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Social Media Experts or Hammer Gurus? Part 2

22 Jul

In an earlier post, I discussed the continuing sensation of some communications folks appointing themselves “social media experts.” Once again if you are calling yourself this, I implore you to stop! You’re saying nothing!
 
Social media is a tool; you need to be an expert in the messages you’re crafting.

A good carpenter knows more than just the inner-workings of a hammer and is therefore more than a hammer guru.
 
There are hundreds of twitter users who list in their bio that they are social media experts, gurus, kings, queens, and mavens. Uggggg!
 
fail 
I’m not sure what credentials one needs to make this claim. Did they discover LinkedIn two days before the rest of the world? Do they have more time to spend on Facebook lately since their PR agency business has slowed down?
  
One of my local PR community’s favorite butt of many jokes is one such self-described “mavens.” My favorite part of this story is that this CEO joined Twitter only after hearing about it on Oprah this past spring. You can’t put lipstick on an outdated publicity model and call it a social media consultancy.
 
Here’s another gem. I recently started following on Twitter a marketing and PR agency that says it specializes in social media strategy. What happened next? You guessed it…I received a generic auto-DM saying “thanks for the follow.” I hope they are not charging their clients actual money for their social media expertise.
 
Don’t misunderstand – there are many true social media experts out there. The best of them do not need to call themselves experts; their clients and peers are doing that for them.

The Latest Cheap Trick in Media Marketing

7 Jul

 
I love the fact that Cheap Trick’s latest album, The Latest, is going to be available not only via download, CD, and Vinyl, but also on 8 Track.
 
Downloads are available now via iTunes and Amazon. For those of us who prefer to actually have a hard copy with artwork, we’ll have to wait until July 21 for the CD at major retailers. And for some of us who like to argue that high-grade vinyl records offer better quality sound than CDs (yeah, I’m one of those guys), LPs will also be out later this month.
 
But 8 Track?
 
It’s brilliant! What better way to grab media attention for the world’s greatest power pop band than to announce a new 8 Track release! As of today, Tuesday July 7, there are already hundreds of stories online and in print (source: MediaQ monitoring) and hundreds of tweets on Twitter. How many journalists, bloggers, and Twits would be writing about a new Cheap Trick album without the 8 Track gimmick?

Click on 8 Track to hear stream of songs from "The Latest"

Click on 8 Track to hear stream of songs from "The Latest"

This isn’t about 8 Track tapes, which no one is really going to buy other than as a conversation piece or collector’s item. This is about knowing your target audience and executing ideas that cut through the noise. Cheap Trick does retro-cool right and always has. The 8 Track gimmick should get even more attention for what is actually a great album. I have heard several tracks (via 2009 technology, not 1977 technology) and am pleased to report that the boys from Rockford are still on top of the world. Since departing the major labels (Epic in the 80s and Warner Brothers in the 90s), the band has taken back their creative control and has spent the past 10 years writing brilliant rock and pop songs.
 
Cheap Trick proves a point frequently discussed on this blog. Buzz is not established by which media channels or tools you use to get a message out. In this case, an interesting story is getting attention, as opposed to  bad content that is just being pushed via social media or traditional channels.
 
As a side note, let me take just a minute to discuss the retro tech mentioned above. For those of you too young to have really used 8 Tracks, let me clue you in. They were horrible. While the wide tape may have given us the idea that it was higher quality than a cassette, the truth was that the wide tape was actually divided up into 4 programs with 2 channels (left, right) for each (thus, 8 tracks). The programs ran simultaneously on the same length of tape. Frequently a song would be split into 2 programs. You would hear a fade out, then “Ka-chung” as the tape player automatically switched programs, and the second half of the song would fade in. Perhaps this 8 Track stunt will also remind us how fortunate we are to now live in an era of iPods.

Media Measurement: Focusing on What’s Being Said

5 Jun

 

This week’s PR Workbench post is by guest bloggers Brad Snyder and Maddie Forrester of Perception Metrics. Perception Metrics delivers data-driven media insight quickly and cost effectively to brand managers, public relations professionals, and their clients.

 


Looking at what’s being said, not just who is saying it (how many times)

When people talk about media analysis, they’re normally discussing results measurement – figuring out what impact they’ve have had and proving it to their clients.

But considering the amount of time and resources that go into creating a brand identity, there is surprisingly little listening done in advance, before brand books are signed, sealed and delivered. 

Imagine, for example, that you are at your local pub and you overhear people talking about your company and its competitors. Without a doubt, you’d be most interested in what was being said, not just who was doing the talking or how many times they mentioned each product or competitor. You might also notice their overall tone, of course, or how much of the conversation was focused on which company, but you (and your boss) probably want to know how, in this conversation, each brand is described.

