In case you're wondering where 'One Britain One Nation Day' has come from:

It's not a government campaign. It's run by a guy called Kash Singh. He trademarked it in 2005, when he was a policeman.

It's sprung to attention because the Department for Education tweeted this today.
Various Twitter commentators positioned it as "Boris Johnson's" strategy, and claimed it was organised by the "Union Unit".

It is not Boris Johnson's strategy, and the overall idea has been around since 2005, so obviously not created by the (2019/20 founded) Union Unit.
It's actually popularised by Philip Davies MP and Esther McVey MP (who are married).

Philip has known Kash Singh for many years (Philip is MP for Shipley; Kash is a former West Yorkshire policeman, and lived in nearby Keighley)
This year, Esther McVey brought it up at Prime Minister's Questions, asking if Boris Johnson would support Kash Singh and OBON.
Yesterday, Philip Davies followed that up, asking Gavin Williamson if he'd endorse it and thank Kash Singh.

He did so, as you can see in this video.

Obviously, Boris Johnson had already given it a nod at PMQs, so Gavin Williamson would have to also support it when asked.

Gavin is Education Minister, which is why, a day later, the Dept for Education twitter account would put out this (now heavily ratiod) tweet.
Summary:

- Not a govt campaign
- Been round 15 years, run local to Esther McVey & Philip Davies constituencies for at least the last few
- This year they've successfully nudged their friend Kash & 'OBON' onto Boris & the DfE

Expect jokes on Friday & it to become an annual topic
As an add-on, a few have noted OBON had an all party parliamentary group. It *seems* that was fairly short-lived, though I guess could be reborn.

@andreajenkyns (another West Yorks MP) launched it with Kash in 2018, but it had already gone from the register of APPGs by Sep 2019

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More from @danbarker

22 Jun
What do these 2 big 'culture war' stories this week have in common?

1. M&S launches new underwear range 'inspired by George Floyd'.
2. St Paul's Girls' School no longer using the term 'head girl' because it's 'too binary'.

The answer is, oddly, neither is quite what it seems.
The 'George Floyd Underwear' story: The Daily Mail tweet that popularised the idea he 'inspired' it is below.

If you open the image, you can see the DM tweet says 'inspired by George Floyd' in quotes, as if M&S said that. But the article itself does not contain that quote at all
If you read the M&S press release, this is the only mention of George Floyd (bwlo).

Ie: The Daily Mail seem to have picked that up & summarised it as inspired by George Floyd, and added quotes around that phrase, which people read as if that's what M&S have actually said.
Read 7 tweets
11 May
A few weeks ago, there were a couple of popular tweets declaring that the "mad umbrella shop" and "mad sailor shop" in London had survived the pandemic.

It is with regret that I report that the "mad sailor shop", Arthur Beale's, is closing, one of the oldest shops in London.
If you've ever passed the shop, you've probably noticed the sign says "Established Four Centuries".

Nobody knows exactly how old it is, but there is a card in the British Museum from 1791 showing it was already a well-established business at that point.
I often post photos of their brilliant shop windows. Here's one from a couple of years ago, where they had a full moving underwater scene.

Read 15 tweets
11 Apr
Here is another example of a viral story that is not really a story at all:

The Royal Yacht, The Telegraph, The Independent, and Prince Philip.

I'm sure most people realise, but here is a short note on what's actually happened...
In the tweet above, The Independent ask:

"Would you like to see a £190million Royal Yacht built as a memorial to Prince Philip...?"

You'll note: The question is in a form that is easy to quote tweet, adding an angry comment, without any need for anyone to visit the article.
The tweet poses a "Yes/No" question. We are all trained to realise that whenever a newspaper asks a yes/no question, the answer is almost always "No".

(often known as 'Betteridge's Law of Headlines" (albeit not a headline here), after @ianbetteridge, or sometimes "Davis' Law")
Read 25 tweets
27 Mar
The whole "Prince William is world's sexiest bald man" says "Google study" thing.

I'm sure most people realise what's happened, but in case not, here is a brief explanation:

This is the headline on the version of the story that's been shared the most (from the Independent)...
That's quite a neat headline, as it makes it sound like the study is *by* Google, when obviously it isn't.

They back that up in the text with this note.

The study was 'using Google'.
You can also see above, The Independent cite that the report appeared in The Sun. That basically means they've cribbed the whole article from The Sun & put a small spin on it.

The Independent's tweet has been very heavily shared.
Read 18 tweets
15 Mar
With Thorntons closing all 61 stores, being able to generate demand online is hugely important.

As you can see from this chart of Google searches for their brand name (text search), basically over the last 18 months Hotel Chocolat have 'eaten them alive' online.
It's peak 'easter egg' season, so not a great time for this news to come out.

Thorntons rank #2 in Google organic search for 'easter eggs' in the UK but they're not particularly visible as competitor ads bump them down a fair way.
Bidding on 'head terms' like 'easter eggs' is not always a wise thing to do, but you'd have thought they'd at least make it into the shopping ads there which (even reloading & going incognito) are almost entirely Hotel Chocolat.
Read 14 tweets
1 Mar
SEMrush, the SEO tool, has filed to go public. Here's the S-1: sec.gov/Archives/edgar…

They spent $54 million on marketing last year, for revenue of $125 million.

(gross profit $95m, net loss $7m)
They state they have 67,000 customers. Divide $125 million profit by 67k and that would mean average $155 per customer per month spend.

(nb this ignores growth over the year, just total revenue divided by current customer numbers)
Their timeline states they passed 50,000 customers in 2019, meaning roughly 10-15k customers added across 2020.
Read 8 tweets

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