Tue, 07 Jan 2003 14:00:16 GMT

A growing number of people are using RSS readers to read weblogs. In effect the reader brings the latest stories from any weblog you subscribe to into an e-mail type application where you can read them without having to browse from site to site!

PR Opinions has had a RSS feed for a couple of weeks and it has been working nicely. If you’d like to subscribe to the feed, point your newsreader at:
http://tmurphy.blogspot.com/rss/tmurphy.xml

Tue, 07 Jan 2003 13:49:40 GMT

Richard Bailey points to a new study from the Interactive Bureau London on the effectiveness of web sites of the top 100 public companies on the UK stock exchange.

The study found that while overall the web sites had improved over last year, twenty percent of the companies didn’t explain what they do on their front page and listen to this, nearly FIFTY percent do not identify a section on their web site for the media….. scary stuff…

Mon, 06 Jan 2003 15:27:40 GMT

PR Week has an interesting lead this week on what’s in store for 2003 – predictions from some industry luminaries.

Challenges for 2003 include better understanding clients’ pain, ethics and accountability, getting clients to pay for value, diversity, shrinking budgets, managing public scrutiny, working with alternative media, demonstrating PR’s deliverables, demonstrating value, ‘relevant’ media relations, strategic counsel and last but not least credibility and ethics.

There’s a lot more in the article itself. Have a read.

OK something completely unrelated. Marketers aren’t traditionally the most technically proficient of professions. However if someone warns you that you’ve published your confidential account login and password information on your website, it’s normally a good indication that something’s amiss.

According to a story in Wired, advertising agency Carmichael Lynch [BIG Flash alert] posted those details on their jobs page and although warned by a visitor to the site in June took no action until December. According to the firm there is no sign that anyone did try and use the password though if they had they would have had access to internal documents and client databases belonging to a number of clients including Porsche.

It’s a good reminder to us all that security is vitally important and while accidents happen it’s essential they’re addressed fast!

Fri, 03 Jan 2003 09:10:43 GMT

Rafat Ali has a very interesting article on why 2003 might end up being the year Weblogs get bought up.

He suggests that rather than even being bought, a small number of very very popular webloggers might be taken on as salaried employees of some of the larger publishing houses. He also suggests some possible link-ups in the piece.

If you aren’t already looking at weblogs that are relevant to your industry or market segment, now might be a good time!

Boing Boing one of the most popular link weblogs, recently published their visitor numbers [Excel spreadsheet] – and any publisher would be very proud of similar readership numbers.

According to the numbers, Boing Boing gets over 200,000 unique visitors a month…. not bad for a web page.

Fri, 03 Jan 2003 08:58:55 GMT

This morning I was reading Dave Winer’s Scripting News as I do most mornings, and he had a post on an opinion article written in the New York Times by James Ledbetter.

Ledbetter is the business editor of Time Europe but is better known as the editor of the Industry Standard, a now defunct magazine that covered (and promoted) the New Economy. Dave’s post recommends we read Ledbetter’s piece “to to be reminded how the business press excused themselves and still do now, for the abuse of trust of their readers during the dot-com boom.”

I thought that he was being a little harsh on Ledbetter, particularly since I really enjoyed the Standard. But when I read Ledbetter’s piece, I felt myself agreeing with Dave. Ledbetter’s not apologising for misleading people with poor editorial judgement, instead he’s pushing the blame around the table and the usual suspects get a good kicking namely; his competitors, bankers and of course PR people.

I think Ledbetter made a mistake writing this piece. If you have a few moments compare his op-ed with a piece written by Joyce Slaton on the media’s role in the dot.com bubble. Her piece is honest, interesting and insightful. Ledbetter should have just published a link to it. [Comments]