Sheffield city council needs a new Twitter username

…and so does the Sheffield Telegraph

Sheffield city council on Twitter

Sheffield city council on Twitter

The council’s approach to Twitter has come a long since its fledgling first steps where #almost #every #word #was #inexplicably #hashtagged. They seem to have got the hang of it now and have certainly discovered its value, particularly during times of crisis such as our occasional floods.

I was thinking about how they might further improve what they are doing and for me the username they have chosen, ‘SCCPressOffice‘, is not very good. You might hope that after being on Twitter for a year or two, they would realise that the could change it to a name which would work for them much more effectively.

Here’s why Sheffield city council needs to change their SCCPressOffice Twitter username:

  • It doesn’t contain the name of the organisation that it is supposed to represent
    Sheffield city council is called Sheffield city council, and none of those words are included in the name. Instead, they have chosen to use an abbreviation that no member of the public would really choose of using (SCC) and also the name of the department providing the tweets. To me, this seems quite inward-looking: why base your name on meaningless local government internal jargon and the name of an internal department? By all means use your Twitter biography to explain who is running the account on behalf of the organisation, but not your username
  • It doesn’t contain the name of the city it is supposed to represent
    The council’s primary interest, and the reason it exists, is the city of Sheffield. Although it may not always be demonstrated with swagger, the people who live here love their city and have plenty of civic pride. Why wouldn’t the council choose to include the word Sheffield when representing itself online?
  • It doesn’t help search engine optimisation
    When choosing names for things like this, it is good to pick a name that is also the kind of thing that people will put into Google or the Twitter search box to look for it. Who on earth would search for SCCPressOffice? Perhaps someone wanting to get in touch with the press office. But everyone else would type ‘Sheffield council’ or ‘Sheffield city council’
  • It doesn’t read very well
    I’ve got used to it now, but to someone unfamiliar with the name, SCCPressOffice doesn’t scan very well and isn’t particularly easy to read. Their Twitter biography also doesn’t make sense: “Sheffield City Council, Sheffield where everyone matters”
  • It isn’t really on-brand
    I’m guessing that the council doesn’t have a very developed set of brand guidelines. If it did, referring to itself externally as SCC would surely not be encouraged

It seems to me that when setting up this Twitter account the council has made the classic mistake of naming it based on the internal set-up of the organisation, instead of their audience’s needs. As I said, few people call the council ‘SCC’ and no-one really cares that the press office update it. To the outside world, that Twitter account is Sheffield city council and the name should reflect that.

I’m not out to slag off the council or the people running the account, I just want to see the prominent users of digital services like Twitter in Sheffield use them to their maximum potential. They offer an opportunity to engage with hard-to-reach people and are a great way for the public to feed back on council services. Getting the name right is a good start and a platform on which to build.

As a footnote, the Sheffield Telegraph has also not chosen a very good Twitter username in ‘shftelegraph‘. It isn’t easy to remember what it is (I should know, as I type it every week), it doesn’t mention Sheffield or Telegraph and their Twitter name (different to username) is Sheffield Newspapers. When looking for the paper on Twitter, who would type the name of the parent group instead of the newspaper title?

Come on council and the Sheffield Telegraph: no matter how much red tape is in your organisation, the power is in your hands to make this easy change. You won’t lose any users and it can be done in two minutes. What do you say?

Paul Scriven’s Mercure Sheffield St Paul’s hotel training video

Not such a perfect day for the leader of Sheffield city council

The original of this video was hastily removed this morning, although Sheffield politics has preserved a copy and uploaded it again:

Paul explained on Twitter that it is an internal training video.

Sheffield and Meadowhall Christmas TV ads

Selling shopping

The council and Meadowhall have made adverts for the Christmas season.

Brace yourselves for the coach-loads of Londoners descending on the Moor to finish their Christmas shopping.

Save Portland works, Sheffield

Formally object to the planning application

Just to draw your attention this campaign to try and save the Portland works building on Randall street from the threat of being developed into flats.

