CONNECTION + COMMUNICATION Page 14 of 27

Do What You Love interview – Digital Mums

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Mums are having a tough time at the moment. 1.2m mums are missing from the workplace. Another million want to work more hours. And many more struggle to fit their work around their family commitments and are fed up with their work-life balance. There are all sorts of reasons why mums find it tricky to find a satisfying job that they can fit around their family, including the astronomical cost of childcare, bosses unyielding to part time hour requests, and skills becoming out of date in our fast-paced world. Thank goodness then for Digital Mums – a new social enterprise co-founded by Kathryn Tyler and Nikki Cochrane – a dynamic duo who feel passionately about removing these barriers. Digital Mums provides mums with social media management skills that allow them to set their own hours and work from anywhere. It’s the only social media marketing training programme that has been designed with mums for mums. We caught up with Nikki to find out more about their exciting new business venture. 

Nikki and KathrynCo-founders of Digital Mums, Kathryn Tyler and Nikki Cochrane 

1. How did Digital Mums come about? 

My co-founder Kathryn Tyler and I met in Thailand on a yoga treat seven years ago and have been friends ever since. We both had a background in Social Media Marketing and were really passionate about setting up our own social enterprise to solve a huge problem in the world. We also wanted to create a flexible working environment.

We set up our first business, Hackney Social, in 2013 when we recognised that small businesses in our community wanted help with digital marketing and needed an affordable solution. There was such a demand for the service we were offering that Kathryn and I just couldn’t manage all the work by ourselves, and Digital Mums was born.

Digital Mums recruits and trains mums and connects them to organisations in their community that need social media management. The eureka moment for the business came one afternoon when we were talking about what makes a great social media manager. The list included the following: being a great listener, a community builder, a nurturer, being able to stay calm in a crisis, and having good judgment. We realised we had just described a mum! When we started to research maternal unemployment and discovered that it was at a 25-year-high we were totally shocked. There are all these amazing and talented women out there who have taken career breaks to bring up their children and now want to get back to work in a flexible capacity.

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2. Why did you decide to focus on mums? 

Kathryn and I were both affected by the issues that mums face when we were younger. When Kathryn’s dad died, her mum struggled because she had no focus outside of the family home there was nothing she could throw herself into. My mum was forced to raise me, my brother and my sister alone after our dad died. We were all under the age of four and the only part time work she could find was cleaning jobs so she’d have to find babysitters or take us with her.

We are often asked why focus on mums and not stay at home dads. Kathryn wrote a blog post about this recently, which explains that maternal unemployment is a huge problem and why the social media manager is an ideal role for mums who have a natural set of transferrable skills. We designed the training with mums for mums and as a small business just starting out we need to stay focused on this for now. That said, we’d love any dads who are interested in the role to get in touch!

3. How do you become a digital mum? What skills and qualities do you need and what training is involved?

In order to become a Digital Mum, you need to complete an application. At the moment we take a small cohort each month and the application process usually starts with a call with either myself of Kathryn. There are two routes. Firstly, our Foundation Course, which is perfect for mums or mumpreneurs with their own business who do not have a prior marketing background. The second option is, the Advanced Course which is for ideal for mums who have background in PR, Marketing and Communications, and client services. In this course, all our students are matched to a live business which allows them to apply what they are learning immediately in a real world setting.

Both courses are delivered in a really fun and engaging online environment which was co-designed with our first group of pilot mums. All the students work together in groups providing support and feedback in weekly google hangout sessions, which are all overseen by a digital expert. In addition to this they all become members our Professional Network of Freelance Social Media Managers.

4. What does the job involve and what are the benefits? 

The obvious benefit is the flexibility of the role which means you can fit your work around childcare and other responsibilities. A typical day in the life of a Digital Mum will start at the beginning of the week with a call with her client. The average Digital Mum will work 10 hours per week. This is usually broken down into client relationship management, research on content curation and online engagement.You can read about three of our amazing Digital Mums here:

1. Kathryn had no direct experience of marketing or social media management before joining Digital Mums but came armed with some transferable skills and lots of enthusiasm.

