Welcome to Idealog Weekly, the free email newsletter for New Zealand commercial creatives, entrepreneurs and anyone rich with ideas.
Yes, this newsletter is late. Yes, we have an excuse: we are feeling poorly. And pretty pleased with ourselves.
That’s because last night the Ideologues attended the annual MPA magazine awards—so please allow us this humble report from the floor. Our news is all good: not only did Idealog once again win the award for Best Business Magazine, but we also won Best Business Website, Business Cover of the Year, the overall Best Use of Photography Award for a story on the Art Venture programme, and two of the four Supreme awards: Supreme Cover of the Year for our July-August 2008 cover featuring Kevin ‘Bloody’ Roberts, and Supreme Designer of the Year for our in-house demon art director, Adrian Clapperton. We have no idea how such a nice guy can also be so talented, but we’re very pleased that he is.
Forty-four magazines from 22 publishers entered this year’s awards—which the MPA says is a record. There were 37 categories in total, and Idealog and our sister titles, Good and Inspire, won 13 of them. Today’s self-inflicted headache feels remarkably sweet.
Speaking of award-winning magazines … you may notice something new in your letterbox tomorrow, nestling among the bills and the direct mail. The item in question is rectangular, nattily designed and contains riveting stories.
That’s if you’re a subscriber to Idealog magazine. The rest of you must sneak down to your nearest newsagent on Monday to snag a copy of the July-August 2009 issue that’s a real conversation piece featuring Lance Wiggs, Gimblett Gravels, Red Witch, two chaps on a mission to democratise art on a beer budget and much more.
The story connecting Fisher & Paykel’s DishDrawer to a windmill design is probably my favourite, and I like the idea of collecting obsolete electronic gizmos to build wah-wah fuzzboxes.
Check out the contents page on our website. And if you wish that you too had a brand-new Idealog before it hits the streets, subscribe to Idealog online—and save up to 37 percent of the cover price.
Our friend David MacGregor, Idealog co-founder and columnist, recently suffered a heart attack. As you’d expect from David, he’s remarkably chipper about it, and although he’s currently in North Shore Hospital awaiting an operation he’s productively spending his time thinking, writing and reading. Here’s David’s blog on what happened and also his … off-beat idea. Get well soon, David.
Hammonded-out yet? Us too. Surely there’s a more entertaining way to sell faster broadband with Telecom’s marketing millions? Step forward, Comcast.
Our advice to Telecom: ditch the Hammster andget the rabbit-panther thingy. (Via Andy Eakin)
Ever felt ripped off overseas? Spare a thought, then, for the Chinese visitors on package tours to New Zealand who take dream holiday to Godzone only to be left ‘enforced shopping’ for up to four hours a day—and charged as much as four times the price that locals would pay. That’s the conclusion of a Tourism New Zealand unit that’s been recording the impressions of Chinese visitors as they leave our shores. Amanda Cropp has the news on the Idealog blog—and a suggestion for a suitable punishment for those who so cynically damage our tourist industry and betray Brand Enzed.
I enjoyed reading Jason Kemp’s summary and thoughts on media activism and collaboration, and how these things are changing the way we receive news. Jason talks about everyone now having the tools to “manufacture dissent” through Internet forums and that’s certainly an interesting way to look at it.
At the same time though, it’s worth remembering that the consent manufacturers have the same, if not better, access to the very same tools the dissenters do, and are able to use them to undermine democracy through subtle propaganda. Worse, the forces of darkness can use those tools to collect the names and locations of dissenters to imprison or kill them, and to disrupt and subvert their efforts. Social media does indeed remove disintermediation but that feature cuts both ways.
There’s no industry quite like the web. Any site is only as good as its design, content, technology, usability and marketability—and all those things need to be right. In New Zealand, we have the talent and the skills to build great sites, so it's the perfect time for a dedicated web awards—and the Webstock team are the perfect people to do it. At Idealog, we're right behind the >Onyas and delighted to sponsor the Most Innovative category. Show us your best!
Onyas open for entries soon (get a move on, Mike!) and there’s an awards ceremony on August 20. The list of judges for the Onyas is impressive, headed by Alex Wright, director of user experience at The New York Times (there’s a short interview with Wright in the new Idealog). Check out all the judges’ bios at the Onyas website.
