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Random Acts of Goodness

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009 by John Mallen

Among other things I am worn down by what MSNBC’s banner is calling the AIG Bonus Blame Game — the latest being that the execs at AIG were demanding the bonuses or else they would dump confidences about the company to the competitors.

Maybe others like me are worn down by the headlines, sound bites and the cable news people. I mean worn down!

Contrast these headlines with a story by one of the best bloggers out there, Danah Boyd  in her post yesterday called “random act of kindness.”

This guy gets up from his seat in first class to allow her companion to have the seat, so the couple could fly together. No gimmicks, no follow up… he just did it.

Isn’t that somewhat like what policy leaders probably expected from AIG and all those bankers? Something larger than self.  Maybe random acts of goodness — as in the public interest.

Will Social Media Reshape Books?

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009 by John Mallen

David Meerman Scott  raises a most interesting concept, asking whether the format of books in the future will be changed as a result of the online literacy.  David brings in Zak Nelson, a marketing and PR professional with five years of publishing experience.  

” ‘Why aren’t books more like websites? Or even magazines, for that matter? Or hell, like comic books?’  Zak sent me a diagram of what he’s thinking (click the image for an enlarged version).”

Is Zack onto something, David asks? Yes he is.  Look at how Tom Peters has used design in his books. Check out Re-imagine. Look at the social media news release.

But should Web-like, social-media like books be on paper?  Today I received an invitation from The Wall Street Journal Online for free PDA software so I can read the paper on my screen on the go.  Just recently in a blog post about the future of newspapers I observed that every subscriber to The New York Times could be sent a free Kindle for half what it costs to print and distribute the paper.

I think David and Zak have raised a great question. But I don’t think their question will be answered satisfactorily in on-paper printed word.  Problem is the on-screen printed word is like the elusive search for a better battery for electric cars — something we all want that hasn’t arrived.

Sunday, February 15th, 2009 by John Mallen

social-media-todayWhat does the sea change in the use of media mean for the future of media and communications to people in the market?  I found on Social Media Today  some comments worth paying attention to. 

 

The notes about media are from  just one of 10 categories in Richard Edelman’s blog summarizing his experience at Davos.  Here are the points (lifted directly).

  • Distribution is the new hot area (YouTube is now the #2 search vehicle); content, which was king, now is not.
  • There is expectation of free content, which may well mean more consumer-generated and aggregated material improved by democratization. Media companies must provide a “live” experience, allowing more continuous updates.
  • Subscription models, such as Thomson Reuters, only work because they are aiming at professionals with inelastic demand for high-grade material at their fingertips.
  • The display model for advertising is broken; the ad agencies need to find better ways to reach specific audiences through more targeted, measured advertising.

Richard concludes his post, saying he leaves Davos “convinced of the centrality of public relations to the rebuilding of confidence in companies and government.” Here PR appears to be equated with having credible messengers educating the masses. 

No argument here, being that our firm is a micro version of Edelman, “the leading independent global PR firm.” I also believe that in its larger context PR has an exciting role to play in energizing a new world of free, multi-media, two-way conversations that will replace the paid, push advertising model of the past. 

Meanwhile the points above are really worth giving some thought.

We've Got a Secret

Friday, February 13th, 2009 by John Mallen

david-plouffe1After eight years of Bush administration secrecy, it’s remarkable to read how an architect of  President Obama’s success in winning the election presents a public lecture at the National Press Club where the media is excluded.

Duh!

Well, take a look this fascinating story in today’s Washington Post by Dana Milbank: The Audacity of Audaciousness. “It takes a certain amount of nerve to have an event at the National Press Club and then ban the press from covering it,” he writes launching the tale of how Obama campaign David Plouffe, was booked for the press club speech,  sponsored by media group Politico and Georgetown University.

The Post points out that Plouffe went to Azerbaijan this past weekend to give a speech, “The Power of Democracy,” where –you got it — reporters were told to leave before he began speaking.

It gets even better. Reporter Milbank showed up at the Press Club wearing a sandwich board with the message  ”unPLOUFFEable.” He gave out notebooks and pens, asking attendees to take notes. The result? You can read most of what Plouff said.

If you go to the story, don’t miss the Washington Sketch on-line discussion between readers and Milbank. Entertaining and witty.

Photo by: antisocialtory

No News Hits Home

Friday, February 13th, 2009 by John Mallen

Taconic PressWith all that’s being written about the economy and the current struggle of mainstream media, the plight of what we’re looking at really hit home this week.  