2. Elvira was a marketing professional before deciding to become a home parent. She’d been doing this for three years, looking after Georgie, 5, and Molly, 3, before starting the Digital Mums course.

3. Penny was a power marketer before joining Digital Mums. She spent several years working in senior and global brand management marketing roles most recently from Diageo, the leading drinks company.

Kathryn5. How do businesses and whole communities benefit from the work of Digital Mums?

On an individual level we see our students grow in confidence as they move through the training programme. Whole communities benefit as we try to connect the right Digital Mums with the right businesses in the local community. As well as connecting people and communities, all our students automatically become members of a really supportive network of working mums.

6. What do you love most about being social entrepreneurs?

Every day I wake up and think how lucky I am to be doing what I love and working with a brilliant team. Creating a business from scratch has been a huge learning curve and extremely rewarding. We get to meet the most amazing and inspirational women on our training courses and being able to help rebuild their confidence and support them into meaningful employment is an awesome feeling and something I’m very proud to be part of.

7. What have been the toughest challenges you’ve faced along the way?

Interestingly I find it difficult to even remember the toughest challenges (perhaps I’ve just blanked them out!). I suppose the biggest challenge of all was in our first year, when we were a bootstrapping startup! We were piloting and building the training course in the evenings and weekends while working in part time jobs to just cover the bills. Making decisions around investment has been hugely challenging as finding the right investment partner who shares the Digital Mums ethos and philosophy is incredibly important to us. As a social enterprise our social mission really matters to us but we also have to ensure we have a sustainable business so there’s a balance to be struck.

8. What is your advice for a successful business partnership?

While we were friends beforehand, we are lucky that our skill sets compliment each other – this is vital when it comes to running a business. We both bring different perspectives to situations which is really powerful when you work in multiple areas of the business. My advice for finding the right co-founder is to make sure you share the same vision for the company.   If you have the same end goal you will stay focused and make the right decisions along the way.

9. What technologies are exciting you at the moment?

There is so much exciting tech out there at the moment. The stuff that most excites me is when it’s doing good and making a difference in the work. ‘Peek Vision’ is pretty awesome – it’s a portable system for testing eyes for cataracts anywhere in the world.

10. What is your big dream?

Right now our big dream is to get over 1,000 mums back into the work place.

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If you’d like to find out more visit the Digital Mums website.

Do What You Love HQ Update – March ’15

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March has seen us settle back into life after our expedition to the Arctic Circle and continue working to put the foundations in place for a very exciting year ahead.

The highlight of the month was finding our new Marketing Officer/Community Manage and I look forward to introducing you to her next month. I’d like to take this opportunity to thank everybody who applied for the role. We were overwhelmed by the quality of the applications, it reminds us that we live in a fascinating world full of talented, inspiring and interesting people.

As always, our commitment to helping you and others like you has never been stronger. We are currently working very hard to ensure we continue to deliver free resources and online courses that exceed the standard that is expected of us.

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Beth has been super-busy putting together two brilliant new e-courses which are coming your way soon. She says: “It has been a very personal and contemplative process, and in these courses we give away much of our business model and DNA. Why? Well the simple answer is because it can help you change your life and that is what we are all about. It has certainly changed how we view the world.”

The first jam-packed, business/life-changing course to be unveiled will be The Business Soul Sessions. Registration opens shortly and we can’t wait to share the details. Interested? Jump on the waiting list now and make sure you don’t miss out.

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When life starts to feel like it’s all work, work, work, we know that it’s important to make time to play. Beth took her first creative workshop in months the other day, and came back a different person. Read this to find out why you should do something nice for yourself today.

And there’s lots more exciting news to report…

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Intimate conversations with fascinating people (FREE webinar series)

 

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Over the past few weeks I have had the great privilege of interviewing a series of fascinating people on the big questions that echo for us all. What is really important in life? How do we pursue our dreams? What is the future going to look like in terms of the way we work, learn and earn? How can we carve out our own path, and do things in a way which makes us happy? How can we be more creative, more adventurous, more inspired in our daily lives?

