Take time to ask. Take time to get to know.

As a freelance writer I get pitched a lot. I don’t hit the delete
key unless it’s totally irrelevant. But I have to say there are several
people who do take the time to ask if whom they represent is relevant,
and they do their homework.

I had a pitch from a PR firm in the UK recently that really stood
out. He promised he wouldn’t flood my inbox, and offered an RSS feed as
an alternative –something I opted for.

On a macro scale, how do you get to know an organization, its
priorities, its strategic goals?

On Wednesday I was asked by a local firm
to speak to a group of incoming account managers about strategic
thinking and solutions selling. I used an example of how as
‘transparent’ as it may seem, a company’s web site is the last place
you’ll find that kind of useful information. A Google search would be a
hit or miss, unless you find a corporate blogger giving the inside
scoop. Nor would a site map reveal the inner working groups, the nodes
and the unofficial networks. Taking time to get to know this
“inner-net” means putting our digital smarts aside, and falling back on
our analog skills. I use the phrase “Think digital, act analog” (first
used by Guy Kawasaki, I believe) to illustrate the point.

A good article on this also appeared in Fortune magazine
last month (titled “The hidden workplace.”) “There’s the organization
chart,” it said. “And then there’s the way things really work.”

Bottom line: Take time to understand the analog networks. These power brokers, access points, nodes and human routers may not have a LinkedIn profile, but they sure make things happen!

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Is it live, or is it on ShootLive?

Liveearth
What technology would PR companies, the police, and the paparazzi want to get their hands on?

It’s delivery that basically sends raw images from a video camera direct to the consumer. It is a service from ShootLive,  news agency for the digital age based in Nottingham, UK. The ShootLive service was used in the coverage of David Beckham’s game in July.

Why does this change the game? Because of the need for speed. In journalism and in PR, or even in law enforcement, seconds make a difference. The scoop, the intervention of a criminal, the ability to relay instantaneous pictures of a tragedy such as an earthquake can impact lives.

Images from camera are streamed (as an XML feed) to a mobile phone in less than 60 seconds, the company says. What I like about all this is it doesn’t make the end-user jump through hoops to receive it. Images could arrive as a multi-media text alert.

What could this do for marketing? Apart from the obvious ones that ESPNs of this world will jump onto, and be able to monetize, marketers could get users to opt-in to premium content. Think: Olympics, stage acts such a Live Earth, and even regional ones. The McDonald’s and IBM’s could sponsor XML feeds . Down the line when the genie is out of the bottle, cell phone carriers will use the technology too. Already, AT&T has a similar service called VideoShare where subscribers could stream video with a camera phone to another phone –while talking! These are both low-end ($29.99 and $79.99) Samsung phones not some souped-up smart varieties.

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Good press, bad press about Second Life

Psst. Did you hear? Second Life is getting bad press. Ever since Businessweek magazine
did a cover story on SL last year, there has been nothing but good buzz
about the place. After all the IBM’s and Coca-Colas have all
established a presence there. But the question marks are beginning to
appear. (Note I didn’t say ‘cracks’).

WIRED is running a story (Lonely Planet: How Madison Avenue is wasting millions on a deserted Second Life“)
questioning MadAve’s rush to set up islands in a “metaverse,”
especially when it’s unmanned, feels lonely and way too cumbersome to
navigate.

Technology Review (subscription required) on the other hand has a very interesting analysis called Second earth –the possible mash-up between Google Earth and Second Life.

My take: It’s way too early to pass judgment on Second Life.
Critics are quick to use ROI thinking to evaluate the impact of a 3D
experience on business. For now the shine is off the rose. But we’ve
seen that happen before, haven’t we? Anyone remember Friendster?

Like it or not, the web will soon incorporate features of these 3D worlds. Trends such as geocoding, mobile
optimization, and our appetite for for on-demand information will create this world –with or without goofy avatars.

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Stories in PR and social media

Summing up a few interesting stories last week.

1. The walled garden of Times Select may soon open up to the rest of us who don’t want to part with $7.95 a month.

2. AT&T ‘censors’ Pearl Jam’s words. they didn’t want to to get Dixie Chicked, for supporting an anti-Bush band.

3. A company called Fatdoor has come up with an interesting way to use social networking to get to know the neighbors. It’s a mashup of public information, a wiki, maps etc. Good explanation here

4. A very cool idea from Edinburg, England. Using a camera phone and text messaging to detect art.

5. Taking story #3 to its logical conclusion, how about using a social network to get to know your dog’s owners? Technology Review magazine had a story about how your dog’s FaceBook-like page (called a PetWork, I kid you not!) could enhance your social life.