Located in Sharrow, the grade II listed building is currently home to metalworkers, cabinet-makers, musicians, artists, sole traders and others.

The case for keeping the building as a home for little mesters-style workshops is articulated well in a letter in this week’s Sheffield Telegraph which describes the works as our ‘living heritage, not a museum or polished up piece of preserved past’.

Isn’t there a more appropriate location for flats, one that doesn’t involve threatening the existence of these historical workshops and small businesses? As the letter in the paper points out, some of the commercial tenants are proudly still practising the traditional manufacturing methods that made the city famous.

The online campaign is centered on the Portland works blog and a Facebook group which you can join to keep up to date with the cause.

Perhaps the most useful way of showing your support is to formally object to the planning application on the Sheffield city council website. The recent victory over East midlands trains regarding the station barriers was supported by 1,250 objections that will have no doubt been an influence on the planning board.

Object to the Portland works planning application

Sheffield on Twitter – update nine

August 2009 update

Here are this month’s additions to the list of Sheffield people and organisations of interest on  Twitter. The full directory can be found on the Sheffield Twitter users page.

Paul Scriven – leader of Sheffield city council
@Paulscriven

Jon McClure – Reverend and the Makers front man
@JonMcClure

Cocoa  – chocolate shop on Eccy Road
@Cocoasheffield

Our Cow Molly – locally-made ice cream
@OurCowMolly

Seth Bennet – BBC Sheffield sport presenter
@Sethb45

Oktoberfest Sheffield – beer festival
@OktoberfestShef

Popolo – restaurant in Leopold square
@PopoloSheffield

Eliot Kennedy – songwriter who has worked with the Spice girls, Bryan Adams, S Club 7 and 5ive
@EliotKennedy

Robin hood airport – Doncaster-Sheffield international
@RobinHoodAirpor

Graduates Sheffield
@GradSheff

Oxjam – music festival
@OxjamSheffield

Sheffield unsigned – music directory for artists in and around Sheffield
@sheffunsigned

Crookes forum – community group
@CrookesForum

Hillsborough forum – community group
@hillsbroforum

South Yorkshire fire and rescue
@SYFR

Apple admin – professional virtual admin services
@AppleAdmn

Benchmark recruitment – recruitment agency
@BenchmarkRec

Sheffield university real ale society
@RealAleSociety

C21 creative – web and graphic designers
@C21Creative

VT music – music publisher
@VTmusic

Sheffield big – support programme to help residents set up in business
@sheffieldbig

Roundabout – homeless youth charity
@rndbt

South Yorkshire music – local music news
@syorkshiremusic

Little white book – wedding planners
@LWBwedding

Wath festival – music festival
@wathfestival

Sheffield law society – supporting and representing Sheffield’s legal profession
@SheffieldLawSoc

3 squared – web, print and software
@3_Squared

Sorby nano – leaders in micro and nano scale investigation
@SorbyNano

SYPTE – South Yorkshire passenger transport executive
@SYPTE

City church – local church
@CityChurchShef

Sheffield craft collective
@Craft_Candy

LCPU – NAVCA’s local commissioning and procurement unit
@lcpu

Mookau – gift boutique
@mookau

Abbey joinery
@AbbeyJoinery

Training foundry – computer trainers
@trainingfoundry

Platinum blind – band
@platinumblind4u

Dead world leaders – band
@DWL_Official

Sheffield liberal youth
@ShefLibYouth

Sheffield Labour students
@sheflabstudents

Extension match – brick and stone supplier
@ExtensionMatch

Atweb – band
@atewb

Geeks in the peaks – rural getaway for geeks, 4-6 September 2009
@geeksinthepeaks

Harry Gration – veteran Look north presenter
@gratih46

Sheffield latest – automated news
@sheffieldlatest

If you want to be listed on it then follow @sheffieldblog, get in touch or comment below.