This journey of conversation has taken me to three continents, across many time zones, and it has both provided answers and sparked further questions.

We have recorded these in-depth interviews with thought leaders and put them together into a brand new FREE webinar series called Alchemy, and you are invited. It will stretch your mind, challenge your thinking and open your eyes to new ideas. I urge you to be part of it.

The videos will be shared daily by email from April 27 – May 3 to everyone signed up to the series. We will also provide an Alchemy Playbook, full of probing questions to help you squeeze all the goodness out of each conversation. And we will be hosting Twitter chats with some of our speakers at the time their interview is first broadcast, so you can ask them questions directly yourself.

And don’t worry if you are working that week, or travelling, or in a different time zone. We will provide info on how to access the videos after they have gone ‘live’ too.

So please, give yourself the gift of listening in to these vital conversations. Sign up now (remember, it’s free!)

This week we’d like to challenge you to take one minute to register for Alchemy, and then another minute to share it on social media and encourage your friends to get involved in these real and important conversations.

Thank you for caring about the big questions,

Beth and team

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Discover your passion and purpose today…

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Do you feel lost or as if something is missing in your life? Maybe you want to make a bigger difference in the world than you feel you are, but you aren’t sure how. So many of us walk through life, feeling numb and desperate for a deeper connection, but aren’t sure how to get it. We can help you change that. Tell us what you need today and we’ll help you do what you love.

Do What You Love Interview – Dale Thomas Vaughn

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Today we’re excited to bring you a fascinating interview with Dale Thomas Vaughn, a champion of self-discovery and authentic healthy masculinity. Having written four Amazon best-selling books, run with the bulls in Pamplona, walked the 500 mile pilgrimage that is the Camino del Santiago, and tried, and failed, in the world of business, Dale knows a thing or two about passion and purpose. He reached the top of his game when he began coaching men on how to authentically be healthy men; men who find other healthy positive guys to be in a pack with. Today, through his work with The EmpowerMentorship Institute, Dale helps guys discover what they want from their lives and then empowers them to make a plan to go and do it. He is also Editor of Leadership & Business at The Good Men Project, a site about men that regularly reaches unique traffic levels that rival Oprah.com and Politico.com and his award-winning work with men and at-risk boys has led to the foundation of the Global Center for Healthy Masculinities.

1. How are you ‘doing what you love’?

I love my life. I get to see guys at their best. I get to mentor good men to step into their greater purpose and pursue their passions. I’ve helped school teachers influence their toughest students with positivity and compassion. I’ve helped people change their culture at work by being more present and team-oriented. I’ve watched men transform from poverty to six-figure salaries while simultaneously pursuing life goals they thought were impossible… there’s nothing better than building hope. Every time I get to help a single person I feel honored, I know I’m at my best, and I see the difference I’m making in the world. And although I’ve been at this for a decade or more, I feel like I’m just getting warmed up. Life is a creative pursuit. We make what we want… often unconsciously or passively. I try to be active each day to make my world around me. Buckminster Fuller summed it up when he said, “I seem to be a verb.”

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Your dream, your future


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Louise Armstrong

This is a guest post by Louise Armstrong. You can read more about Louise here.

In my last two posts I looked at how we can embrace our ever-changing world and evolve the way we live by adopting some simple techniques to help us survive and thrive in the future. Today, in my final post, I wanted to share with you the most powerful technique of all: it’s one that will help you to unlock your own potential and inspire you to make the most of the human experience. It’s the power of imagination.

 

“I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.” – Albert Einstein

 

We all know what it’s like to dream, even if we can’t remember what we actually dream about, and scientists have now proved that dreaming plays a central role in our emotional health, our memory, our learning and as a way to help us find creative solutions to our problems. They’ve also discovered that over half of our waking thoughts are daydreams and that this is when we ‘unthinkingly’ do our best thinking.

