Friday, October 06, 2006

The Value of Social Media Sites

Knowledge @ Wharton has been looking at the value of services like MySpace..


Less than three years after emerging from nowhere, the hot social networking website MySpace is on pace to be worth a whopping $15 billion in just three more years. Or is it?

Is the much smaller Facebook, run by a 22-year-old, really worth the $900 million or more Yahoo is reported to have offered for it? Maybe. Or maybe this is Dot-Com Bubble, Part II, with MySpace, Facebook, YouTube and the other new Internet phenoms destined for oblivion when the fad fades.

"What makes this hard is that these companies seem to be so many years away from the kind of earnings that the valuation numbers are forecasting for them," says Andrew Metrick, finance professor at Wharton. The $15 billion MySpace figure "would imply that a lot more people will be on MySpace than are currently on it."


Perhaps the problem is that they are looking at an old fashioned marketing and advertising models.

Thinking more about the nexus of relationships that form round bloggers would be a better model. Think in terms of society rather than customers.


Skype TV

B2Day reveals:


The Skype founders are at it again. This time they are creating peer-to-peer software, dubbed the Venice Project, to stream TV shows over the Internet (see earlier post). Skype founder Janus Fris tells Om:

Like Skype, The Venice Project is simple - you download and you get free television. . . . we are inviting more people to our beta program. It is near television quality, and it needs about one megabit per second. We are building an ad-based system, and it is close to the television model. We will do revenue share with the content providers. With our system, people can be targeted with the right kind of ads. We are respecting the copyrights.

TVoIP is an interesting idea as a channel for communication.

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Flirt of buy

Nice way of putting it... Seth Godin points out

Amazon users visit to buy stuff, and MySpace users visit to flirt.

Last time I checked, flirting was a fairly unprofitable activity.

There's a long list of high-traffic sites (beginning with theglobe.com and extending to hotmail and many others) that couldn't monetize. They were stuck because the bait that got them the traffic had no room for a reasonable hook. You could use a TV like model and interrupt with irrelevant ads, but it doesn't work so well.

All a long, long way to say something simple:
Whatever your website, I think you want better traffic, not more traffic.


But.... If you want to flirt don't go to Amazon unless you want to buy roses to help with the flirting. The pay off is better flirting and that is at the core of monetising social media.

I can help you flirt better.

Benfits of blogging

Andy Lark has been looking at benefits of blogging and adds these elements:

Some of the other areas we also see benefits in are:
  1. Reduced cost of customer acquisition: customers are looking at the blog for education and insight reducing the requirement for hard materials and ongoing dialogue with sales engineers. In short, blogs reduce the sales cycle. We can measure this in hours of people time taken back.
  2. Reduced SEO costs: By participating in other blogs (especially those of pundits and analysts) we see more inbound traffic against key topic areas reducing our dependency on paid search to drive traffic. We've seen this go as high as 25%.
  3. Participation reduces research costs: Closed blog communities are a great source of insight for polling and thought taking. They reduce the cost of insight.

Go on... make your own show

BloomBox is a web application that makes it easy for PR people to create movie and video contnet based arround user generated content.

BloomBox was launched in September 2006. The first BloomBox-powered site is Islandoo. For Islandoo, BloomBox has been customised to create a user generated audition site where the community's collective wisdom is used to decide who gets picked.

Since it started marketing they have been surprised by the new uses that people have seen for the software. Sports clubs are considering using BloomBox to create a community of fans. Large professional services firms are considering using BloomBox as a knowledge management system. BloomBox would be great for these applications, and probably many more!

How students get thier own back

“Whoa… dude… Code of Hammurabi. I’ve seen this in … I’ve seen this in a British Museum.” If only these words came from someone goofing off in a high school class. Instead, they were uttered by a lecturer, John Hall, during a class he gave in September to more than 1,000 students taking a business course at the University of Florida.