Is Sheffield really the greenest city in England?

Finding the evidence

Sheffielders are rightly proud of their city and are always happy to extol its virtues at any opportunity. One thing in particular that we have all heard and seen written countless times before is that Sheffield is England’s – and if not the UK’s or even Europe’s – greenest city. But is this really true?

When it comes to promoting the city, most of the bigger organisations in Sheffield seem to think it is. The development agency Creative Sheffield mentions it in the introductory text on its homepage and then states it as fact on a sub-page of their site. The council website is also littered with references to ‘the greenest city’ and Sheffield Hallam university devotes a page of its site celebrating the fact.

Sheffield university shows a little more restraint, with some pages focusing on more general facts about our open green spaces and others including references to us as one of the greenest cities. You can still find mentions of it being the greenest though.

The sometimes-inaccurate Wikipedia sits on the fence by stating that ‘Sheffield often boasts of being Europe’s greenest city’.

The problem is that there is no agreed way of defining what ‘green’ is and then comparably measuring how green a city is. If you define green using your own criteria then you could argue that there are several other cities deserving of the title of the greenest one. The only way to work out which city is definitively the greenest is to agree a set of quantifiable criteria and then measure your sample of cities against these.

There are some green statistics about Sheffield that we can be proud of, but together these don’t necessarily add up to mean that the city is the greenest. As quoted from the Creative Sheffield site (and also by many people from Sheffield):

  • Despite its urban location almost three-quarters of the city is taken up by natural vegetation and waterways.
  • More than a third of the city is located in the Peak District National Park – no other city has a National Park within its boundary.
  • In addition you’ll find 150 woodlands and 50 public parks all within Sheffield and it is rumoured that there are 4 mature trees to every person living here!
  • Over 44 per cent of Sheffield residents live within a five minute walk of a wood and half the city’s population live within 15 minutes of the open countryside. Imagine that!

The gold that we won in the Entente Florale back in 2005 is also often used as a trump card in the argument. But what about the other cities that have won this? Does that award make them the greenest, too?

I’m not saying that Sheffield isn’t the greenest city, but it would be good for someone to do the research and prove beyond all doubt that this is categorically true. Is anyone up to the challenge? Or does it not matter whether it can be proved or not?

In the meantime, at the very least we can rightly be proud of all the parks, woodlands, greenery and world-class countryside right here on our doorstep.

Is Sheffield the greenest city in Europe? Image by @DrJoolz

Sheffield from Norfolk park by @DrJoolz; used with permission

Sheffield on Twitter – update seven

June 2009 update

Here are this month’s additions to the list of Sheffield people and organisations of interest on  Twitter, with perhaps the most notable being the addition of the council (@SCCPressOffice). The full directory can be found on the Sheffield Twitter users page.

Sheffield city council press office – the council’s press office
@SCCPressOffice

Art Sheffield – Sheffield contemporary art forum
@artsheffield

Sheffield Hallam university – the university’s central Twitter account
@sheffhallamuni

Quba new media – web agency
@quba_nm

Sheffield live – community radio station
@Sheffieldlive

Fuse  – show on the university’s Forge radio station
@FUSE_forgeradio

Celluloid screams – Sheffield horror film festival
@sheffhorrorfest

SSiD Sheffield – University of Sheffield student services
@SSiDSheffield

Vox Sheffield – Volunteer-led organisation that exists to nurture, encourage and showcase creative expression and experimentation
@voxsheffield

Sheffbookclub – Twitter-based book club on Sheffield
@Sheffbookclub

The Earl – Queens Road pub
@EarlPub

SCCWeb – Sheffield city council web team
@SCCWeb

Sheffield university Japan society – University of Sheffield student Japan group
@shefjapansoc

