Susannah Vila

"As Tech In Asia reveals – citing a Chinese language report from Sina Tech — the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) has announced that number of active devices in the country has reached 1,030,052,000, thanks to 43 million new activations in the first quarter of 2012."

« China Confirms it Now Has More Than 1 Billion Mobile Phone Users (via thenextweb)

User Stories Are Important

If you’re trying to get people to adopt anything new - from a blog to a social network to a new phone - and that’s why I went through a few for the engine room’s directory of tech support resources for advocacy - with a particular focus on our board of advisors.

Read it at our site.

thenextweb:

According to the Forrester report, there will be 1 billion smartphone customers by 2016, with 257 million smartphones and 126 million tablets in the US alone. (via 1B Mobile Users by 2016, Apple, Google and Microsoft with 90% share)

thenextweb:

According to the Forrester report, there will be 1 billion smartphone customers by 2016, with 257 million smartphones and 126 million tablets in the US alone. (via 1B Mobile Users by 2016, Apple, Google and Microsoft with 90% share)

Training South Asia’s Youngest Civil Society Members

I just got back from doing a new media advocacy week long workshop in Sri Lanka with youth leaders from throughout South Asia. Posted this at The Huffington Post

This summer, frustration towards pervasive corruption in India reached a tipping point when hunger striker Anna Hazare mobilized thousands. While an awakening of the world’s largest pluralistic democracy should perhaps not come as a huge surprise, is something also brewing in neighboring Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and the rest of South Asia? 

That’s what a new generation of committed youth activists in the region would tell you.  Last week, I co-led workshops on online strategy at a training event in Sri Lanka  - where activists conceived of and refined ideas for new, regional NGOs and campaigns.

To my surprise, it was not the examples of online activism from North Africa and the Middle East that provoked the most excitement - instead it was news from the Indian anti-corruption movement. 

Here’re the presentations from the workshop I gave at the event - which was a partnership between the U.S. State Department and the Sri Lankan NGO, WCIPER. The goal was to offer a more strategic framework for these young leaders to plan their campaigns within, and then to go deeper into how new technologies can be embedded into this strategy. 

Strategy, New Media and Winning Campaigns from susannah vila on Vimeo.

In the coming months, the projects that these youth leaders envisioned over the course of the week long conference will be implemented. The campaign that we (trainers and judges) gave first prize to will receive support from WCIPER, the US Embassy, and other supporters.