Within weeks, highlights from the lecture were uploaded onto numerous Web sites, including Break.com, where the video is labeled “Stoned Professor,” and YouTube. And shortly after that, the university placed Hall on paid administrative leave.



Thanks Guys.

Four daily editorial deadlines at The Telegraph

The Telegraph is planning to use new editorial touchpoints to drive multi-media advertising.

Annelies van den Belt, new media director of the Telegraph Group, told the Association of Online Publishers' conference in London, that touchpoints - four daily editorial deadlines focusing on delivering news to different platforms and audiences developed as part of the Telegraph's integrated newsroom project - are key to new advertising plans.


Source Journalism.co.uk

Affiliate marketing worth £2 billion in UK

The UK Affiliate Marketing sector, which has more than tripled in size since 2004, has made huge strides since it was first used by marketers ten years ago says e-consultancy.

Online businesses increasingly see this as an invaluable way of generating extra sales by using networks of websites as a virtual sales force to broaden their reach.

More about affiliate marketing



200 years from coffee shop to cyberspace

The Times has plans to open up parts of its 200-year-old archive, Times Media's digital publisher Zach Leonard told the Association of Online Publishers (AOP) conference, in London, yesterday.

Mr Leonard said the Times was looking at ways to make use of the newspaper's archive and turn it into a revenue steam.

He later told Journalism.co.uk that Timesonline would first look to experiment with subscription-based offerings to the business community before turning its attention to the consumer market.

Evaluation conference

So, Evaluation is a PR thing... Don't you believe it.

The UK Evaluation Society and the European Evaluation Society are collaborating for the first time on the organisation of a major international conference to be held in London on 4-6 October 2006.

The conference invites evaluators, commissioners of evaluation and users to reconsider the role of evaluation in democracy, what it contributes to social and public policy and how it reflects and shapes cultures and institutions. The conference is expected to be the largest evaluation conference ever held in Europe and has already attracted widespread interest from around the world.

Ring tones are to pirate what storks are to frogs

"The ringtone business in the UK has stalled and is now in decline. You can put it down to price, piracy and the Crazy Frog effect," said Rob Wells, director of the new media division at Universal Music UK, home of artists including Eminem and U2.

Guardian report.

Scream marketing gets one in eye

Within the web advertising world, interruptive formats, including pop-ups, dropped by 9% from a year ago and are now worth only 0.7% of all online advertising spending, reports the Guardian.

Guy Phillipson, the IAB's chief executive, said advertisers were realising that more tailored campaigns were the way forward and were moving away from formats such as pop-ups that mirrored the old-fashioned interruptive nature of TV and radio advertising.


Well... what a shock!


Or, take your tank off my screen.


This is good news for Public Relations when it seeks to engage with online consituents. Oh yes and were did the money for pop-ups go? Is this a budget that PR practitioners picked up?

Online advertsing still on the up

The Guardian says Online advertising spending soared more than 40% to just shy of £1bn in the first half of this year, putting it on track to overtake press advertising by the end of 2006, according to research by the online marketing trade body the Internet Advertising Bureau (IAB). The figures echo reports that indicate the online sector is shrugging off a tough overall advertising market, which has hit ITV and larger radio stations in recent months.

Expats get own web site

The Guardian has launched a website, GuardianAbroad.co.uk, aimed at expatriates.

The site will mix stories with practical information about living abroad and is linked with Guardian Weekly, the international weekly print edition of the Guardian.

Publicis new executive chairman

Olivier Fleurot, the former chief executive of the Financial Times Group, has joined ad agency Publicis as executive chairman.

With a shareholding in Feud Communications to entertain the Board with too.

Gamers rock round the world

This attracted my attention from NMK.

This is a form of Second Life but in a more controlled environment. It is a channel for communication which is very 'sticky'. Gamers spend hours in this space and is an opportunity for engaging audiences.


With MMORPGs (massively mulltiplayer online role playing games) rapidly gaining traction in the media world, will we soon be talking about the latest "virtual" reality shows instead of Big Brother?

