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Archive for May, 2006

Print Media Power?

Tuesday, May 30th, 2006 by John Mallen

Yahoo is THE No. 1 news source. Far more than any newspaper, magazine or TV program.

Yahoo’s popular news hub is the top online news destination, with 25.7 million unique U.S.visitors in April. CNN followed with 23.7 million visitors, and MSNBC lured 23.2 million, according to Nielsen/NetRatings. The AP site ranked 18th in the current events and global news category, with 6.1 million unique visitors in April; Topix ranked 29th with 2.7 million visitors, Nielsen said.

Should PR pay more attention to the online world?

[From "Just an Online Minute" by Media Post, Friday May 26, 2006 http://publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=43837]

Now is the Time

Monday, May 29th, 2006 by John Mallen

In his recent address to attendees at the Counselors Academy in Savannah, Josh Hallett (http://hyku.com/blog) echoed what many others have been saying: the investment in advertising is shifting to on-line dialog … what he called a "great customer experience."  I left the entire session with a strong sense that the communications foundation I had grown with is now shifting powerfully into symmetrical, two-way communications models heavily enabled by Internet blogs, RSS, podcasts and wikis. Of course other tactics, long employed by public relations, are and will continue to be helping maintain the dialog between institutions and their publics.

But the most powerful finding in Josh’s comment was not the above. The most powerful was that in the room of 50 seasoned PR people, only five were bloggers and only about half were using feedreaders. As Joseph Thornley, CEO of Thornley Fallis Group, observes in his blog (http://www.propr.ca/hallett/), "This level of use by senior practitioners suggests that blogging has a distance to travel before it will have penetrated into the mainstream of the public relations industry."   

Not only are the "tools" of communications changing, so too are the social patterns by which people are communicating. For professionals, there is no time to delay developing a facility with both.