlikely to ever turn away.

Hispanics are the nation’s fastest-growing voting bloc. Indeed, the government recently reported that white people will no longer make up a majority of Americans by 2042, eight years sooner than previous estimates.

About one in 10 voters said this was the first year they had cast ballots, and 70 per cent of them backed Obama. To cap it off, Obama won the female vote.

“From this day forward,” says historian John Baick of Western New England College in Springfield, Mass., “politics, politicians and the people they serve will never be the same.”

Obama takes over after 16 years of leadership by presidents born in the thick of the baby boom. In this fast-moving society, the worlds in which George W. Bush and Bill Clinton governed are so out of date they seem almost quaint.

Consider this: There were just a few hundred websites when Clinton took office and virtually no blogs when Bush entered the White House in January 2001.

Barack Obama turned to the iPhone into a political recruiting tool with a free application that was aimed at getting all the information to the voter.

The software had a “Call Friends” option to help organise contacts in swing states.

A note about the software on Mr Obama’s blog said: “This tool is designed to help you become more directly involved in our campaign to change the country.”

The free application was developed by volunteers in less than three weeks.

“This really has the potential to help the campaign,” said Jason Grigsby, one of the project leaders.

“The use of mobile technology to get out the vote and get people involved was a way for the grass roots to really make an impact.”

In a recent blog entry the campaign wrote: “During the last days of the election it was more important than ever to call your friends and family to make sure they were registered and voting for Barack.”

The blog also said that it hoped the “Call Friends” feature would “generate thousands of additional personal contacts” – that would then be then turned into votes.

Other features include making notes on which friends have been called, who they are supporting, and if they need a reminder on election day.

The website said the total amount of calls the application made were tallied but no information left the phone, so the privacy of friends and users were protected.

iPhone app

The Obama camp has been praised for how it has used technology

The application also passed on up-to-date news from the campaign, plus video, photos and talking points to help convince friends to vote for the candidate.

Raven Zachary, another co-developer, is quoted telling the BBC: “The iPhone is one mobile platform and there are millions of voters who don’t have the iPhone.

“But we are at the beginning of a new wave of mobile technology and we are seeing with the Obama campaign how he uses technology. This will become the norm moving forward.”

“Having your friends sorted by battleground states is something I haven’t seen any other politician come up with before. This is a glimpse of the future of high-tech politicking.”

Declan McCullagh, chief political correspondent at news site CNET also told the BBC: “It’s a pretty slick iPhone application.

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“This is an indicator of how mobile technology can impact political change,” said Raven Zachary

Jonathan Wight, another developer who worked on the project, said he did not believe John McCain’s camp would have time to better their efforts. “It took us less than three weeks and McCain simply could not catch up.”

Senator Obama has proved a fan of technology in his campaign and made headlines when he announced his choice of Joe Biden for vice-president via a text message.

Both Mr Obama and Mr McCain have turned to the web to raise money, to YouTube to air adverts and to Facebook to raise their profiles among the social networking set.

Obama, of course, raised millions of dollars via the Internet. One of his favourite platforms, YouTube, did not exist when Bush began his second term.

WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- “President-elect Barack Obama is a fan of technology, but the attention his administration gives telecommunications and high- technology issues will be overshadowed by his head-on confrontation of the global financial crisis and the war in Iraq.”

Obama is a firm believer in high-speed Internet as a tool of change, which could drive early action in his administration toward blanketing the country with broadband networks.

For example, he favors giving government subsidies to Internet service providers who build networks in hard-to-reach areas. The government currently only subsidizes phone service in rural areas. The idea of expanding eligibility for that money to Internet providers has garnered bipartisan support in recent months, which may make it easier for the administration and Congress to take steps in that direction.

So it would appear a big part of his victory and the making of history was the Obama Team’s use of technology that has never been seen before and will shape our future and future elections to come.

Keep the scary in Halloween

Posted 17 Oct 2008 — by admin
Category Marketing, News

halloween

As the season of ‘Trick or Treat’ comes around we at EO Creative are pleased to join in with the fun and games. We have produced a little treat for all our friends, clients and collaborators at

http://www.eo-creative.com/halloween08/.

Let us know what you think of this little flash animation skit.

Opening of Belfast Apple Store

Posted 20 Sep 2008 — by admin
Category News

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The EO guys waiting outside the new Apple store in Belfast. Not the biggest Apple store in the world, but at long last Ireland has a Apple store.

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In the line the banter is good. Networking with various creatives, offers of free comics and Starbucks free hot chocolate, makes the whole experience good craic.

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At last Victoria Centre has something worth coming to see other than John Lewis. Ireland has been waiting on a real Apple store, lets hope the experience of Apple globally is the same in Belfast

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Creative Comforts in Business Eye

Posted 15 Sep 2008 — by admin
Category Creative Team, News, Technology

Over the summer we were asked to be part of an article to be featured in local magazine Business Eye, regarding our innovative method of working. It appears that our choice to invest in technology rather than shiny, slick office space has been viewed as the wise choice, as many other type of business are opting for similar solutions. So with the summer at an end, at last the article has been published in Aug/Sept edition and we thought we might share the article here on the blog in case you have not had a chance to get your copy.

Feel free to view case studies of our work at EO Creatve or contact us to request a brochure and discuss your business/project in greater depth. All information regarding our practices and approach can be found at the same address, along with the contact details.