Lean and keen: MxM and Good for Nothing kick off action for famine aid
Last night saw the first evening of MxM/GFN action for famine aid.
4 posts
Last night saw the first evening of MxM/GFN action for famine aid.
OH: #goodfornothing is like a wholesome speed rush
Sat May 21 17:45:35 +0000 2011
Cath Richardson
Last weekend I went to the second Good for Nothing, a full on 48 hours of tea and booze fuelled thinking, making and doing for three good causes. I've written about my first experience at Good for Nothing and I won't repeat what I covered there. The Pipeline boys put in place a few tools to encourage people to get making faster this time, but the main difference was that this was a two day event rather than just one and the emphasis really was on making something go live by the end of day two - no jacking around.
This time round I worked with GnewtCargo, a zero-emissions logistics company who use electric vans and cargo cycles to deliver goods in East London. You can read a great round up of what the group overall achieved here but I want to focus on the part that I was working on as it proved to be a great example of what you can do when you apply Lean principles to the hack day mentality.
Last Saturday but one marked the first iteration of Good for Nothing, an initiative from the Pipeline Project, which describes itself as a "creative collaboration gig bringing together awesome causes with a collective of thinkers, doers and tinkerers applying their day job skills to do some good for nothing."
And so a bunch of us gathered on a dark and snowy Friday night eager to find out what we might have to offer to 3 fantastic social enterprises: the Good Gym, Global Generation and the Great Football Giveaway (yes it was a remarkably alliterative event). The process was simple and unstructured: lay out 3 briefs and invite the audience to get their hands dirty. Dan, Tom and Tom, the lovely team behind the Pipeline Project, didn't over-engineer the event but they did push us to take our ideas and initiatives as far as we could go. What can you make live in a day?
Tim, Stuart, Anjali, Oli and I had an Amazing time at the London Twestival yesterday. More than 100 cities all over the world hosted a Twestival to raise money for communities that don’t have clean, safe drinking water – something most of us take for granted.