Welcome to Collective Conversation Sign in | Join | Help

Subscribe

Search

 Go

Post Calendar

<January 2009>
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
2930311234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930311
2345678

Tags

    No tags have been created or used yet.

Niall Cook

Niall Cook is the Worldwide Director of Marketing Technology at communications consultancy Hill & Knowlton, with responsibility for the agency's online marketing strategy and internal systems to maximise marketing and new business efficiency. He created the industry leading blogging policy for the firm and set up Collective Conversation, the first blogging community from a professional services company.

Niall frequently advise the agency's Fortune 500 clients on the effective use of technology to support internal and external marketing strategy, having recently worked on projects for Allianz, HSBC and LG. Prior to joining Hill & Knowlton in July 2000, he held positions at the online currency beenz.com, Answerthink Consulting Group, UBS and Reed Elsevier. In July 2008, his book Enterprise 2.0: How Social Software will Change the Future of Work will be published.

Niall hold an honours degree in Typography & Graphic Communication from The University of Reading and lives in Suffolk with his wife, daughter, two Hungarian Wirehaired Viszlas, one Tibetan Terrier and two cats.

He is a frequent speaker and author on the topic of social media and social software, and was invited to address the Singapore Ministry of Information, Communication and the Arts in 2006. He has also led the Ark Group's Social Software in the Enterprise Masterclass. Other speaking engagements include the Institute of Fundraising's national convention, the 2nd Annual Internal Communications Measurement Conference, and moderating discussions on social media in business.


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Published 06 June 2008 14:09 by Ampersand Editor

Comment Notification

If you would like to receive an email when updates are made to this post, please register here

Subscribe to this post's comments using RSS

Comments

    No Comments

Leave a Comment

(required) 
(optional)
(required) 
Submit