In turn, this event will ask if UK creative suppliers, agencies and brands are ready to grasp emerging opportunities in this new media space.

World of Warcraft is one of the most played games in North America, and the most played American MMORPG, with a total of over 6 million customers worldwide. As of the first half of 2005, Lineage II counted over 2.25 million subscribers worldwide, with servers in Japan, China, North America, and lastly, Europe. The free Korean MapleStory features purchasable game "enhancements" and claims to have more than 30 million players in all of its many versions, with the majority of them from East Asia.

Powerpoint for the Social Media set

Niall Cook tells us he has been playing with SlideShare after reading Ross Mayfield's comments. Think YouTube but with PowerPoint presentations rather than videos (most PPTs are arguably more amateur).

"For corporate bloggers like me, it promises to be a great tool for embedding presentations into blog posts."

Google mystery

I noted this in my RSS reader from Read/Write web. And the page has been taken down too:

"I've been tipped off about some mysterious Google screenshots - including what appears to be a mock-up for a Google Web Office product, called Google RS. The screenshots were at this location, but have since been taken down. Luckily I saved them just before that happened ;-) Here they are:


GoogleRSMockup.png


NewHomepageMockup.png.jpg


GoogleHomepageMockup.png


GooglesearchMockup.png


GooglesearchMockup2.png

What do these screenshots mean? Perhaps just the noodling of a Google freelance designer. But that Google RS one seems significant. The WebThoughts blog was the first to post about this and his comments about Google RS are great:

"So, it seems as if Google will incorporate Gmail, Calendar, PicasaWeb, Blogger, Writely, Spreadsheet and Notebook to this new service.

I guess that this also includes GDrive (leaked as “Platypus”), and a combined web-interface. I guess that Writely and PicasaWeb will get different user interfaces, Writely will be orientated on Spreadsheets (which indeed looks better IMO).

Another part of the deal could be Google Reader, which has recently been updated to the unified Google interface."

More on this as it develops..."

What is this blog thing anyway?

Philip Young has an interesting post.

Like a few others, I have been trying to work out what a blog is. Specifically, is Mediations a publication that is on general release and should be regarded in the same way as a newspaper, magazine or book? Or is it a place over which I have some control and where I can expect some personal rights? My feeling is that very few bloggers who I read have resolved this dilemma.

I have a thought that may help.

If one considers blogging as a social media, we can think of the channel for communication as facilitator for use by groups of people who form the nexus of a number of relationships with the blogger at its core. If you like, the community that is connected through the blogger is a small hamlet. which has a tight knit community but which is part of a wider community (parish?) and thence to the breadth and depth of the network offering a connectivity, a penumbra of links. Such a hamlet is to an extent dependant on the channel but can use other channels (Usenet, email, phone etc) to maintain its existence.

Thus a blogger is the nexus surrounded by close and progressively remoter connections.

The nexus forms when its Hamlet has values in common and at its core these values (interests, ideas, passions) are very akin.

Thus to a definition of a blogger being the nexus of values at the core of a community of other people (who will be, predominantly) connected through blogging channels.

Where there is commonality of values across a wide range of individuals, they might be considered to be a public, with common values they share passionately (e.g. the notion of professional public relations). Thus, from time to time they coalesce, because they have common cause (many shared values). Such a coalition can, and probably would be, within the 'hamlet' which is the nexus around the blogger.

This has consequences for Public Relations.

It means that in thinking about building relationships, the practitioner will be addressing a wide number of individuals sharing values with other individuals. Public Relations is therefore about values that can be shared with individuals each of whom have, to an extent the same or similar values.

Endorsing values, sharing values and empathetically adding values is the means by which the practitioner can engage with bloggers and, equally how bloggers can engage with organisations.

This could be an explanation the viral effect of some notions. It is more than word of mouth, it is the sharing of values. Some, as we know can be very effective because they can be driven by emotional values. Shared emotion is very powerful indeed.

