Moxy Productions Inc.

Communication. It’s what we do.

Archive for 2008

We’ve been as busy as stink.

Saturday, November 15th, 2008

There’s only about a thousand things for us to catch up on – new client work, additions to our team, and the bookkeeping. But in the midst of it, it’s hard to find the time. So because we’ve been exploring the possibilities of Animoto for client work, we thought we’d share a quick version of our own portfolio rocking out. Eventually, this piece — or one much like it — will find a permanent home on thee site. But for now, enjoy it here!

Social Media: it’s time we all got it.

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

What an exciting time to be in our business! Over the past few years we (Moxy and  Wild Imaginations Inc.) have been very fortunate to work with some great clients, learn a ton about communications and brand development, and be a part of some exciting developments in business—both our own business growth and our clients’.

But there’s even better things on the horizon, and we’re just waking up to it now. It’s best to bring this discussion in the first person: not “we” Moxy Productions Inc. / MOXY Webworks, but me, Jesse Collins, owner-operator, chief-cook-and-bottle-washer, and author of this post. That’s because this discussion is as much about the distillation of business communications as it is about increasing reach and building community around what we do, or what we sell, or what service we provide.

First, the idea of doing any of this stems from believing in what we do. As a provider of a product or service, we start by being evangelists for what we create. Everything I’ve ever done in my life has come from absolute belief in being happy, from the belief that I would rather be a success at something I love than a failure at something I hate. From leaving the University of Toronto to become an actor, which led me into the most engaging and satisfying performance career I could’ve hoped for, from wanting to learn about directing—again, a passion that I still enjoy—to wanting to build a business (read: make my living from) working with the communications and the internet.  So here I am. Engaged in learning every day, all because I left an institution of learning to pursue something that people thought was unattainable. That’s ironic.

So believing in what we do becomes the foundation for how we successfully use this vast, evolving mass of tools and techniques that are being generated every second of every day on the internet. Of late, Social Media has become so important that it can no longer be ignored by companies that believe in what they do. It’s not a passing fancy, it’s not a diversion for people playing little games on their computer. It is a legitimate place where people expect to share information and engage in conversation with their friends, with strangers and with brands. Yes, engage in conversation with brands.

Perhaps the best example of this is Twitter. Twitter is a service that allows users to send updates or “tweets”: text-based posts, up to 140 characters long to the Twitter website quickly and easily, from the web, from Facebook, or even from your phone.

Updates are instantly delivered to other users who have signed up to receive them (people who “follow” you) as well as to the public stream. Users can receive updates via the Twitter website, instant messaging, SMS, RSS, email or through an application.

I joined Twitter a little over a year ago. Admittedly, at first I didn’t get it. It felt like a distraction I didn’t need. I should be writing and talking and building and working, I thought, not watching this stream of people’s tweets go by.

But gradually, I started connecting with and following people in the same business as us, and people with the same interests. I started to notice that folks were using these short posts to communicate valuable ideas, share links to important blog posts, and even just to make each other feel better in an increasingly hostile and mean-spirited world (i.e. American Idol and society’s new craving for harsh criticism of people who do things out of joy). And I wasn’t the only one.

Twitter has grown exponentially, to the point that it can barely handle it. They are currently trying to shore up the system to handle the millions of users that have flocked to it. And it’s being used creatively, engagingly, and successfully, by people and businesses alike.

But the internet shows this better than I can. In this interview of Amy Worley from H&R Block By Rodney Rumford of www.Facereviews.com, see how a massive company uses it to engage with its customers.

Frozen music.

Monday, March 31st, 2008

Again, I’m referencing the Goethe quotation “Architecture is frozen music”, only this time it’s spot on. We’ve been giving a hand to my wife’s cousin Terry Corbett to create a site that provides some insight into his stone fireplace business, and how it emanated from his work as a sculptor. I’m going to cross-post this at jessecollins.com (my personal blog, sub-titled “A blog for those who’d rather be at the cottage”) because there is a story regarding Terry’s love for sculpting that is most appropo for that venue…

Creating a stone fireplace mantleBut here at the Moxy blog, it’s important to note why we wanted to come on board to do some design for Terry. Web presence is about findability, as Aarron Walter describes brilliantly in this month’s issue of A List Apart. And we noted that with Terry’s existing site that was basically a catalogue built on non-standards-aware code, findability was being impeded by the site. I believe really strongly that the beauty of his work with stone fireplaces is the direct result of his talents as an artist; and that folks who want that kind of high-end detail in a big investment for their home, should be able to find his story on the web.

