Beyond marshmallow motorbikes
Improv can still be powerful when it’s mundane
Improv can still be powerful when it’s mundane
Finding space for stronger feelings in collaboration
Welcome to the Ourhouse Weblog. Blogging is something I’ve become increasingly interested in. Earlier this month I set up the Beyond Branding Blog which is
The competitive streak in me means I need to keep with Tony Goodson’s blog. The struggles of learning to speak “Movable Type” and thoughts on the nature of blogging.
Earlier today I was writing about passion brands and the power of community. I got a small but interesting example of this principle in action when I visited Ton Zijltra’s blog to find that he’s opened a separate blog on his planned abandonment of Microsoft.
I’ve been doing a lot of thinking – and worrying – about collaboration. I think the ability to collaborate effectively is becoming ever more essential
I’ve just had a delightful meeting with Emma Cahill co-founder of publishing house Snowbooks. They describe their approach thus: We publish far fewer titles than
The AntiBrand: blackSpot sneakers, a project by Adbusters attacks Nike directly. In doing so they take on what has become one of the great icons
My friend Olaf Brugman has invited me to take part in a workshop in Brussels on October 29th. It looks set to be an interesting
The Church of the Customer blog quotes an NY Times interview with David Bowie who says: I’m fully confident that copyright for instance, will no

Joho the Blog: Get Human…The Movie David Weinberger reviews GetHuman… publishing the simple shortcuts to bypass automated phone systems and talk direct to a human being. Just the sort of

Nice thought from Made to Stick (I blogged it earlier here). Your brain hosts a truly staggering number of loops. The more hooks an idea has the better it will

I had an interesting conversation last week about intangibles. I think this word gets used in strange ways. When businesses talk about “intangibles” it seems to me they mean things

Henry Blodget spotted this image. I think it captures very succinctly the perils of retrospective coherence – the myriad ways we tidy up history to make things seem more linear.