The same principle should be applied to media analysis. So much of our industry focuses on “how good” the conversation is, overall, or “how much” of it there is. But media analysis can also delve into what, exactly, is being said. That can help you clarify errors, affirm and repeat positives, and share your perspective. You can also compare the ways that your company’s perception (what people think it is) is different from its projection (what you are saying it is)…and hopefully, you would use this information to make decisions about how your organization should act next.

When the conversation you’re “overhearing” is actually the sum total of newspapers, blogs, message boards, Twitter, and the TV – well, you have to boil it down quite a bit to understand what’s going on.

One way to do that is to look at which messages are unique to each company, and which are shared.  Check out this graph – and if it gives you flashbacks to middle school, I’m really sorry. It’s a Venn diagram that looks at the unique and shared positive messages in a media collection describing three retail clothing stores (names have been changed).
 

clip_image002 

You can see right away that the conversations are really quite different. In this conversation, “Heritage Apparel” was the least unique; it has the most generic of the brand identities.  But it also means that “Heritage Apparel’s” identity is similar to the overall competitive landscape.

On the other hand, “Retrofitters” owns the most unique messages. It has a fairly strong brand identity in this conversation. And some of its messages – it was the only one described as “cute,” for example – are really nice to own.

“New Vintage’s” image is different. People are using words like “inspired,” “famous” and “attractive” to describe it. It also is more often described as “favorite,” “popular” and “trendy” than Retrofitters.

 
Here’s another example – one with a more political application.  This Venn shows how different media groups describe controversial Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez.  Rather than comparing him to his competitors (seeing as how he’s president-for-life), it compares the conversations happening in different parts of the world. These are only the negative messages:

  clip_image003

 

The coverage we get can vary wildly, depending on the perspective of the publication. Hugo Chavez very much embodies this. The entire community agrees on the facts – the study was done in November of 2007 when Chavez advocated for a referendum to allow him to run for president indefinitely, froze diplomatic relations with Columbia, and accused the CIA of orchestrating a coup. 

The Venezuelan media focused on the events in the country.  They acknowledged “criticism,” the “conflict” between Venezuela and Columbia, and a “clash” between pro- and anti- Chavez protestors.  US media used significantly stronger language, with messages like “dictator,” fear” and “suffer.” The non-US International media was considerably more cordial, describing Chavez as “controversial” and saying he was going “too far,” “too fast.” 

When you look at what’s being said (rather than how much is being said) you can position your brand image in a way that is unique and relevant.  Join the discussion: how would you use this data? What would you do if you were each of the clothing retailers? How would you advise Hugo Chavez?

Bulldog Media Relations Summit 2009 – Prologue

13 May

 
Media Relations pro’s – are you heading to the Bulldog Media Relations conference in New York this weekend? Why not?
  
This year’s show has tremendous potential with keynote speakers such as news icon Dan Rather and popular anchor / consultant Dan Abrams. 
  mr09logo
Please check back here throughout the weekend and week as we’ll be posting updates, photos, Tweetup details, and commentary.
  
 What are you looking forward to seeing at this year’s show?

Newspapers: Trend or Term?

27 Apr

  

In an earlier posting, I opposed the current Public Relations industry panic that “the media is dying.” I maintain that the media is alive and well; it’s evolving. Those of us working in the PR world need to promote that fact that despite cutbacks and right-sizing, the media, including newspapers, is more important than ever.

 

One way to do this may be to update the definition of terms. Let’s start with the word newspaper.

 

Most people still see a newspaper as news printed on paper. I submit that even those media outlets that stopped printing and distributing news on paper in favor of an online-only model can still be called newspapers.

 

We’re already using the word publish with an online meaning. When I’m finished writing this piece, I will hit a button labeled “publish” so you can read it via this blog site. Not many years ago, the word “publish” meant physically producing and disseminating printed pages for public consumption. We’re already far beyond that definition in this digital age. We’ve updated these terms in our lexicon:

 

  • A file is no longer limited to something in a manila folder
  • To dial-in or dial-up does not require the use of a rotary phone
  • A press kit does not – and should not! – need to be a wasteful and environmentally unfriendly box of junk that PR folks send to journalists who throw them away
  • A record can be a compact disc, not only vinyl
  • An album is a collection of songs, not only on vinyl

 

Those last two are still hurdles for some people! Let’s all say it together….CDs are records…albums are collections of songs….

 

 
Here are a few others to think about. Is “The Office” a Television show? Of course it is, though millions of us do not watch it on a Television but via iTunes, Hulu, DVDs on a laptop, or on a monitor on an airplane.

  

Are companies like Best Buy or Toys R Us only retail stores, or are they suppliers of goods both digital and physical? I say the latter. I’m a huge Toys R Us customer in my nearly three years of fatherhood, yet I haven’t stepped into a brick & mortar Toys R Us location since I was a kid.

 

So why are we limiting the term newspaper to exclude digital editions? We need to stop hitting the panic button every time a favorite newspaper or magazine goes online-only and realize that the newspaper lives on. And in the digital world, that means lives on forever.