Of course, such an explanation may also help us understand why YouTube, and Flicker and del.icio.us are important because they help explicate values.

All good Relationship Value Model stuff.

Better Google serach for the blind

This is an upgrade from Goole for easier searching for the visually impaired.

Major communication channel upgrade

Today, the Google Groups team launched a new beta version, available to anyone at groups-beta.google.com. It may have been awhile since you thought of Groups as cool or sexy — if you ever did — but I couldn’t have been more excited to work on the team responsible for making the current Google Groups better.

Google Groups is the old Usenet rendered as web pages.

In many subjects it competes with Blogs for comment, criticism and content.

It is one of the really big online channels for communication and this has potential. It is quite MySpace in its way.

Google haf vays off making you tell zee truth

Jim Horton was really on the ball with this one. He posts:

No doubt you read this story in the last day or so about Google's CEO predicting a way on the internet for anyone to check the accuracy of a politician's statements. To some degree, that exists, but one has to dig. Schmidt is predicting in five years there will be an easy way for any citizen to do it and for a service like Google to render a probability of truthfulness.

What he failed to say is that similar truth-telling approaches will be applied to companies as well, such as this blog posting comparing the cost of car services for two chief executives in New York. Once facts are available somewhere, they are potentially available everywhere on the internet. It's a matter of building search and database functions.
monitoring, searching and fact checking is a habit. For the PR industry its time to hone those skills and for 'creatives', stretching the truth has a five year half life but even better we will get rid of the marketing speak garbage such as 'XXX company leader in...'.

Hooray!

Why we need Ajax

Now this is going to be difficult. Its about Ajax an approach to software development and what is comming up.

In the tech world Ajax its cool.

To PR practitioners its about being able to use information from one source and mix it with another source as an understandable page of information.

Look boss - no hands.

The process allows data to interact without you doing anything. It allows you to look at data from different perspectives. Er... should this photo be top right or bottom left and which title are we going to use for the MD.. is he a CEO today?

With XPRL (of course I expect that you are already demanding that any data coming into your company or agency is compliant) you can get Ajax software people to knock up all sorts of gizmo's really fast and really cheap (but you need XPRL to make it REALLY cheap).

One of the reasons all this is cool is at Read/Write today.

They comment on the Ektron and SitePoint survey of 5,000 web developers in a report entitled The State of Web Development 2006/2007.


One thing to note is that most development is XML based (blogs, RSS, wikis etc all depend heavily on XML standards) . The other thing to note is the sort of stuff that developers think are critical this year.

  • Real-time visual 3D view and navigation of a site
  • more standards compliance, responsible use of technologies and semantics
  • portable information progress
  • Paradigm shift: you will not search the Web for information. You will define what you want, and the Web will collect it for you.
  • Voice interactivity/navigation
  • "...total immersion. Cell phones, PDAs, laptops, PCs, TVs – so many different ways exist to access the Web and more are added every day. The Web is going to become –if it hasn’t already – the hub on which the world spins."
  • "Integration of Internet technologies into everyday life that does not involve a desktop or even a mobile/cell/PDA"





PR's looking in wrong direction

'The speed of technological change' is a phrase frequently used in the media. It creates an image of a fast-paced world in which the advancement of gadgets is relentless. But the man on the street, it seems, is being left behind.

Sounds like Director General of my acquaintance. Actually it comes from a certain Haymarket publication hiding behind passwords that i have not got time to fiddle with.

Of course, this writer is wrong. He is just looking in the wrong direction. He can't see that technology is not just about a PC in the bedroom.

This stuff is not about Q: 'do you know about blogging?' ..... A: 'No but I have a few web sites I go to - an sometimes I comment'... You don't have to call it a blog to be able to use it.

You don't have to call it near field communication - you can call it an Oyster card or a season ticket.