So have a look at stone-fireplace.ca for more info about Terry, his team and their work!

We still have much to do there (like add proper contact forms and begin to showcase some actual fireplace mantel models) but that will come in time. The main thing is we’ve given findability a chance through standards and design.

What’s in the pipes…

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

Well, it’s a sin that I’ve been so busy that we’ve neglected our blog. But wait a minute—that’s a good thing!

The fact is, I’ve been scurrying back and forth between client work, March Breakage, and a ton of voice work. Carol left today for a mini-tour of the Southern USA with clarinet-phenom Dave Bennett.

But there’s some wonderful things in store down the road. We’re going to begin developing our first web-based app, Involvid, a new twist on video training and certification; we’re going to get Carol rolling with some Singing Instruction and Technique; and we’re lending a hand to our brilliant cousin Terry Corbett over at Northern Stoneworks, embarking on a new stone fireplace site.

So watch this space – lots more coming soon!

Preaching to the converted.

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

Jesse Collins speaks at the BCSI recently spoke at the Chinese New Year Banquet of the British Computer Society in Upper Canada. A small but enthusiastic group of revelers waited patiently through my presentation, “Bridging the Disconnect between Art and technology: From Wild Imaginations to Web Experiences” before an absolutely extraordinary banquet prepared by Empire Legendary Oriental Cuisine. If I’d known the food was going to be so fantastic, I would’ve cut the presentation down to the title and “Happy New Year.”

It was great chatting afterwards with some of the guests. It’s a little unorthodox to wax poetic about web development (and in particular, web standards), and how a lifetime of working with actors, designers and directors led me to them—but there is a connection. That connection should just be made more quickly when there’s good food waiting.

Our thanks to Shane O’Neill from Hitachi Canada for the invite. It was a great night.

MOXY Webworks

1101 Clarkson Road, Suite #303, Mississauga, ON L5J 2W1
(905) 274-MOXY (6699)

Availability

We are currently booking client work that commences April, 2010.

MOXY prefers to work by referral only. We occasionally provide pro bono services to non-profit and not-for-profit organizations.


Warning: extract() [function.extract]: First argument should be an array in /home/moxy33/public_html/weblog/wp-content/plugins/simplepie-plugin-for-wordpress/simplepie_wordpress_2.php on line 887

MOXY's Weblog

  1. As easy as 1, 2, 3… Tuesday, 26 May 2009, 4:25 pm
    What a wild ride. A few days ago, I took the opportunity through a friend to have a drink with a gentlemen I had met socially a few weeks ago. Norm Lehman is an interesting guy: ex-advertising exec, s. […]
  2. How it all comes together… Tuesday, 17 February 2009, 5:06 pm
    Some of you may know that we’ve worked for years on the Diogaurdi Tax Law account, under the guidance of Patti Plant from CEO Media Group and lead designer Tony Delitala of Delitala Design. We’ve. […]
  3. Helping Hands Monday, 9 February 2009, 6:31 pm
    It’s more than a funny co-incidence that right while I’m in the middle of enjoying Tim Ferriss’s highly regarded The 4-Hour Work Week, I get a visit from Diane Goldsmith. It seems Diane is behin. […]

Client News

Entomology-Photography.com

Paul Eeckhoff's incredible photography in an online gallery. This will blow your mind when it drops.

“Teaching a child not to step on a caterpillar is as valuable to the child as it is to the caterpillar.”

~Bradley Millar

Maurine.ca

Our favourite Business Relationship Consultant gets a re-align.

“Man is a knot into which relationships are tied.”

~Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Flight to Arras, 1942, translated from French by Lewis Galantière