Wed, 10 June 2009 ![]() 1. Steve Rubel and his colleagues at Edelman have put together a white paper on the role of search engine visability in reputation management. The main contention is that increasingly, search engines will have a critical impact on how brands are perceived. It’s well worth the read, especially the information regarding the importance of benevolence online. 2. Guy Clapperton takes on Harvard in Twitter Hyped? It seems that Harvard’s research revealed that a huge majority of people have created a Twitter profile and never use it after day. Guy says that this is normal with new technologies, and predicts that Twitter will, indeed be pervasive. 3. It’s no secret that I’ve recently become fascinated with podcasts. So I was delighted to find Bryan Person’s The Daily Boo, a short podcast about online communications and media. This week he spoke to Donna Papacosta about the business of podcasting. She sees the use of podcasting on the rise among corporate clients who benefit from the long tail effect and the power of human voice. 4. I loved this post entitled Why I hate bloggers, not only because it’s a beautiful example of linkbait, but because Lisa Barone is just so wonderfully crabby. She writes, “A blog won’t make you any less boring, it will just emphasise the fact that you are.” Ouch! But the comments go on and on. 5. Doug Goldstein has written a funny post about why every marketer should take a journalism class. Humour aside, he’s right in that marketers should be prepared to dig a little deeper when thinking about what strategies and tactics should be employed. Comments[0] |
Sat, 6 June 2009 We had a capacity crowd come out this week to the Isle of Man Social Media Club’s Super Third Thursday get together. The focus was on eDemocracy and how the interactive web is changing politics and democracy. Simon Collister, who hails from Ramsey, was our speaker and he gave us a fascinating insight into how the participatory web is rapidly overcoming barriers which made full participatory democracy, as opposed to the representative democracy we have currently, more viable as a political system. Thirty-eight people attended (a record crowd!) and they had a lot of questions for Simon especially about how Obama’s Internet campaign delivered him to the White House. The need for more transparency in UK politics drew a lot of comments from the floor; not surprising in light of the recent expenses scandal. The Isle of Man Social Media Club, with the motto, ‘If you get it, share it’ aims to expand media literacy, share lessons learnt, encourage adoption of industry standards and promote ethical online practices. Thanks to Simon for taking the time to join us and share his insights. Thanks also to sponsor Charterhouse Group International who made the event possible. And thanks especially to everyone who came out. Comments[0] |
Thu, 4 June 2009 ![]() There seems to be a theme about 'giving it away' in the PR blogosphere this week. I guess it's a sign of the times, but what about those green shoots we keep hearing about? Either way, here's my top five blog posts from the past week. 1. Lloyd Gofton has a go about 'devaluing PR'. He says, "PR, as an industry, needs to wake up to a whole host of challenges, and the last thing we need is to be destroyed from the inside. Have we really been demoted to scrabbling around fighting each other for an ever decreasing pool of clients?" I hope not Lloyd. 2. Emily McDaid also says we shouldn't be giving our services away. She's recently had to pitch against some one whose price tag was zero. Don't worry Emily. Remember: no cost equals no value. This is not a sustainable strategy. Your client will be back before long with hat in hands. 3. Mitch Joel seems a bit more optimistic with his 'Six steps towards a new economy' post. He says that digitisation, new business models, nomads, customer care, contact and analytics will become key PR drivers as we work our way out of the recession. I agree that all these will play a role. But the single biggest change will be that the 'mass communication' dream will become a thing of the past. Recognition that each individual is part of community will be come clear, and this will impact everything we do. 4. The Bad Pitch Blog makes the top five again this week with Get the picture or get lost.
Kevin Dugan explains, "Visuals decrease our word count and increase our
effectiveness. And in a Web 2.0 society it's become cheaper and easier
to make our efforts über visual. The evolution of news and search is
making this visual leap essential." Comments[0] |