Part of our business has long been to help clients find their way into articles in the media. During the past week, among many clients with stories to be placed in the media is Birchez Associates, an affordable home developer. They held a ground breaking ceremony attended by a host of community leaders from Rep. Maurice Hinchey (D-N.Y.) to our new, and first, county administrator Mike Hein. The event was well attended, covered by two local media reporters, a pre-event radio talk show and a post-event radio/print news interview on the Mid Hudson News network.  All good and more reports being developed.

During all this our inveterate media director Sandy Frinton fed back some sad news. A regional weekly and magazine publisher, the Taconic Press was rumored to be closing down. It did! A regional television network said it was no longer covering stories across the region. Word came down that one of our daily newspapers and a regional business journal (not the same ownership) are close to being shuttered.

For all the complaints any of us may have about the local-regional media, even worse is the prospect of having none!

How to drive business development for small business

Friday, January 30th, 2009 by John Mallen

How do you drive business development for your small business?

There are numerous sources of business ideas. Many are excellent and proven. I want to bring your attention on one tool we all use — but too often left to fend on its own — communications.  Call it advertising, promotion, public relations (PR) or anythiong else. But all of these are in the communications bucket. In small business (and often larger ones) communications is the empty seat at the leadership table. But it is a powerful success enabler.

“Okay,” you say, “let’s get out there and run some ads.” Let’s get a promotion going.” Not necessarily bad, not necessarily good either. What you need to start is a business strategy which is well-supported by a communications strategy. Let’s take it by the numbers.

First — be clear about your business strategy. If you have been moving along from one year to the next, stop. Take stock of where you stand, what you want to achieve and how you will get there. All this sets the foundation.

Second – market research. This can be as simple as listening well to customers or asking questions of customers and prospective and listening to their answers. Market research could be results of a highly sophisticated study conducted by your trade association. It could be as basic as having your people ask a similar set of questions of everyone they deal with for a period of time, and systematically analyzing what they say. Research means understanding the context of your market, the dynamics affecting behavoirs and the impressions shaping opinions about your firm or the future.

Third — explore how communications can work in the marketing environment to accelerate your organization’s stratgegy and its progress toward realizing your goals. Central to success here means stepping away from tendencey to type cast marketing communications, and in, “Let’s get out there and run some ads.” Ads to do what?   Knock on the door of your customers’ attention to get awareness, share of mind, or generate traffic. Understanding how communications can contgribute to your business strategy means setting communications goals and developing a strategy for communications — all in support of the business growth plan.

Fourth — do it. Create an affordable, executable plan of action. Using one communications tool effectively is far superior to using a set of tools that fail to achieve, because you cannot achieve the frequency needed, or they don’t reach the right people, or any of dozens of reasons these efforts so often fail.

The greatest cause of failure is the fixation on the tools that we personally understand and find appealing versus the tools needed to drive the strategy — if there is indeed any strategy at all.  These four steps can be extremely difficult to execute with any discipline, especially when you’re taken with the daily challenges of running your business. Being so close to your business does not provide the vantage you need to move effectively from step one to implementation. If you can, it would pay you to enlist the support of a professional or a small brain trust of advisors to help you set the course.

The most citical professional support initially is not the development of an ad or drafting of your press releases. These skills will make sense, but only once you have identified a strategic plan for communications. In many cases, it would be preferable to execuite simply so long as it is focused and sustainable. By this I mean having one well-targeted promotion, or driving awareness through one well-aimed direct marketing ad campaign.

Communications is one means of driving devbelopment for your small business. Following these steps will ensure that whatever communications you deploy drive success.

Context Communications

Sunday, January 18th, 2009 by John Mallen

 

                                                                                  

 This is no debate about policy. It’s one person’s indiviudal example of how context frames the thinking tsurrounds a course of action. In contrast with the current President, the president-elect frequently outlines context.Providing context is not necessarily rare, but in an era where brief is the new long — in communications — it’s good to consider how your going to provide context.  Whenever one has a responsibility to execute and in doing so affect others, there are two types of communications required. One, in the broadest sense, is purposeful. The other is context. Purposeful communications can be everything from marketing to instructions.

Whether the message is about a new product, a change in the organizational procedures. Purposeful communications is about what to do, how, why, when. In addition, it’s information aiming to affect perception, change attitudes. But context communications is different.