The £5000 people spend each year on gadgets is of no consequence? Best of Stuff, claims that 30% of Brits own up to 15 gadgets, with mobile phones voted as 'top gadget' by 26% of respondents.

More than one million Freeview digital TV boxes or televisions with built-in digital tuners are being sold every three months as Britons prepare for the digital switchover, industry regulator Ofcom said on Wednesday.

The use of things like Oyster cards to get into football matches, the uptake of digital TV (zero to over 50% in less than a year) and all those things have passed this contributor by.

So much for the platforms but what then of football podcasts and blogs, YouTube look alike products and BeBo being the fastest growing searched for brand this year.....

The man in the street, far from being left behind is buying beers with his cell phone.

Its the PR industry that is being left behind.

Podcasting football - wshat opportunities

The second Connacht podcast is here! Rob Murphy talks with Connacht Coach Michael Bradley & captain John Fogarty about the game against Leinster and the up-coming clash with Ulster in Galway next Friday night.

He has provided a full podcast for the supporters club of his interviews with the Connacht Coach and Captain.

Podcasting is popular in football but the key here is the range of outlets that have been created.

Here are some used and suggestions for further distribution:

Club site
Local papers, radio (yes why not?) and TV sites
Email distribution
Club blog
Fan blogs
Local Pub/club/sports shop sites
iTunes etc
CD's

The list goes on... all in the name of creating communities

When you get cut off

Seth Godin has an object lesson in managing an issue.

When web sites don't work, its your organisation that is cut off from the world and not the world cut off from you. The world goes somewhere else.

This then is an issue for people who are responsible for relationships - its a PR issue.

Back to Seth:

It's easy to riff and agitate and brainstorm about the marketing message, about authenticity, about treating people the way you want to be treated... but if your building burns down, it doesn't really matter so much.

Amazon's shopping cart has been broken, off and on, for days now. I can't find a status blog for them, so it might just be me and a few colleagues, or it might be everyone in the world.

That's like every single Walmart in the country unable to open their doors because the locks are jammed. Suddenly, having good locksmiths on staff is really important.

As the bar keeps getting raised for what people expect from an online experience, the collection of things that you MUST get right keeps going up. It's expensive, but so is rent. It's part of the deal.

A million visitors every month

MAYO Communications, a Los Angeles public relations and marketing agency is celebrating its first anniversary of a prototype website that offers free publicity tips for marketing communications. www.MayoPR.com. It

MAYO evolved from a high tech public relations firm to servicing entertainment publicity clients and nonprofit organizations. MayoPR.com, which was launched a year ago this month now receives an average of 1.230 million visitors a month according the Urchin Statistics, which tracks the website.


This is an example of how one can build a presence on-line to attract people. It PR!

If its mobile its (still) news

Tech Digest has caught up with Leverwealth:

It's not news that online social networking sites are going mobile. MySpace took its first steps into mobile earlier this year in the US (with mobile operator Helio).

But talk seems to be intensifying, as the big Web 2.0 sites realise that mobile will be an important part of their future development.

Bebo plans to launch its own mobile service next year, possibly in partnership with O2.

A call for a 'press listing' of Social Spaces

Introducing Weblo, a new virtual world where the networking is more financial than social.

Members can buy and sell property and virtual domain names, as well as become the online publicity manager for a celebrity of their choice. All this based on real-world assets too, from buildings to celebs, while the domain names are the sames as ones owned out on the 'real' Web.


It is said to be doing well. But here is yet another communication channel to watch. Its all about which niche publics want to use it. In PR we now need the equivalent of a Media list to keep track of all these emerging channels for conversations.

Shropshire Star football blog

ShropshireStar.com is joining the fun with the launch of our new Shrewsbury Town fan’s blog.

This is another newspaper using blogs as a marketing tool as much as a communication and social group building offeringbr


Their Shrewsbury Town blogger is fan David Craig, who will be sharing his thoughts on the comings and goings and the ups and downs at his favourite club.