Business growth centre and incubator the Icehouse is flinging open the doors to all and sundry on July 29 between 1 and 6pm, so if you’re a business owner and entrepreneur looking for expert tips, to make contacts and to rejuvenate your ideas and goals, well, you know where to be that day.
The entire Icehouse team, from chief executive Andy Hamilton to chairman Greg Cross and Start-Ups director Ken Erskine, will be at hand for your brain-picking pleasure.
Also that day, hear stories from business owners who have experienced the award-winning ICE Bridge Owner Manager programmes, and what they do for you.
Icehouse big-co partners such as Boston Consulting Group, BNZ, Ernst & Young, HP, Telecom and Gen-i, Microsoft, Minter Ellison Rudd Watts and Telecom will be around that day to explain how they help small businesses.
Plus, there are seminars on a wide variety of topics, like social media, how to avoid intellectual property disaster, how to unlock growth potential in your business and subjecting your idea to the market validation test.
Get your “60 second elevator pitch” for ready for Speed Networking at 4.30pm that day, followed by drinks. Andy Hamilton’s 60 second pitch about the Icehouse should give you an idea how to go about it
Full programme and online registration for the open day are at the Icehouse website.
“Cuba’s opened up a lot now ... dealing with communists is really neat. But when we started working with them, our money would go missing—we’d send the money to Cuba, through the bank, and it would disappear. And Cuba would ask, ‘Where’s the money?’ and we’d say, ‘We’ve sent it.’ The American bank had frozen our money and tagged us as working with terrorists.”
—Tim Rose of Havana Coffee Works on the efficiency of US banks
Read more on our website: web exclusives, opinion, creative directory, Idealog TV, the Idealog blogs and the Idealog podcast. See you at idealog.co.nz.
Juha Saarinen
Ideologue, Weekly
{The giver} Previous
October 30, 2009: Man of the moment
October 23, 2009: By the numbers
October 16, 2009: Pavlova principles
October 9, 2009: The secret of the songbook
October 2, 2009: Free and easy
September 25, 2009: What the world wants
September 18, 2009: A slice of the pie
September 11, 2009: Walking man
September 6, 2009: A calmer kind of business
August 28, 2009: We have issues
August 21, 2009: Mincing about in waistcoats
August 14, 2009: Wired on pop culture
August 7, 2009: Trust is not a commodity
July 31, 2009: Fuzzy logic
July 24, 2009: Game of life
July 17, 2009: Grape expectations
July 10, 2009: Blade runners
July 3, 2009: Free: another word for nothing left to lose
June 26, 2009: Poorly pleased
June 19, 2009: The giver
June 12, 2009: Buggy on down
June 5, 2009: Brand Cambo
May 29, 2009: When the going gets tough, go proactive
May 22, 2009: Bayerische Wasserstoffmotorenwerke
May 15, 2009: Rugger blogger
May 8, 2009: Get on our cloud
May 1, 2009: Easy Tiger
April 24, 2009: Tiki tacky
April 17, 2009: The not-so-great indoors
April 3, 2009: A site for sore eyes
March 27, 2009: Dual control
March 20, 2009: Worth their Alt
March 13, 2009: Biofuels or bio-fools?
March 6, 2009: It's electrifying
February 27, 2009: Experience-rich and theory-poor
February 20, 2009: It's a hundred-and-fourteen-pager
February 13, 2009: Own your mistakes
February 5, 2009: Rules—made to be broken
January 30, 2009: Money: that's what I want
December 5, 2008: Framed by the thousands
November 28, 2008: Spank-branding novelty next week
November 21, 2008: In the Loop
November 14, 2008: Your good health
November 7, 2008: Misfits of science
October 31, 2008: No absence of colour
October 24, 2008: Plain-speaking Peri
October 17, 2008: Rebels with a cause
October 10, 2008: Seoulipsism
October 3, 2008: Fall seven times and stand up eight
September 26, 2008: Don't label us
September 19, 2008: Bloody Graham
September 19, 2008: Dream proposition
September 5, 2008: Taxi!!!