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Stop slamming Arizona!

Needle
While I was away on vacation, taking pictures of some amazing cities, celebrating their positive side, the Economist
magazine trashed my stomping ground and I am not a happy puppy. I am
particularly annoyed, since they conveniently ignored so many good
things that are happening here.

If you haven’t seen the Economist’s July 26th article on Arizona (“Into the Ashes”) go read it and come back.

Going by some letters in response to its editorial last Wednesday in the Republic, readers
were as critical. Two out of three letters criticized the editorial for
not facing reality. One, however was a letter from a couple who thought
the criticism was undeserved. They signed off as being “London by
birth, Arizona by choice.”

Why such a paucity of positive commentary? More pertinently, where
was our PR clout when this kind of ‘rubbish,’ as the Brits say, was in
the works? How does someone from a magazine like this get to slant an
article so bad, when some of the points raised are actually good: less
smog than LA, new schools emerging, the opportunities that Light Rail
will bring etc. They paint us as a “crime ridden mess” apparently
because of the Light Rail system construction , snowbirds who leave
their homes unattended, and clueless visitors.

That’s like saying London is the armpit of England because of the
overcrowded subway system, clueless tourists, constant terrorism
issues, and Crossrail construction –conveniently ignoring the amazing positive sides of this colorful, cosmopolitan city.

Why are positive stories hidden from view, tucked in the back of the paper —like this today, about the growing state economy? It’s time we started telling telling our own stories, if no one else will.

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Harry Potter’s social media impact on branding

Potterbook
Harry Potter is an extended tale of no, not just wizards and magic
but the wisdom of the crowds in action. But that story got buried in
the hoopla around the launch of Harry Potter & The Deathly Hallows last Saturday.

Very predictably, the traditional news media covered the event in
the same way they did, say, the iPhone. Too much attention to people
queuing up for the book, the parties, the ‘education’ component, but
very little about the phenomenon itself.

The fact is, the Harry Potter franchise just doesn’t belong to J.K. Rowling
anymore. The books may be in 200 countries and 63 languages, but the
Potter brand goes beyond that geographic reach. It’s been open-sourced
in more ways than you could imagine; the wisdom of the Potter crowds
has always ruled when it comes to creating their own message channels,
cranking out their own Potter-esqe stories etc. Despite the fact that
this is a book, and not a digital product, the fans are all over the
social media map. There is:
    * The Mugglecast podcast run by high school students, that has some 50,000 listeners a week, and features Elton John and Bono.
    * The Leaky Cauldron leaks news about the books and carries a disclosure that it is in “no way affiliated with J.K. Rowling.”
    * No shortage of Potter blogs, including one that suggests a Bollywood storyline for an Indian audience.
    * The Harry Potter Fiction store, that’s not managed by Scholastic, the book publisher; it’s also “unofficial.”
    * The Academy of Virtual Wizardry, at “Caledon Highlands” in you guessed it, Second Life!

I could go on…

So I wanted to track how the raving fans were behaving. I had a
haunch that there would be an equal outpouring of passion on Saturday
the 20th July around midnight not in front of the bookstores where the
TV crews were waiting in hoardes, but on Wikipedia. At 11.00 pm Pacific
Time the discussion (on the “comments” page of the Harry Potter Wikipedia showed
signs that things were heating up. The Wikipedians had been discussing
the value of locking down the Wiki, since everyone knew the book had
leaked and the plot was being discussed elsewhere.

“Just wait until the official release time. Then we can put
everything up in 5 minutes or so, considering the number of wikipedians
interested in this.”
said one editor at 11.03 pm. This was clearly a hard core editor, but also a big Potter fan. “Most people, me included, will be too busy reading the book on Saturday to check the article.”
Others like him (or her) were unhappy that some editors had moved to
freeze the pages until a week after the launch. Fan passion was
expressed in the form of outrage that some newspapers’ reviewers had
created spoilers by discussing the plot before the launch. Reading
through their discussion gives you a glimpse of not just how these
unpaid wikipedians work, but how fans operate late at night, doing a
thankless job for what? To them this isn’t JK’s book. This is theirs.

