Sleepless in Heathrow

 

It all appeared to be going so well.  The “Delivering the New PR” conference was a success (based on the feedback from the attendees I talked to). 

I took a cab to Heathrow with Neville and Elizabeth in plenty of time for my flight. We dropped them off at Terminal 4, and as we were making our way to Terminal 1 a thunder storm hit the Heathrow area.  I assumed this would delay flights in and out – but I didn’t realize by how much. 

I was due to fly out on a BMI flight to Dublin at 19.10 however it quickly became apparent that it was delayed.  We were still sitting there at 22.30…. 

In that entire time there was only one BMI announcement and that was to inform us the flight had been delayed until 19.50.  The rest of the delay updates only came when passengers actually walked up to the BMI desk at the gate and asked for the latest information -  which BMI kindly shared – and luckily those passengers were kind enough to pass on the message. 

At 22.30 they announced that our flight was cancelled due to “operational” issues.  Chaos ensued with passengers flooding the desk, we all had to register there and then, go back out to the departure atrium, queue at the BMI ticket desk for over an hour.  There was then another half an hour waiting for a bus to take us to the hotel and then about three quarters of an hour checking into the hotel.  I finally go to my bed at around 01.50. 

A long day…. 

PS: The BMI staff I dealt with were pleasant and efficient, however my complaint centres on why there wasn’t clear and regular public communication regarding the status of the flight? In fairness to Aer Lingus – who had similar delays – they made a point of providing regular updates on the progress of all their delayed flights.  It’s better to say too much than too little particularly when people are stuck in an area that resembles something like a blitz shelter.

Some Feedback and Reader Social Responsibility

Before flying out to London for the New PR conference tomorrow morning, I attended the first All-Ireland corporate social responsibility event, which was jointly organized by BITC Ireland and BITC Northern Ireland.

It was an interesting event with a strong turn out and provided a great opportunity to catch up with a lot of people I hadn’t seen in a while.

One former colleague informed me she has discovered this blog. So ever the egotist I asked what she thought. Her response:

“You seem to rant an awful lot.”

I thought that summed it up nicely.

The first roundtable session of the day was hosted by RTE’s Mark Little who did a fairly good job. Of course one of the issues he came back to again and again was how do you address the widespread cynicism of corporate social responsibility.

I think it’s an important question to ask, however it got even more interesting when the session was opened to the floor.

The first question was directed to Little himself asking how did he see his corporate social responsibilities (or maybe “viewer social responsibilities”) given the increasing pressure on journalists to get the juicy story… in some cases ignoring the facts.

He dodged the question and bounced it to the panel. It’s an interesting perspective – and it’s a pity he wasn’t pushed on it.

One of the other really interesting discussions (not in the sessions unfortunately) was around the cost, budgeting and measurement of CSR (and community involvement).

It was interesting that there was divided opinion. Some believe you must tightly measure the success of your CSR efforts, while others believe that the more you focus on ROI, the more it moves from CSR to marketing….

London: Delivering the New PR

London: I arrived into Heathrow this evening (BMI) for the third "Delivering the New PR" event. Of course we had the usual Heathrow delays and hassles, which combined with the heat and a driver who drove me around in circles made for a stressfull trip.

Of course it's been worth it to catch up with Chris, Elizabeth, Neville, Philip and Nicky.  Unfortunately Stuart isn't arriving until the morning.

Earlier in the day I was at the first All-Ireland CSR conference.  They got a great turn out and it was fantastic to catch up with a lot of people I hadn't seen in a while, but I think there could have been more content and sessions.

Blogging on WordPress

Well after listening to Neville Hobson evangelizing the wonders of WordPress I decided I had better give it a try.

My daytime blog uses MoveableType on my own web server, but to be honest I am afraid to touch it in case it falls over.  I’m proud to say I installed it myself but every time I try and change something it all falls over.  I don’t have time to go diving back into the morass of templates and configurations. 

