Well I’m coming to the end of a busy week. I managed to get my contribition to the Global PR Blog Week completed and it’s now online.
Normal services will be resumed on Monday, have a good weekend!
Well I’m coming to the end of a busy week. I managed to get my contribition to the Global PR Blog Week completed and it’s now online.
Normal services will be resumed on Monday, have a good weekend!
�It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness . . . it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair . . . in short, the period was so far like the present period .�
Charles Dickens, Tale of Two Cities
Dickens could have been thinking about the current state of Public Relations when he penned those lines nearly 150 years ago. Public Relations is an industry with schizophrenic tendencies. On the one hand, PR has enjoyed a prolonged period of prosperity both in terms of fiscal growth and its transition from the periphery to become a pivotal component of the marketing discipline. In short, PR has succeeded in obtaining greater influence, value and awareness. But that�s not the whole story.
Public Relations is still widely misunderstood. The popular perception of PR is driven by high profile �practitioners� whose professional conduct often bears no resemblance to the daily working lives of most PR professionals. PR is also faced with a range of challenges from the significant changes taking place in how people receive and use information. While the traditional media and PR tools continue to play an important role, practitioners are faced with new technologies and new audiences that require new thinking and some brave decisions.
Public Relations in 2004 is indeed, a tale of two professions.
For the full version, please visit Global PR Blog Week 1.0
You may have noticed there hasn’t been a whole lot of new content and thinking here this week. Well I’m on the road and time has been in short supply.
To be honest with all that’s going on over at the Global PR Blog Week, I’m not sure there’s much need or demand for anymore PR content this week!
Highlights of day three include:
Philip Young will be contributing a piece on PR Ethics this Friday. He is looking for practitioners to participate in his online survey. You can find it here.
Finally Jay Rosen who was interviewed by Steve Rubel as part of Global PR Blog Week on Monday, has been doing some thinking on PR.
He ponders whether PR people are beginning to forget about control and instead engage with their audiences.
“I’m not sure what to make of this. But with more and more people in PR talking about the need for transparency and genuine public interaction, and asking whether “spin” has seen its day, it is at least possible that a debate could break out– a split in the ranks on what is wise, responsible, effective and shrewd practice in a time of changing media platforms, vanishing knowledge monopolies, and shifting expectations. It would be natural for PR pros who blog to be out front on this.”
Personally I think the advent of the Internet and tools like e-mail and weblogs have effectively removed the illusion of control that many in our profession may have held.
PR firm Peppercom [Flash Warning!] have announced a new proprietary measurement tool for PR and it can also be used to measure sales and marketing campaigns according to MediaMap’s blog.
So two issues. First of all Peppercom’s site is a classic example of why Flash navigation is the spawn of Satan (and yes they are the latest addition to the Flash Hall of Shame).
Secondly they have no details about the measurement tool on their site….
PS: You have to love the clicking noise effects on the site.
In case you thought that the Global PR Blog Week was going to be a cosy love in, there’s actually some great debate to match the fantastic content.
Is that enough content for you?
Meanwhile, Jim Horton has raised some hackles with his post today that blogs maybe over blown:
“There is too much enthusiasm for what blogging can do. It is like discovering a new world and dreaming of what the land can be before one finds it has poisonous snakes and deadly spiders.”
Trudy Schuett takes Jim to task for his comments:
“The only thing I can’t get my head around from your post is why you think
all these bloggers need an editor. They’re not all for general public
consumption, if you didn’t know that. (There is no insult intended here; I
just figure maybe you don’t have the whole picture yet.) Even on the
professional level, who is to know if the editor knows any better than the
writer?”
Meanwhile Ross Mayfield, sitting in his greenhouse, throws a stone at the PR profession:
“As a CEO, I have grown to distrust outsourcing PR beyond coordination, especially when we can extend our reach by ourselves authentically and the strategy is core. Oursource your PR and you may find they jump ship to share your ideas with competitors the very next day. A discussion on transparency needs to be complimented by one on ethics. If both are not addressed, sunshine is the best disinfectant and disintermediation is inevitable.”