ELR auctions – Antique and fine art auctioneers and valuers
@ELR_AUCTIONS

teamNomad – digital agency
@teamnomad

Becky Hayes – Hallam FM presenter and former High street honey
@Bhorhais

PH weddings – wedding photography and planning

http://twitter.com/PHWeddings

Shane Rounce – designer and photographer
@srounce

Martin Field – photographer
@martinfield1

Team Cooper – Flash developers
@tim_cooper_uk

BFFS – British federation of film societies
@_BFFS_/

PHS Sheffield – Psychological health website updates
@PHSsheffield

Sheffield alumni – University of Sheffield alumni department
@SheffieldAlumni

CAaD – contemporary art as dialogue blog
@CAaDSheffield

Bex knitwear – hand knitter and designer of knitwear
@bexknitwear

If you want to be listed on it then follow @sheffieldblog, get in touch or comment below.

New Sheffield city centre shopping website

Town battles on as it awaits the arrival of Sevenstone

It is a difficult time for the city centre at the moment. While the promise of the new retail quarter has raised hopes that town will once again become a significant northern shopping destination, walking past the empty shops on the Moor and Pinstone Street is presently quite depressing.

Although it was reported last week that footfall in town has increased by 17,000 people a month, for me the city centre still needs all the help it can get to encourage shoppers.

Seemingly, the council has recognised this and is making some effort to give town its best chance of success before the arrival of Sevenstone, with hoardings displaying images of Sheffield being erected around derelict buildings marked for demolition.

And according to this council email, a new website promoting shopping in the city is in the pipeline:

A new website will be launched in April that shows just what’s on offer for shopping in the city centre. It will show potential shoppers what shops are here, where they are, and what they sell. Retailers will be able to update special offers and events, and talk to other retailers through the site. The aim of the site is to promote Sheffield as a competitive retail destination. It’s a joint initiative between the council, Creative Sheffield and the Chamber of Commerce.

So if these initiatives work, what will people think when they arrive in the town? Some visitors from London commented to me that as an urban environment, parts of the city centre look great (I did take them on a selective route of the city). But some areas look very run-down and we know that for shopping, it still has a long way to go.

With current economic conditions causing more retailers to fold and further shop units to stand empty, I can’t help but feel that it will get worse before it gets better. However, I am also sure that in due course we will once again have a shopping destination of which to be proud.

City lofts St Paul’s tower cladding design row

Standing your ground

You’ll have no doubt read about the current disagreement over the panels used on the outside of the City lofts St Paul’s tower development in town. In a nutshell, the council agreed a certain specification of cladding, which the developer then changed.

The council has stood firm and now crisis talks are taking place between both parties with the hope of resolving the issue. You can read the detail of the saga unfolding in the 196-page thread in the Sheffield Development Forum.

I was passing the development this week with my camera so took some photos which are below.

Despite it being a brilliant sunny day, the brown panels still looked a bit dingy. And as someone also pointed out in the discussion thread, if this is them at their best, how many clear sunny days will we get in Sheffield to see them like this?

Even with the sun directly reflecting off the side of the building, as shown in the bottom photo, it still has a dated look to me and reminds me a bit of a 70s London building that I used to work in and is about to be ripped down.

What do people think, should the council continue to stand its ground and demand an improved design, risking that the tower is left to stand empty or even be demolished?

cladding1

cladding2

City lofts St Paul's tower cladding

Sheffield City on the move video from The Full Monty

Watch (some) of The Reel Monty video online – or buy the DVD

If you’ve ever searched online for a clip of City on the move, the promotional film famously featured in The Full Monty, you will have probably drawn a blank.

However, to mark the official release of the film on DVD, The Star has put parts of the video online along with interviews with the Council’s first-ever publicity officer and the film-maker.

It’s a nostalgic look at a city that was improving back then, but is almost unrecognisable compared to the Sheffield of 2008.

Read the accompanying article or go straight to the video – you have to press play to set it going. You can also buy a copy of the DVD from thereelmonty.com.

And for comparison purposes, here are the two promotional films that Creative Sheffield has made over the last couple of years to promote the city:

2008

2007

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