August 29, 2008: Up-Skilling on Idealog TV
August 22, 2008: 144 pages of pure pleasure, plus politics
August 15, 2008: Wash down that Lovemark with a Steinie
August 8, 2008: Strange journey
August 1, 2008: SMElly and happy
July 25, 2008: What a dive
July 18, 2008: Softly and woolly does it
July 11, 2008: The saviour from Timaru
July 4, 2008: Last laugh
June 27, 2008: King Kev
June 20, 2008: Slow ART
June 13, 2008: Killing two birds with methane
June 6, 2008: A combine harvester
May 30, 2008: Gold paint
May 23, 2008: Rock, out
May 16, 2008: Goodwill hunting
May 9, 2008: No wine jokes please
May 2, 2008: Who's bad?
April 24, 2008: Succession success
April 18, 2008: Out now or thereabouts
April 11, 2008: Paint by numbers
April 4, 2008: Reincarnated good
March 28, 2008: Making it
March 20, 2008: Knock three times
March 14, 2008: The customer is always tight
March 7, 2008: Beautiful words
February 28, 2008: Goodnight, I'm off to work
February 22, 2008: The art issue
February 15, 2008: Straight to the top
February 8, 2008: H for hot
December 13, 2007: Nothing in common? Perfect
December 6, 2007: Who needs a beer?
November 30, 2007: Dirty secret goes public
November 23, 2007: Don't speak
November 16, 2007: Worthy work (and free beer)
November 2, 2007: East meets best
October 25, 2007: Raid the fridge
October 19, 2007: Looking good
October 13, 2007: Can't miss it
October 5, 2007: Fresh meat delivery
September 28, 2007: If the walls had eyes
September 21, 2007: Phoenix rising
September 15, 2007: Can we fix it? Yes we can
September 6, 2007: Feats of social engineering
August 31, 2007: Doesn't bite
August 24, 2007: Telling us where to go
August 16, 2007: Tomorrow time
August 10, 2007: Going West
August 3, 2007: How to ... be your business
July 27, 2007: Freaky food
July 20, 2007: Meet the neighbours
July 12, 2007: Free Hollie
July 6, 2007: Green queen
June 29, 2007: The truth about youth
June 21, 2007: Walk this way
June 14, 2007: Times ten
June 7, 2007: The ape woman needs a label
June 1, 2007: Impossible is something
May 25, 2007: Yeah, we're still here
May 11, 2007: Trophy time
May 3, 2007: Friends with the band
April 23, 2007: Why worry?
April 19, 2007: Done by the big jobs
April 12, 2007: A rockin' good read
April 5, 2007: No fear
March 29, 2007: Out to pasture
March 22, 2007: Hip-hop and The Human Touch
March 15, 2007: Crazy Frog and Billy T
March 10, 2007: The Benadryl edition
March 1, 2007: We can be Xero
February 22, 2007: Back on board
December 15, 2006: Free beer
December 8, 2006: December 8, 2006
December 1, 2006: December 1, 2006
November 24, 2006: November 24, 2006
November 16, 2006: November 16, 2006
November 9, 2006: November 9, 2006
November 3, 2006: November 3, 2006
October 26, 2006: October 26, 2006
October 19, 2006: October 19, 2006
October 12, 2006: October 12, 2006
October 6, 2006: October 6, 2006
September 28, 2006: September 28, 2006
September 21, 2006: September 21, 2006
September 14, 2006: September 14, 2006
September 7, 2006: September 7, 2006
August 31, 2006: August 31, 2006
August 24, 2006: August 24, 2006
August 17, 2006: August 17, 2006
August 11, 2006: August 11, 2006
August 3, 2006: August 3, 2006
July 27, 2006: July 27, 2006
July 21, 2006: July 21, 2006
July 13, 2006: July 13, 2006
July 6, 2006: July 6, 2006
June 29, 2006: June 29, 2006
June 22, 2006: June 22, 2006
June 15, 2006: June 15, 2006
Audi designer Wolfgang Egger brings the A5 Sportback to life right in front of our eyes. It’s all about three lines, apparently, but those three lines have been obsessed over. Enjoy the autospeak: the rear comes complete with both accent and elbow.
Latest issue: Under the sea
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