Check out his blog in their Community section and see whether the Shrews gave him a happy birthday last weekend.

Political bloggers

By Tom Burgis at the FT gives a run down of the blogs that are providing excitement in Tory Party Conference week.

Big blog boris is on the list and is a VERY human voice.

As the Conservatives seek to recast themselves as a modern party, au fait with iPods and fretting over carbon footprints, Tories have eagerly been following their leader into the blogosphere - and the blue blogs have been abuzz with gossip and vim this week from the party’s conference in Bournemouth

Your job explianing the stuff

Nielsen//NetRatings has released a survey that shows the latest internet trends and technologies are still a mystery to many UK consumers, reports e-consultancy.


This means PR people have a role to play in educating the public to help just as the Sun newspaper is doing (and very, very well).

The report shows 52% of British web users believe online and digital technologies make their life easier, but a similar percentage say they find them difficult to follow.

The least-heard-of terms include VOD (75%), Wikis (70%), and IPTV and Really Simple Syndication (both 69%), while 67% aren’t aware of Web 2.0. One in seven also know of the iPod but don’t know what one is.

While many of these technologies aren’t especially visible, the results suggest the industry could be failing to adequately educate internet users about new developments.

Readers flock to newspapers

Wired News reportes that:

The average number of monthly visitors to U.S. newspaper websites rose by nearly a third in the first half of 2006, a study released on Wednesday said, though print readership at some larger papers fell…

The average number of unique visitors to online newspaper sites in the first half was more than 55.5 million a month, the study said. That compares with 42.2 million a year earlier….

The Washington Post’s website increased its audience reach among readers aged 25 to 34 by more than 60 percent…

The number of page views at newspaper sites rose by about 52 percent in the first half…

Of course, it is content online that is making waves.

So its silly for newspapers to put barriers to entry as in Belgium.

As a practitioner, of course, you need to be sure that any story run by a publications will be available in print AND online.

But we all know that don't we?
Kevin Anderson is reporting on the AOL meeting.

His current contribution is great and reports on contributions from:

  • Tom Bureau, CNET Networks UK
  • Adriana Cronin-Lukas, Big Blog Company
  • Lloyd Shepherd, Yahoo!

From which I took these thoughts, which I like:


This is not about technology but a developing culture. This about creating content and distributing it like never before. The one trend driving this on all sorts of fronts. The consumer is no more. The monolithic is no more. People are contributing. Does this technology allow people to do what they could not do before?

In the early days, lots of people see the internete as another channel. TV, print, radio and internet are just seen as another distribution channel. But the internet is a sea for the other channels. It is creating leaks from these other channels. We all swim in the same pool. The internet is not a one way channel.

The internet is a network. Users are rerouting around the gatekeepers.

It's important to think about who you serve. There is only a small sliver of groups who will contribute, but they are very important. Try to focus on the top third of level of passion/expertise and numbers. Do not try to reach the 'true freaks' but with 'avid contributors' with a very deep way.

Transforming a newspaper into a multimedia house

Kevin Anderson reports on the way Ulrik Haagerup has transformed his traditional newspapers.

This was the second time in a year that I've heard Ulrik speak, and it's a real treat. I first heard him talk at an IFRA convergence workshop last summer. His ideas are compelling, but his new media leadership is some of the best in the world. He clearly communicates a plan of action for media organisations but he also has a management framework that helps organisations help staff through the change.


They now have a multimedia newsroom. They don't have newspaper reporters or radio reporters. They have reporters. They create story for all media, but not all stories are created for all media. He broke it down this way as media and their strengths:
TV- feelings
Radio- here and now
Web- searchable and depth
Mobile- everywhere
Traffic paper- find time
Weekly- to everyone
Daily- stops time


We are seeing this in the changes at the FT and Daily Telegraph. The item makes interesting reading.

