Anne Keenan's blog

Top Secret

May 6, 2008 - 1:40pm

I feel as if I am in a secret club.

Backstory: One of my best friends, Sarie, works at MoMA, and pretty much anything I know about contemporary art is due to our friendship. Things like: the new Olafur Eliasson microsite that user Flickr to sort user-generated photos, or the fact that you can get AudioGuides on your iPhone or on iTunesU, or PopRally. Aka the secret club.

PopRally describes itself as

a program of events at The Museum of Modern Art and P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center that features collaborations with artists and musical acts, performances, film screenings, receptions, and special viewings of exhibitions at moderate prices.
I would describe it as
MoMA hosts amazing events featuring art, film, performance and music, with free booze for $8, aimed at a younger, hipper audience.
So pretty much: a dream come true/secret club.

Strategic Swedish Planning

April 17, 2008 - 5:10pm

The new New York office is a dream. An Ikea-furnished dream. Gisele mentioned that we went to Ikea, but I have to elaborate.

We drove to Ikea on Friday morning at 11 am. Traffic was light, Gisele was an excellent driver, I navigated as only a girl from New Jersey can, and Harish made back-to-back calls from the back seat. I did a little pre-gaming with the team regarding decisions that needed to be made, an overview of the trip, and areas of the store we would avoid.

Despite my schedule and lists, Gisele and Harish got overwhelmed at the top of the first escalator. “We should have hired a consultant to help us furnish the office at Ikea...” Harish said mournfully. “Wait” I replied. “I am a consultant helping you to furnish your office at Ikea. In fact, I’m your consultant. You pay me to consult.” Thus was born EchoOffice.

EchoOffice will be available for all of your office furnishing services, including online and offline strategy, on-the-ground engagements, and strategic communication. Whether you need a cute couch, or have to furnish an entire office, we will serve as your guide and coach. Until we get staffed up and off the ground, let me be your virtual consultant for making your next Ikea shopping trip the best it can be:

1. Do preliminary research. Although I find the Ikea site to be incredibly hard to navigate and not intuitive, spend a little time researching the items you are interested in. You might want to also check some similarly-priced competitors: cb2, west elm, and maybe pottery barn. Make a spreadsheet that includes photos, prices, and colors. Pages has an excellent template for just this sort of thing. Note: if you are really set on an item, save yourself some heartache--search to see if it’s available in your local store.

  1. Plan your space. Draw out a sketch of the room (bonus points if it’s to scale) and approximately where you want everything to go. Before you leave the house measure anything that looks handy and mark it on your map: windows, walls, doors, closets. I promise this will come in handy when you are staring at 6 different lengths and widths of curtains.
  2. Make a plan of attack and a list. Ikea is overwhelming, and people who don’t have a clear plan or goals tend to start snapping at each other around the paper-napkin area (overheard in Ikea: “fine, I don’t really care. Pick whatever you want. You never listen to my opinions anyway.”) Don’t let this happen to you. Decide what you want to focus on, which decisions you need to make during this trip, and which items you really need. Sure, you’re going to leave with some random wrapping paper, and a sheepskin rug that you couldn’t resist, but at least make sure you get what you came for.
  3. Bring provisions. About half to two-thirds of the way through Ikea, just as you are starting to hit your stride, you will become famished and parched. Sneak a little snack into your bag and you will be much happier.
  4. Ask for help. Don’t throw your back out trying to lift that giant BIlly bookshelf alone, ask an employee. Don’t wander back through 17 living rooms looking for the desks, ask someone for a shortcut. The Ikea workers are generally helpful and kind, so don’t hesitate.
  5. Enjoy yourself. If you get tired, kick back in the living room, or try to sneak a nap on one of the beds. Harish took a conference call from the puffy, floral couch. I pretended the 612-square-foot apartment was my apartment. I think I saw Gisele squeezing a plush cat toy. Ikea is fun.

UPDATED: Things Taken, Lessons Learned.

