Webstock wisdom
February 19th, 2008
by Tiki East
Many may expect Webstock 2008 to be a massive geekfest of new toys, bells and whistles - catchphrases, techery and geekspeak. They wouldn’t be entirely right .
I won’t recap too much of what actually happened. There will be others who do a good rundown of events. The whole thing has also been captured for easy web access which should be available here soon.
The key messages coming out of conference were far from technical goobledegook. On the contrary, these are all pretty sound principles for anyone communicating with the public. They particularly ring true for cultural sector organisations looking at how to build or renovate their online presence.
- Simplify. Simplify design, simplify choices, and simplify the way people can start using your site.
- Don’t make users work for their information.
- Test your product. Often.
- Your website is not your product. Your content or data is your product and your website is one channel to communicate that product.
- Play with others. Design your website and your content so that it can interact with others.
- Don’t build artifacts, those big monolithic unchanging websites. Try to create spaces that people can work/play/learn with. Interaction is really important.
- Find out how people are using your information and work with them.
- Be creative. Innovation takes time but it’s worth pushing through.
- Collaborate. The team is smarter than the individual.
- Win audiences with consistency. Have constant quality standards across all your media and with your end product.
- It’s ok to fail. You need to try things out – get fearless.
I’ve found the best thing about going to these sorts of conferences is that it gives you time to think constructively about your projects. It also gives you the vision and vocabulary to go back to the office and convince your managers/team/stakeholders that changes are needed.
It also gets you all inspired and excited to get back to the office, work hard and do great things. That in itself should justify the spend to your manager!
For more on the wonders of Webstock check out the commentary on the following websites and blogs, at:


I think you’ve captured the festival/conference perfectly …
Thanks for the shout-out
Yay! The long awaited video and audio of Webstock is now online for the learning. Relive the heady highlights in your own home or place of work through the wonder of modern technology!
http://webstock.org.nz/past/recordings.php
I personally found Liz Danzico and Russell Brown to be the most useful sessions for me. But, I do have a few to catch up on. SO if anyone has any must-dos - please share!
xx Tiki
Thanks for this article! Especially I liked the points at the end of the article.Though a couple of them were pretty obvious, I will take most of those points into consideration while working on my site.
Thanks again!