Blogging ROI

Kent Newsome Makes some excellent point in the debate about blogging ROI. I like this comment:


This never ending effort to treat blogging as some new age business plan continues to read to me like someone furiously trying to stuff a round peg into a square hole. But sometimes you take the conversation where and as you find it, so let's take a look.

Publicis to take majority stake in Freud

By FT reporters Tim Burt in New York and Gary Silverman in London

Published: June 17 2005 03:00 | Last updated: June 17 2005 03:00

Publicis, the French marketing services group, is to take majority control of Freud Communications of the UK in a deal valuing the privately-owned public relations business at about €70m-€80m ($85m-$97m).

Video in Social space needs contextual relationship

Forrester Research has just released a comprehensive study examining online video consumption and the effectiveness of online video advertising. For those of us trying to figure out how online video advertising will work, this is a very valuable report (see BeetTV for more info)

Senior Analyst Brian Haven speaks with Beet.TV from his Cambridge, Massachusetts office. His take on the nascent online video advertising space is both optimistic and harsh. He writes that video ads seen on clips as "pre-roll" don't yet resonate with consumers: they don't notice the ads, don't interact with them and are fairly negative about ads that interfere with their viewing enjoyment. He says that 82 percent of consumers say that ads within a video clip are "annoying."

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Easiest creation of a television channel in history

Ian Douglass at the Telegraph wants to point you towards a few things. The first is the easiest creation of a television channel in history. Terry Teachout, drama critic at the Wall St Journal, was dismayed at the lack of arts coverage on television so he scoured YouTube.com for things he liked and linked to them from his blog. The result, he argues, is a new arts-based on-demand channel (he calls it ArtsTube) that includes film of Picasso at work, Elvis Presley performing Blue Suede Shoes and Willhelm Furtwängler conducting Die Meistersinger in a hall full of swastika banners.

Instant publication of press releases - anybody?

David Meerman has an interesting post about Yesterday in the 'press release' distribution business.

He sums up with some advice that I add below.

For the nonse, this is OK but I just wonder what the business model is for the future.

Yesterday, talking to Peter Wilson, we pondered on how easy it would be for a distribution agency/publishing house to render 'press releases' ready for page and ready for print by using XPRL. Of course it is dead easy, would cut out a load of journalist's time and, from reliable sources, would be an instant pass straight through the system.

The whole business is designed to make it easy.

David's points are as follows:


The important things to consider before you send a release through any service are:
1. What reach does the service have into the ways that buyers search for news such as Google News, Yahoo News, vertical portals and online news sites?
2. What reach does the service have into the media that you want to target?
3. What value added social media tools such as tagging via Technorati, DIGG, and del.icio.us does the service provide?

Compare the various services and the pricing levels and choose accordingly. "We've always sent releases through XYZ wire" is not a good reason to continue to use that service.

Viewing Smoke and Mirrors from back stage

Is it enough for us to simply ‘accept’ that practitioners do not get involved in formative and evaluative research (a sort of ‘research-phobia’) because of lack of time and its prohibitive costs? Asks Toni Muzi Falconi.


For researches and academics, these are only outright excuses as low and even no-cost evaluation methods are widely available. Instead they cite practitioner lack of interest, commitment and knowledge, as the real underlying reason….
Of course this is not sufficient for anyone interested in governed change! As change happens anyway, whether we like it or not, we should try to at least govern that change which mostly affects the dynamics of our profession!

And this is where Jim Macnamara the highly reputed senior Australian professional, academic and researcher- is in the final stages of refining an articulated and stimulating paper, for the moment entitled ‘the fork in the road’......

This is both a 'must read' and an insight into where smoke and mirrors are viewed from back stage.

Blog but don't Libel

Net neutrality - its important

Dear Colin. Can you add this to the agenda for urgent action on the Internet front:

In the New York Times of September 27 Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, advocates “Net neutrality,” or limiting Internet service providers’ control over information.