In fact some of the biggest inventions of our time came about through daydreams – the Internet, robots, rocketry, test tube babies, the list goes on. All these things were dreamed up by imaginative people; people who went beyond facts and thought globally and synthetically, made serendipitous associations and came up with surprising and novel solutions.

“Without leaps of imagination, or dreaming, we lose the excitement of possibilities. Dreaming, after all, is a form of planning.” Gloria Steinem

ImaginationImage credit: Martina K Photography

The world needs imagination

Imagination really can change the world because new ideas can change the world and it takes imagination to have a new idea. Imagination fosters empathy – the ability to “walk in someone else’s shoes” – and it also enables us to find creative, innovative solutions to problems. By unlocking the power of imagination for ourselves we pave the way to a life of awareness, fulfilment, freedom and personal power. Imagination is not the product of a gene pool lottery; it’s inherent within us all.

Here are my top tips for developing your imagination:

1. Create space for your imagination to roam free

“Imagination is like a muscle. I found out that the more I wrote, the bigger it got.” ― Philip José Farmer

Allowing yourself to dream is like making a statement of intent: you are giving yourself permission to explore the possibilities and opportunities that open up when you free your mind. In our hectic daily lives, we don’t always give ourselves the time or the freedom to dream and yet it’s one of the most valuable gifts we can give ourselves.

I make time to dream in the morning when I first wake up and I write my thoughts in a notebook – it’s fascinating to see what emerges. Sometimes I daydream while I’m cycling to work. It’s amazing what thoughts pop into my head and very often I’ll come up with the perfect solution to a problem I’ve been having.

When do you give yourself time and space to unlock your imagination and dream?

2. Share your future truths

We all have dreams – big and small – but all too we keep them to ourselves. When you put yourself out there and start to share you find that amazing things can happen. Often you realise that other people are dreaming the same thing too! Unlocking the collective imagination goes a long way to counter all the negativity and angst we face in the media.

This happened for me recently as a result of a little project that I started in my own community. The Peckham Coal Line began as a seed of an idea we had to turn a bit of disused railway into a park. The dream was shared on Facebook and then we built a simple website to raise awareness. Before we knew it 50 people in the local community had emailed me to show their support and offer up their time to help. It is still early days but the project is gathering momentum and this is allowing us to talk to the local stakeholders and ride out the collective imagination of the local community. It’s so exciting to see the dream come to life.

A forgotten space - View of the west part of the route from the Bussey Building with the city skyline behindA forgotten space: view of the west part of the coal line route from the Bussey Building with the city skyline behind

What’s your dream? Where are you going to share it? It might be a conversation with someone you know, a stranger, or a post on social media – start small and be open to where it takes you.

3. Create a prototype: make your dream a reality one layer at a time

Have you ever noticed that the ‘hi-tech’ communication devices you used to see in Star Trek look just like the early Motorola phones? It’s a commonly held idea that fiction informs reality and film props add that element of believability by making ideas a little bit more tangible.

The idea of developing and prototyping future concepts is widely accepted in design circles – so why can’t we apply this same idea to our own lives by adding layers of reality to your dreams? By experimenting with our dreams and taking small steps to bring them to life, we stop feeling stuck or overwhelmed and instead start feeling excited and that we’re making progress.

One project I worked on this way is IoTA a space to help non-techy people make use of the ‘internet of things’ technology that is set to grow massively in the future.

The first thing we did was to draw out the idea. Then we described it. And then we made a film about it. We didn’t think much would come of it but when we shared it on social media people loved it. Before we knew it we were running a session with teenagers at a school in Manchester to put the ideas into reality. Being open to possibilities has meant that the project has now won some funding to enable us to develop the ideas further and we’ve created a new company as a consequence. It sounds grand but in retrospect all we’ve done is kept adding more layers of reality to grow our idea.

What can you do to add a layer of reality to your dreams? Maybe you can draw it, paint it, or make a little model. Maybe you can act it out, or do something productive towards making it happen.