 

PRWeek Goes Monthly

15 Apr

 

PRWeek has just announced that that it will soon be a monthly magazine. This was part of a slew of announcements about revamps of the online edition, e-newsletter, and blogs.prweeklogo1

 

See the full announcement here:
 

http://www.prweekus.com/PRWeek-announces-weekly-online-edition/article/130669/

 
This move makes sense to me, especially combined with the online changes and additions. 

 
What are your thoughts on PRWeek and other PR industry publications? Are they still near the top of your reading stack? Or have you already seen most of the content online by the time it arrives? 

Social Media Experts or Hammer Gurus?

9 Apr

  

 

Self-described Social Media Experts beware!

 

If you call yourself a social media expert, the rest of us will soon see that you’re saying nothing.

 

 

Social media is just…media…channels…tools. It’s a means to deliver your message to your audience. This is true whether you’re a PR person for a coffee shop, a salesperson for an office supply chain, or a fund-raiser for a local charity.
 

Carpenters are carpenters, not Hammer Gurus. Cowboys are cowboys, not rope & fence kings. Drummers are drummers, not drumstick and cymbal experts. Sure, they know a lot about those tools of their trade, but tool expertise alone won’t make get them hired or help their client. The quality of the work they produce with those tools will.

  

Thanks to Albert Maruggi and Kevin Dugan for listening to my rant earlier this week on this topic! 

 

Is PR Recession-Proof? A farm boy asks…

26 Mar

For horse owners, spring means expanding your network of resources to hay suppliers, stables, and farmers who still have hay stocked up and are willing to part with it. Last Saturday, we were fortunate enough to find a farmer in Northern Illinois with plenty to sell. The guy’s son would even help load the truck.

Profit, the horse who sparked the conversation

Profit, the horse who sparked the conversation

  

As we were loading bails of hay, the kid asked me if I worked with horses for a living. “No,” I said, “just one day a week, I guess. On the other six days, I’m in public relations in Chicago.”
 
I had expected the typical questions like “What does that mean?” or “Do you know anyone famous?” Instead he asked, “Is public relations recession-proof?”

 

This shocked me. Why was that his first and only question about PR? He was thinking about career choices and the most important thing to him is an industry’s position in the current economic climate. The source of this thought could have been TV network and cable news. But wait, this was a high school guy and they don’t watch TV news. My conclusion is that on whatever social media sites this kid tapped in to, the recession is being discussed along with PS3 games.

 

I gave him my standard answer: “Is anything really recession-proof?” He answered, “Yeah, I guess not, except for certain aspects of the entertainment industry and the mob.” Okay, so this kid knows his Sopranos quotes too.
 

I told him “despite the recession, we’re doing all right. In fact, it’s going to be a great year for PR. More companies will need to use PR to get their messages to consumers. When they see the costs of PR and the results they get compared to advertising, it’s a no-brainer.”

 

He seemed to get it! He even asked more about the return on investment of PR versus traditional advertising! Maybe this kid will be interested in a PR career. Though he might want to consider following his Dad into the hay business…demand is high, prices are up 25% over last year, and no one is Tweeting about lay-offs.

 

 

 

Fundamental Change at Media Outlets

12 Mar

  

Here is a very interesting trend pointed out by the development team at MatchPoint:

 

 

PR pros should be aware of a fundamental change in the media. In the current economic debacle, fewer and fewer journalists are employed be a specific media outlet.
 
It appears that the media have responded to the current business conditions, in part, by outsourcing editorial functions. The overwhelming minority of bylined journalists in MatchPoint are staff journalists. Most content is now produced by freelancers and syndicators.
 
For example, an analysis of MatchPoint’s Benton Evening News content, circulation approximately 4,000, produced the following results during a recent sample month:
 

  • 301 bylined articles.
  • 171 unique bylined journalists
  • 30 journalists produced > 5 articles

 
However, the Benton Evening News maintains a staff of only 2!
 
“Contributors,” including both freelancers and syndicators, are rapidly becoming the new mainstream.

 

 

For more information on MatchPoint, visit: MatchPoint

 

Or check out MatchPoint’s Facebook page

 

 

Media Outreach via Twitter

2 Mar

 

In March 2008, the Dow was over 12,000 and just a handful of early-adapting journalists and PR folks were using Twitter on a regular basis. What a difference 12 months make! The growth of Twitter has created an amazing and somewhat frightening channel to PR pro’s to converse with the media.

 

I would like to hear your stories and comments about experiences connecting with journalists in recent months.

 

  

  • How has your media outreach via Twitter been received?

 

  • Any negative feedback from journalists?

 

  • Overall, has Tweeting journalists been effective for you?

 

  • What would help improve this method of engagement?

  

Please comment below or send your tales to me at jmonson@enr-corp.com

 

 

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