Images From Ukraine Trip…
I never got to post some pictures of my trip to the Ukraine, so while it’s top of mind, here is a selection. They run from arrival in Kiev, via a train to Kharkov and back to Kiev…
I never got to post some pictures of my trip to the Ukraine, so while it’s top of mind, here is a selection. They run from arrival in Kiev, via a train to Kharkov and back to Kiev…
Last month I was lucky enough to meet another person who I’ve been working with for approaching a decade but who I have only known over the phone and via email. This time it was Anne Jordan who has been with ClickNwork for about seven years – you can read a little about her here; more recently she provided some thoughts about her work with us and other companies in a blog entry.
Anne seems to be a poster child for remote working. She could easily bag a high-powered job in London running a global research team or similar (she’s done that sort of thing before, with experience at top companies, including Goldman Sachs, Mitchell Madison Group and Marakon Associate), but she puts more store in managing her own career and time so she can pursue things she’s passionate about.
She has a portfolio approach, juggling a range of projects from a handful of clients that include regular assignments and ad hoc tasks all managed so that she has enough time to focus on something that lights her fire – researching Lady Colin Campbell (1857-1911), who she recently wrote a book about that she is now promoting.
Working remotely means she has more time in her day (no commuting, meetings, office politics…) and since she is a researcher she is able to work as effectively from her home as an office. Anne lives in Devon, close to her family and working at-distance also means she can invest time in this rather than work colleagues.
Our meeting was unfortunately short – I was en route to Cornwall – but it was enjoyable all the same and it surfaced some things we have in common, like an interest in how people are making remote careers work for them; how research provision is changing; why existing newsletters are flawed and so on, and I expect it will lead to longer conversations down the line. These are things that don’t as easily surface in virtual relationships and giving them a chance to surface is a real benefit of actually meeting up.
Oh, and the research on the side? We met at Darts Farm, an award winning organic and local food retailer named ‘Best Local Food Retailer’ in BBC Radio Four’s Food and Farming Awards. Some of the work we do is tracking food trends and seeing great local food retailers is great field research.
Yurii duly arrived and we had a great time. We could communicate after all (although not without some difficulties now and then!) and we worked together at his home before walking around Kharkov and going to a restaurant.
I have a photo and when I get to download load it I’ll post it.
Looking back at my trip to the Ukraine to meet and work with Yurii I think I learnt two things:
My work with Yurii over the last few years has focused on developing a newsletter service that rests on a simple idea – we’ll send you (the client, the individual user) an email containing articles, links to articles and summaries of news that you want to follow. It sounds so simple but getting to this point has been surprisingly arduous and more than once we’ve had to rethink and restart.
With myriad free news trackers and newsletters available, many of which are really good, the obvious question is what can we offer that’s worthwhile, and the answer is…focus. Our thinking (hope) is that business professionals need more than just broad industry or market material. These days, with the proliferation of information there is usually good and useful literature on very specific topics that can help business managers but it’s simply too cumbersome for them to pull it together and read it all.
So while a general a newsfeed or newsletter on the food business can be good, it’s not sufficient for someone in NPD that is focused on, say, functional foods, who is probably interested in specific ingredients, the application of specific technologies, patents, specific competitor activity and so on. A brand manager is probably interested in marketing and promotions activity of specific competitors in specific retailers in specific countries, and so on. I think companies would value information delivery with this level of focus and that is what we’re trying to do.
We have developed three solutions to this problem. The first is to send clients articles that cover topics they are interested in, the second is to create and email ‘hand-made’, focused newsletters to subscribers; the third (that I’ll cover in another post) is to automatically generate newsletters according to individual user preferences.
It’s not easy to do any of this and, so far as I know, it’s not yet possible to reliably deliver it using just technology, so our solutions rely heavily on human input. To get a good understanding of the sorts of information clients want tracked we discuss requirements with them and identify the best sources (academic publications, trade journals, scientific studies, blogs etc) and build a search strategy with this in mind. We then daily and weekly visit target sites and run search strings to capture the information they need which is tabulated in our database according to subject.
Each day our system then sends out hundreds of emails with relevant articles to clients. Ongoing communication with clients allows us to tweak coverage as client information needs evolve.
We also have some writers who summarize a selection of these articles and the summaries are made available online and assembled into newsletters. These are in beta at the moment and we are working in just six areas, food business, health & wellness, sustainable business, diet news, innovation and personal care. For each area there are a number of newsletters people can choose to receive and you can see the topics we cover (most are for subscribers only but each site has at least one free newsletter that you can sign up for):
Six hours on the train and I arrived around noon in Kharkov, Ukraine’s second city and where Yurii lives.
We exchanged texts and he’s coming to my hotel in 30 min or so.
I completed the first step of my journey to Kharkov, leaving Heathrow this mornnig and arriving in Kiev today. I spent much of it walking around the city and using the subway – very clean and efficient. I’m not sure what expectations I had, but I’m surprised how beautiful Kiev is; lots of old world charm and modern sophistication.
Tomorrow I’m up at the crack of dawn to get a train to Kharkov…
It looks like there’s another coworker that is ready to meet me – must be my lucky day!
This time it’s Anne, one of our researchers who has been working with us since about 2004 and is truly a great information professional. You can read a little about her here on our sister site, ClickNwork, and also at our ClickNwork blog where she wrote an interesting entry about her new book.
Anne lives not too far from where I’ll be spending some of my holiday and the hope is that we can coordinate schedules to meet up.
In many ways Anne epitomizes what’s good about remote working – she has valuable skills that can be applied at-distance and uses the flexibility of virtual work to make time for something she’s passionate about. I look forward to meeting her.
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