April 14, 2008 - 11:02am

Just in case you aren’t subscribed to my Twitter feed, my big news of the past two weeks is that someone broke into my house and stole a few things. Long story short, I came home from a trip to DC for work, surprised to find my apartment door unlocked (hmm, I thought, I always lock my door), and even more surprised to notice a few changes (hmm, I swear I had a TV hanging on that wall... weird!). They took several things of moderate to high importance:

  • My television
  • A stack of sweaters (the red/pink pile), a stack of long-sleeved t-shirts, and my friend’s down jacket
( categories: What I'm Working On )

Unconferencing You In

February 28, 2008 - 1:32pm

I have to admit that the idea of an “unconference” made me a little uncomfortable. No set agenda? No prepared presentations? No experts? What was there to prevent the entire thing from dissolving into chit chat about the best Woot items and JLo’s babies? The answer, I discovered, is a good-sized group of smart, thoughtful people with a variety of experience, who are willing to share new projects, discuss best practices, and admit to not knowing all of the answers.

So what did those smart people say? Here are 5 insights--one per session.

Last Night a Dorkbot Saved My Life

February 7, 2008 - 1:30pm

A few weeks ago, I read an EchoDitto Labs blog post about Dorkbot DC, which prompted me to search for a NYC equivalent. Bingo! Dorkbot NYC meets the first Wednesday of every month only a few blocks from our office. Perfect, for someone like me who is essentially lazy.

What is Dorkbot?
dorkbot-nyc is a monthly meeting of artists (sound/image/movement/whatever), designers, engineers, students, scientists, and other interested parties from the new york area who are involved in the creative use of electricity. dorkbot meetings are free and open to the public. Since we started dorkbot-nyc in 2000 many other dorkbots have sprung up around the world. See them all at: http://dorkbot.org

3 months the wiser

January 23, 2008 - 10:40am

It’s been three months since I started at EchoDitto—hard to believe, right? I wanted to share a few trends in my life since I’ve been here.

1. Personal content. In the world of non-profits, the personal voice is not the preferred voice. In fact, the preferred voice is generally one that uses words like “community building” “stronger, healthier families” and “together, we can make a difference.” It got so that every time I went to write something, those words miraculously came out, without my even trying. Now, nearly everything I read is written by a real person, and you can tell. Unsurprisingly, I trust the content so much more.

We R

January 11, 2008 - 3:30pm

This year I really needed to watch my champagne consumption at the holiday parties, because in catching up with everyone, I had to explain My New Job and exactly what it is I do at EchoDitto. It’s hard and, trust me, once you’ve had a few drinks it’s nearly impossible.

Descriptions of my job generally followed a set path: first I would go through what the company does—“online community building and innovative web strategies”; hitting a blank stare I would try for street cred—“it was founded by people from the Dean campaign”; still getting nowhere, I’d resort to my clients—“well Rosie.com is my main client.” And after that, well, almost no one cared about exactly what I did, wanting only to know more about Rosie.

( categories: Weblogs | What I'm Working On )

Is anybody out there? Connecting with MeetUp Alliance

November 28, 2007 - 6:31pm

During my spare time, I serve on two very small Boards—one is the Board of my co-op, and the other is the Board of a tiny local abortion fund. Unsurprisingly, I am the tech person/online groups admin/email troubleshooter/”why isn’t this file uploading” contact on both boards, so I’m always looking for ways to make our lives easier through technology. For the abortion fund, we’ve used a YahooGroup and for the co-op Board, I tried something new and started a GoogleGroup.

My experience in both groups is inspiring, satisfying, and frustrating in pretty equal measure. But the frustrating part at both meetings maybe isn’t what you’d expect. It’s not lack of snacks, any deficiencies in my fellow members, or the political climate. Nope, it’s the sense that there are probably a hundred groups out there dealing with the same issues at the same time.

( categories: Grass Roots | Organizing )

Sticky Rice

October 24, 2007 - 1:46pm

So this is my first week at EchoDitto, and one of the most important things you should know about me is that I love rice pudding. And I’m not picky. Kozy Shack? Yes. Kheer? Yes. Homemade? Yes. The kind at the bodega with a half cherry on top? Absolutely.

Which is why the email from my friend Phillip with the subject “Rice Pudding” probably caught my eye. And the URL was www.freerice.com. Free rice pudding? Sign me up.

Well… I don’t want to ruin it for all of you, but it’s not free rice pudding. Instead, it’s a vocabulary game that donates 10 grains of rice to the World Food Program for every word that you get right. Amazing. (My nerdy love of word games took the edge off my rice-puddingless-disappointment.)

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