Context is the surrounding environment , background or settings, which determine, specify, or clarify the meaning of an event, as defined in the Wiktionary. 

I was struck by this just recently when President Bush addressed the nation for the last time. For me it was an unusual peek into the context surrounding some of his decisions. I found myself thinking I wish more of this had been done during the past eight years.  Not to say the President had never given reasons, but he was seldom invited us to reason togehter. 

Photo  by Michael “Mike” L. Baird

Something Old Something New

Friday, January 9th, 2009 by John Mallen

newsroom-by-fullcodepress3

Earlier in the day, one of the clients pounded the table. “Out! Push the message out! I want to get the message out. I want to get people behind this!”  Visions of Facebook, Twitter, and other social networking services danced in my head.

“We need ads! ” said the client.  Nothing in the county has a greater impact than does Ulster Publishing,  independent producers of  six weekly newspapers. Read that to mean the dominant Daily Freeman and it’s companions dailies, The Poughkeepsie Journal and Times Herald Record are not seen as driving opinion. 

“Let’s talk about on-line social networking,” I said. 
Later today, a link to a friend and colleague’s blog landed in my e-mauil in-box.  It’s all about setting up meetings with media people, include influential boggers. It’s by one Kelly, a senior account exec at Landis PR in San Francisco. Nice job. The piece has solid tactical points. I’m thinking of “borrowing” it for a series on PR basics.

Next comes an email from another friend and colleage in PRGN, our network of independent PR firms.  Jay Van Vechtan  emailed a compelling e-mail responding to Kelly’s post.

Says Jay: “In days gone by I loved them, but over the years the opportunities for booking a client on a locally produced TV talk, news or radio show has waned at best.  Locally produced morning talk programs have been replaced by syndicated shows.  Morning, noon and drive time news programs have been cut to the bare minimum, all but eliminating time for live, in-studio guests.  Newspapers are in a free fall, with staff cut backs and reduced circulation.  The magazine industry is floundering.  And so where does that leave us?”

Jay moves along with sound, practical suggestions for conducting a media tour in the new Millenium. He recommends outsourcing the work to a group that does satellite media tours, hitting mainly the second rung ADIs.

All the preceding is fine and good. But are those of us in professional communications hanging too long on mainstream media (MSM) and too little on  Web 2.0 social marketing? Sometimes I want to jump up and down waving red flags and say, “HEY it’s changed!”  Sure we have MSM on the one hand and social media with long-tail marketing on the other. 

Listen to Robert Scoble, one of the top bloggers (and representative of Microsoft) talking about social media back in 2007:   “When I say “social media” or “new media” I’m talking about Internet media that has the ability to interact with it in some way. IE, not a press release like over on PR Newswire, but something like what we did over on Channel 9 where you could say “Microsoft sucks” right underneath one of my videos.

“I don’t really care what you call this “new media” but you’ve got to admit that something different is happening here than happens on other media above.”

I’m reacting to messages from clients and colleages at both ends of the day. Yes I really like MSM; indeed grew up as a reporter for The Providence Journal-Bulletin. But Web 2.0 Internet is bringing a tsunami of creative distruction to MSM. Many of us in professional communications find ourselves working harder and harder to get any exposure we can in MSM outlets that are reacing fewer and fewer people with vehices that have less and less content.

Meanwhile Internet communications continues to get larger and larger, more and more focused, faster, slicker, more compelling and tunable than any other media. Individuals can talk back, even have a conversation with one another as well as news makers.  

With all the foregoing passion, I admit that as professional PR and comms resource too many are way under-engaged in social media. It’s not iinertia or blindness, not really. We’re all doing some. What we need is a full-blown process, spec development, and  execution that’s easily managed. Something easy tha all of us can use.

Photo with permission from Full Code Press

Deflecting a PR Crisis

Thursday, January 8th, 2009 by admin

I thank Sara Marchetti of Ogilvy PR for drawing attention to the excellent response to a online PR threat by Gary Vaynerchuk’s on his v-log.   Not only is his strategy sound, but he presents a terrific example of the best that comes from social networking and hints an a new role for those of us in PR and communications firms.

In the 24/7 information cycle of the Web, one cannot wait for their PR firm to draft a response and post it a day later. Things move too quickly. An emerging role for firms like the one I work with is and will increasingly be to support clients’ do-it-yourself communications and PR.