In the UK, PR firm Weber Shandwick and Media Trust, an organization that helps charities communicate with the media more effectively, have launched a competition for UK charities with a turnover of less than �2 million. Charities are invited to submit entries with the three chosen charities being given three months worth of free PR support. A very worthwhile initiaitive and credit where it’s due.
Neville Hobson has a great post on “podcasting” and it’s potential for employee communications. In effect, “podcasting” is the delivery of speeches or talks or any audio content in mp3 format hosted on an Intranet or website. Staff can then download the mp3 file and listen to it on their desktop or mp3 player. It sounds like an idea with a lot of applications inside and outside the organization.
Richard Bailey explains the subtleties of press release writing.
Colin McKay posts on the snafu surrounding the Toronto Film Festival, the attending “celebrities” or lack of them and the newspaper correction. Interestingly, the New York Times picked up on the story..
PR blogging veteran Phil Gomes is giving a talk on PR and Blogging to the Silicon Valley chapter of the PRSA later this month.
Steve Rubel asks what happens when the mainstream media move 24/7, how will PR people cope?
Inc. magazine covers business blogging.
The New Zealand Herald has carried an article by Tim Marshall, president of the New Zealand Public Relations Institute, in response to a story the paper ran on how government PR spending was out of control…
“The figures in the article showed the number of people designated as public relations staff in Government departments and that the spending had increased by about 50 per cent over the past four years.
Is that out of control? How are we to judge? Are these Government PR people delivering value for money or not? How much should the Government be spending on PR? What are these PR people doing or trying to achieve?
Unfortunately, the article did not answer those questions or give evidence to support the allegation that extra PR resources are promoting the Government’s interests. The story took an apparently pre-determined view that increased PR spending was a bad thing.”