Sigh… do you know I just don’t have the energy to waste on that post….
Luckily some very able-minded PR bodies try to put Ross back on the straight and narrow. Thank goodness.
The week is producing some great content, kudos to everyone who has contributed so far and to the architects of the event, Trevor and Constantin.
MarketingSherpa has a piece on the differences between the technology trade press in Canada.
“Canadians tend to be nicer,” says Susan Verrecchia, President & Founder Verrecchia Group Communications, a technology PR and marketing firm based in Montreal. “It’s in their nature. American journalists can be curt if you catch them at a bad time.”
Free access times out on July 19, 2004 (you’ve seven days!)
Generalizations abound. Ahem.
Well as you will no doubt already know, Global PR Blog Week 1.0 has kicked off in great style with loads of fantastic PR content.
Never let it be said there isn’t good PR content online.
Today’s articles focus on PR and Participatory Journalism and they include:
Trevor Cook on “Re-thinking PR”
Ryan May on “Defining Participatory Journalism”
Steve Rubel interviews Jay Rosen on why “PR Needs to Stand for Real Transparency”
Robb Hecht on “The Great Global Conversation”
Richard Bailey thinks we should “Glance Backward to Move Forward”
Keep checking out the Global PR Blog Week 1.0 site as new content is added regularly through the day…
The torrent of blog related content recently has relegated my beloved RSS to the sidelines (for the moment).
However, Keith O’Brien over at PR Week has penned a fantastic article on RSS and PR.
While I’m not sure that RSS will solve overflowing inboxes, it can definetely help practitioners to monitor media sources (including blogs and competitors) and it does provide an innovative and cost-effective means of delivering news (and maybe creating conversations) to your audiences.
I think Keith’s closing paragraph is a great summary of not only the impact of RSS but of any new technology including blogs:
“From an end-user perspective, RSS fits unobtrusively into the mix of information services available. As with all advancements, public relations professionals need to stay abreast of changes, embrace them, and use them to their benefit. While the technology may be new, the story is not.”
We shouldn’t lose the run of ourselves. We should instead by pragmatic. Existing PR skills are more relevant today than ever before. New technologies should be trialled, but only those that directly contribute to your objectives should be embraced. There is no point doing something simply because it’s the new new thing. Trial it, measure it and if it works use it. If it doesn’t work then try it at a later date.
RSS may not be for everyone at this point but it works for my employer. Try it and you might find it’ll work for yours.
Footnote:
I should issue the disclaimer that Cape Clear does get a small mention in the PR Week article.
John Tawadros writes in MediaPost’s SeachInsider that traditional advertising agencies hate Search Engine Marketing (SEM).
He makes the following points:
1. Achieving profitability in managing clients’ paid search advertising is extremely difficult.
2. A shortage of skilled SEM practitioners.
3. Even “poaching” experts cannot produce superior results
4. SEM is so complex it requires singular focus.
5. SEM requires a commitment to research.
Of course John isn’t exactly an objective observer.
He’s a VP at a SEM firm, iProspect and while he makes good points, I don’t believe that SEM is completely the remit of “SEM experts”. There’s a lot that PR folks can do to better understand search engines and how to improve rankings, utilize tools like Google Adwords etc.
You can read his arguments in more detail here.
For the past six months I’ve been successfully using Qurb to reduce my spam headache and it’s worked really well.
In effect, Qurb scans your e-mail folders and your address book for e-mail addresses. Then any e-mail with a new e-mail address is automatically moved to the “Qurb” folder where you can view the e-mails later and approve any legitimate e-mails. Those e-mails are allowed to remain in your inbox from that point on. It does a great job of keeping your inbox clear.
Since I last installed Qurb, at the beginning of June, it has quaratined 18,000 e-mails, which I am sure you’ll agree is quite a few!
Unfortunately as with all things spam, time is the greatest enemy. Over the past few weeks I’ve seen an explosion in the volume of spam being sent using legitimate e-mail addresses and therefore bypassing Qurb into my inbox….
As I’ve said before, the only solution to spam is hunting down the perpetrators.