4. Be your future, today

We think about the future being far away, and so it’s easy to put things off and tell ourselves that we have all the time in the world to realize our dreams. The fact is the future will be here before we know it so we may as well start living it today!

“The future is radically open, and it is shaped by who we choose to be in the present” Maureen O’Hara, Dancing on the Edge

You owe it to yourself and to the world to make your dreams come true and sometimes you have to think outside the box and be imaginative in order to help bring your dream to life.

For instance my dream for my future is to feel aligned in my mind and body. To get there, I know I need a better work/life balance. So today I decided to experiment with my work day. I worked in flow with my natural energy patterns and decided to go for a swim at noon, which boosted my creativity, motivation and productivity in the afternoon. Ok, I’m not making huge life changes, but starting small makes it manageable and when my goals are manageable I know I’ll stay committed. I’ll keep experimenting until I find what works best for me, and this will take me another step closer to the big dream of living more holistically.

The big question is: what will you do to unlock your imagination and realise your dreams today?

 

What I learnt from an Oscar winner, a music mogul and a spiritual guide (this is gold)

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If I have learnt anything over these past few years, it’s that it takes a village to build anything worthwhile. And by that I don’t just mean having a team with you, or an active community around you, but I mean having people ahead of you, guiding you.

As a business owner, or a professional in any industry, one of the smartest decisions you can make is to find yourself a mentor. By ‘mentor’ I don’t necessarily mean someone you meet with regularly to discuss challenges and ideas, although that is incredibly valuable. I also mean people whose leadership you admire, whose values you share, and whose behaviour you want to model (without copying WHAT they actually do!)

Today I want to introduce a few of the key people who have played a mentoring role in my life, in the hope that it will inspire you to find mentors of your own.

 The Oscar-Winning Film Producer

During the years I spent at UNICEF (United Nations Children’s Fund) I worked very closely with film producer Lord David Puttnam, who was Chairman of UNICEF UK at the time.

David is an impressive man on so many levels – he spent thirty years as an independent producer of award-winning films including The Mission, The Killing Fields, Local Hero, Chariots of Fire, Midnight Express, Bugsy Malone and Memphis Belle. His films have won ten Oscars, 25 Baftas and the Palme D’Or at Cannes.  From 1994 to 2004 he was Vice President and Chair of Trustees at the British Academy of Film & Television Arts (BAFTA) and was awarded a BAFTA Fellowship in 2006. He retired from film production in 1998 to focus on his work in public policy as it relates to education, the environment, and the creative and communications industries. In 1998 he founded the National Teaching Awards, and he is now the Republic of Ireland’s Digital Champion. He also has more honorary degrees than I can keep track of.

But the thing that made him such a shining light for me wasn’t actually any of that. It was his deep-rooted commitment to furthering human potential. We worked together on one huge project which brought sporting opportunities to over 12 million children across the world. Together with David Bull, the inspirational Chief Executive of UNICEF UK, we pitched it to the government and a host of sporting bigwigs. We then spent several years building a complex partnership to make it happen, and its legacy lives on. Time and again in the process we came up against brick walls, but instead of banging his head against them, Lord Puttnam always kept the end in mind, and found a way round or over, or reconstructed the wall completely.

What I have learnt from this mentor: Keep your eye on the prize. Fight for what you believe in. Don’t let bureaucracy stand in the way of big, brilliant ideas.

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Eat. Pray. Wi-fi.

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This is a guest post by Ben Keene. You can find out more about Ben here.

 

 

Has moving to Bali for winter with our family worked out?

I’d only been at Bali’s first co-working space, Hubud (a bamboo beehive of digital nomadic activity at the heart of the island’s ‘eat, pray, love’ capital, Ubud) for an hour when Steve Munroe (a ‘post-UN-cubicle survivor’), uttered his mantra. Perhaps even more interesting than what Steve was saying was the fact that he was speaking to a group of Harvard students who had come to Bali to study ‘remote working’ and sustainable business.

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