Instead I’m trying out the free hosted service from WordPress.com which has the drawback of offering limited configuration but the benefit of not requiring me to waste a lot of time.

Of course there’s a strong chance that it will die of neglect or suffer sporadic posting but then that’s probably no different to the majority of blogs 🙂

We’ll see how it works over time!

Update:

The site is now running WordPress on a dedicated server!

Speaking and Ranking…

I’m in full time parenting mode this weekend, so with my heir in bed, I’ve been doing a lot of blog catch up and it’s very very busy out there.

I’m looking forward to next week and the third and last planned event in the University of Sunderland’s “New PR” series. It’s taking place in London on May 12th and it’ll be great to catch up with Elizabeth, Stuart, Neville, Philip, Chris and of course Nicky and her team. You can find out more about the event here.

Another thing that’s been on my mind: the PubSub PR list.

It’s a little confusing, I don’t understand how the ranking works. [Now given that there is as much ego as altruism involved in this blogging lark, I imagine a lot of people take a sneaky peak from time to time]. Sometimes when I haven’t blogged in ages I move up, sometimes when I do blog I move down. I always knew I moved in mysterious ways but with the PubSub list….. I thought it would be interesting to look at the latest stories from the PubSub Top Ten on May 5th:

#1 – Kami Huyse: Discussion on PubSub’s Rankings!

#2 – Alan Weinkrantz: Discussion on PubSub Rankings!

#3 – San Antonio Byline Blog: The Rewards and Risks of Blogging [Collaborative Blog: Gregory Frieden, Christie Goodman, Kami Watson Huyse, Paige Ramsey-Palmer]

#4 – Steve Rubel: Blogger Spared from Lawsuit

#5 – Brian Oberkirch: BrainJams New Orleans

#6 – Richard Bailey: The rise of PR and Sponsorship

#7 – Andy Lark: Bloggers not rushing to blogs

#8 – New PR Wiki

#9 – Eric Eggertson: Damn Spammer Only Has to Pay $4 Million

#10 – B.L. Ochman: Benny Goes To Broadway and Beyond [Don’t ask :)]

So what does this detailed scientific analysis tell us? Absolutely nothing, but I’m sure we’ll keep peaking at it.


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PR Miscellany – May 5, 2006

Some reading and listening for the weekend…

  • As always For Immediate Release continues to be an informative and enjoyable PR podcast. The boys (Neville and Shel) are now on #134 (or is that 133? 🙂
  • The latest Edeleman Earshot has been released (#5)
  • Brian Oberkirch has released a podcast from a roundtable on PR 2.0 with Mike Manuel, Josh Hallett and David Parmet.
  • The Economist has published a really interesting story on New Media.
  • For the UK readers out there, Simon Collister has just completed a round-up of three UK PR magazines: PR Week (UK Edition obviously), PR Business and CorpComms.
  • As you may have seen elsewhere the BBC and Reuters have published a report on Trust in the Media (PDF) [Thanks to Neville Hobson]
  • Jeff Treem has a summary of the recent Makovsky 2006 State of Corporate Blogging Survey – Fortune 1000 companies aren’t inside the tent [Thanks to Niall Cook]
  • Trevor Cook has a link to three interesting college articles on Ethics in PR from three students in DePaul University
  • Yes, yes, yes… I’ve caved in on the tag rubbish… for the moment anyhow 🙂


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A book for all the Tech PRs…

I realize I’m coming to this quite late, but a friend of mine pointed me in the direction of HackOff earlier this week. [I notice BL Ochman had a post on it back in September last year.]

HackOff is a fictional novel about the apparent suicide of the CEO of a start-up that goes public during the bubble. It’s available in blog format, you can also download it in PDF format or buy it from Amazon.

Now I’m only a couple of chapters into it, but for anyone who was intimately involved in the tech business pre-, during and post- the Internet bubble, this is a fantastic read. It does a great job of recreating the mood and atmosphere of the time.

It’s worth the click…

hackoff.com


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