If only other brands let their customers work their magic this way!

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Newspapers, still a great place for brand “impression”

Yoghurtad_1 I often cover the daring, creative ways newspapers and print publications do to stay relevant. Usually it is about relevance to their core audience –readers.

But ever so often we see them create advertising environments that make you go wow! This is one of them. New York Magazine featured a double spread of two completely unrelated products, but designed (by their ad agency) to belong to a double spread, and stop a reader in his tracks.

There’s a lesson in this: Being relevant to the reader also means being intensely relevant to the advertiser, and it takes a great publisher to encourage layouts like this. Of course, the idea probably came from the agency, but an advertiser and an agency will always gravitate to a medium that allows some flexibility.

So as you could see in this ad, the key was to use two products that are right for the demographic –in this case pearls with the Yogurt. The product on the right is a Greek Yogurt, Fage.

MediaPost reports that there’s another ad involving a Tourneau watch, and the yogurt. I wonder if the advertiser on the left gets a better rate than Fage, since the yogurt company is essentially using the product on the left to make a point.

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Where SEO meets social media meets PR

Yesterday, IABC’s Phoenix chapter
put together a terrific meeting on something that’s on everyone’s
radar. I suspect the topic (“Using SEO & Other PR Tactics to
Communicate with Social Communities in a Web 2.0 World”) was
intentionally long and geeky to make a point. More on this later.

MarketWire
had pried open the controversial but hot topic of Search Engine
Optimization (SEO) and Social Media. Whenever these two buzz phrases
occur in one sentence, advertising agencies, media relations people and
marketers get a little hot around the collar. I know, because I used to
work for a SEO-meets marketing company. There are lots of myths and
concerns out there. Just a year ago SEO seemed like a lot of pixie dust
before things like Twitter and User generated Content showed up. “Social bookmarking” sounded like something Paris Hilton does when thumbing through National Inquirer.

Unfortunately, the world inside corporate marketing is still looking
at what’s unfolding before us as pixie dust 2.0. Look around you. The
world of marketing and PR is roughly divided into people who think “we
don’t have a budget for this crap” and those who go “could we upload
this sucker to YouTube?” So it’s about time we discuss Google Juice, and Digg, and the social media press release, and what in the world is Facebook up to, trying to upstage our beloved search engines.

Could people game the search engine, someone asked? Do “Diggs” mean
anything a few days after the story breaks? Was there some ‘white-hat’
way to get better rankings on search results? Everyone probably knew
the answer to that last one. Sure, there are black-hat methods of
sneaking past the algorithm, and there’s marketing.

You don’t need to know how this algorithm thing works, but if you
accept the logic behind it, then you gotta work on it. Good case in
point: Southwest Airlines.
Three years ago, they optimized a press release by editing it based on
search terms they had been tracking. They tracked the results and saw a
direct correlation to a spike in sales. They won an award for this. It’s a matter of crafting headlines and knowing where to drop in a hyperlink, and a meta tag.

Which brings me to the MarketWire topic. Google (or Yahoo) the words
“SEO PR social media” and see if IABC Phoenix is anywhere in sight. Now
Google (or Yahoo) the topic (Using SEO & Other PR Tactics to
Communicate with Social Communities in a Web 2.0 World) and see what
pops up at the top of your search results. Brilliant huh?

Or is it still pixie dust?

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Stop the presses! Newspaper turns to music marketing in Planet Earth launch.

Prince
With so much turmoil in newspapers today, it still comes as a shock that the The Daily Mail on Sunday in the UK gave away three million copies of Prince’s new album, Planet Earth.

What’s remarkable about this is that this is the “official release” of the album. Gives new meaning to the term ‘Media Release’ doesn’t it? More shocking: The album won’t go on sale in the UK! It will be launched in other parts of the world on July 24th, says the paper.

Prince has managed to annoy Sony BMG over this, but apart from his motives, it gives a new insight into how newspapers may be looking at marketing to stay relevant –and alive. A newspaper as a distribution mechanism for music? Brilliant. Think of the integrated online marketing possibilities.

A interesting note: The Mail didn’t just tip the CDs into the paper. They produced the copies themselves.

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