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News, insight and tips from the social web.

The Hoop blog covers the evolving digital landscape, social media, mobile communications, content marketing and also includes 5 top finds and Fish on Friday. Feel free to make comments.

  • Responsive web design: another fad in design and development? »

    There are high hopes that responsive web design will lead to great online experiences. We take a look at the method of the moment.

    Think about the devices you use to access the web. Chances are you use a desktop or laptop computer. But you might also access it through a smartphone, tablet PC, games console or TV. Do each of these devices give you the same useful experience visiting your favourite websites? If not, why not?

    The web, up until now, has been designed from a uniform perspective. Taking its lead from print design, web design has strived to reproduce templates across all of the devices that you might use. This was good for a time. But this "must look the same" approach missed the true potential of the medium.

    Unlocking the potential of the web

    Responsive Web Design is causing great excitement in the industry as it promises to unlock new digital ideas and experiences. RWD is the method of the moment, but before it came Graceful Degradation, Progressive Enhancement and many other design methods aimed at pushing the medium forward. The difference this time is that, where previous approaches chipped away at the surface of pixel perfection, RWD demands a completely new understanding of how a web page works.

    RWD increases the value of web content, no matter what device you use to look at it. Value to the visitor is determined by the content, interaction or tasks they can complete. Think of your favourite social network. A responsive version of it would adapt to your device, making it easy and intuitive to catch up on news, find new friends or contacts and update your profile. If the website was not responsive you would need to zoom into the page on a mobile device and struggle with buttons designed for desktop interaction – giving you a poor experience and bad impression of the brand.

    The potential for RWD goes beyond mobile. However, the rapid increase in the use of mobile devices, with different resolutions and features like touch screens, has been a key driving force in the return to some of the founding principles of the web. Content is king and, combined with well structured code, you can use it to make your website support your brand values. As many businesses and organisations have found in the digital age; brand value is not about appearance, it is about user experience.

    So where do we go from here?

    The latest responsive site we launched has seen a surge in traffic from mobile devices. iPhone increased by 275%, Android by 484% and an astonishing 1040% on iPad. There was a clear business case for creating a responsive website in this case. Perhaps there's one for yours?

    We're convinced responsive website design delivers a better user and brand experience and we're currently working on new responsive websites for clients and ourselves. If you think your customers deserve a great online experience get in touch.

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    Categories: Insight

    Tags: Business strategy, Content strategy, Digital strategy, HTML5, Mobile, Mobile First, Reputation, thisishoop, User centred thinking, User Experience

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  • A very special Fish on Friday. »

    Russ, proud father of FoF, has become a daddy in real life and might just be singing James Brown.

    Congratulations Russ and Haf, we can't wait to meet baby Iona!

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    Categories: Fish on Fridays

    Tags: thisishoop

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  • A special 5 top finds. »

    This week's 5 top finds is the fifth in the series, so we thought we'd do something a little bit different.

    The shift in advertising trends, from traditional to digital, has been unavoidable. Today, we highlight 5 of our favourite digital advertising campaigns.

    1. Johnny Walker & BBH: The Man Who Walked Around The World

    This 6 minute video was produced in 2008 by BBH and recounts the long and illustrious history of Scottish blended whisky maker Johnnie Walker. 'The Man Who Walked Around The World' stars the superb Robert Carlyle and was shot in a single (yes, just one) take - although it took 40 takes to get the one you see above. This is without a doubt one of the best and most creative advertising videos we've ever seen. Pure perfection!

    See 'The Man Who Walked Around The World' here.

    2. NTT DOCOMO & Drill Inc: 森の木琴 [Wood Xylophone]

    Japanese mobile operator NTT DOCOMO decided to do something a bit different for the advertising for their new handset, the Touch Wood SH-08C. Created by Morihiro Harano of Drill Inc., '森の木琴' features a hand-carved, forest-based wooden xylophone that uses gravity to play Bach's 'Cantata 147'. Apparently, no post-production editing was used - what you hear is what the xylophone is capable of playing. If that's true it only adds to the magic of this advertising video. Truly astounding.

    See '森の木琴' here. See the 'Making Of' video here.

    3. IKEA & Mother London: Happy Inside

    Cats enjoy being comfortable; they live life at their pace and in pursuit of their own happiness. That's the reasoning Mother London's Creative Director Feh Tarty used when he decided to release 100 cats in IKEA's Wembley store. The 1 minute 'IKEA cats' video is the wonderful result.

    See 'Happy Inside' here. See the 'Making Of' video here.

    4. Sony BRAVIA & Fallon : Balls

    250,000 bouncy balls, flying down a San Francisco street accompanied by the wonderful Jose Gonzalez covering The Knife's 'Heartbeats'. This was the sensational advert that launched Sony BRAVIA technology to the world and Fallon's work still has the impact it first had on us in 2005. Amazing!

    See the BRAVIA launch video 'Balls' here. See the 'Making Of' video here.

    5. Dentsu & BERG London: Making Future Magic.

    'Making Future Magic' is Dentsu London's communication strategy. They explored the themes behind this strategy with the extremely talented lot over at BERG, who developed the seriously cool idea "of using photographic and animation techniques that were developed to draw moving 3-dimensional typography and objects with an iPad". The words don't come anywhere near doing the finished 5 minute video justice though so you'll have to watch it to understand. Hands down, our favourite advert of all time.

    See 'Making Future Magic here.

    Denstu London have also released an app called Penki (iTunes link) which allows you to replicate the wonderful 'Making Future Magic' video using an iPhone/ iPad and a camera. For an idea of what's possible using the app, head over to the Penki flickr group.

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    Categories: 5 top finds

    Tags: cat video, thisishoop

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