[thanx to Gerrit Visser for the heads up]

Q. Is your view that the anti-Net neutrality infrastructure actually threatens political democracy? Does it go beyond just the technical structure of the Internet?

A. Net neutrality is one of those principles, social principles, certainly now much more than a technical principle, which is very fundamental. When you break it, then it really depends how far you let things go. But certainly I think that the neutrality of the Net is a medium essential for democracy, yes — if there is democracy and the way people inform themselves is to go onto the Web.

Q. So there are political consequences. Are there are also economic consequences? If so, what are they?

A. I think the people who talk about dismantling — threatening — Net neutrality don’t appreciate how important it has been for us to have an independent market for productivity and for applications on the Internet.

(..)

Q. Do you have a view about the behavior of the telephone companies in this debate? Is this simply traditional monopolist behavior, or is it more subtle? Have you talked to them to understand their motivations?

A. I have tried, when I’ve had the opportunity to find out, to understand their motivations, but I can’t speak for them. So all I can do is guess. But my guess is that it’s not that this is a nefarious planned plot to take over the Internet by a bunch of people who hate it. What I imagine is that it is simply the culture of companies, which have been using a particular business model for a very long time. So I think there is a clash of corporate cultures.

Watch Bebo watch Bebo

Heather Hopkins alerts us to Bebo which is catching up to eBay as the most searched for brand in the UK.

Since May, the term "bebo" has ranked #2 in the share of UK internet searches after "ebay", and Bebo's rapid rise is narrowing the gap. The market share of UK internet searches for "bebo" has increased more than three fold in the past six months and 17.6% in the past three months.


So everyone must head over there to see why this is such an interesting communication channel and Social Network.


An interview in the Sunday Times last Sunday said that Bebo head Michael Birch seemed prepared to wait before earning much money from the service:

Birch, 36, is almost dismissive of the need for Bebo to generate revenues at this stage. For the next two or three years, his priority is to establish the firm as one of the global leaders in social networking. The big challenge is in America, where Bebo is currently a distant third behind MySpace and Facebook, a college-based site.

“At the moment there’s a race for traffic,” says Birch. “Implementing a successful business model does not necessarily help in that goal. There are so many avenues that social networking can go down.”

So Friday’s revelation that Bebo is planning a mobile service isn’t about revenue? Pete Cashmore notes:

…it seems that Bebo Mobile is a step closer - mobile phone group O2 is in talks with the company, although discussions are still at the early stages. There were rumors earlier this week that Bebo plans to extend the site via SMS, rather than the WAP-based services that other social networks are pursuing.

The Ad industry and ethics

Julie Rusciolelli is opening up a debate that offers a problem for 'Marketing PR'. Essentially, she is asking, to what extent can Public Relations endorse, nay even support, advertising when advertising stretches the truth.

'Creative' may mean unethical.

Lets mashup the social space

MySpace is booming in popularity; Facebook is gracing the headlines again; Bebo is growing incredibly; Tribe relaunched; Cyworld, Hive7 and SecondLife are nothing short of a phenomenon; LinkedIn is becoming 'People Search'; ITToolbox relaunched with a host of social networking features; Friendster is now refueling itself to enter the market again.

This is a snippet from a post on Read/Write Web is a very comprehensive run down of waht is available for Social Interactions at present.

The call for a Social Space mashup is a cool idea too.

City AM offers mobile news

Free financial newspaper City AM is today launching an evening news update service for mobile phones.

Called City M, the service will send breaking news updates to mobiles each day at 6pm. It will also contain banner and pop-up adverts personalised for the user.

So:

1.... when pitching a story to City AM will it be available mobile and

2.... are you monitoring what is available on mobiles about your organisations


This New Media stuff is such fun....

Hezza -un reformed

The Tory party may like to think it is going to use social media to engage the British electorate.

I suggest they avoid ex-Tory minister, and leader hopeful Michael Heseltine's publishing houseHaymarket. Not only does it try to run Social Media conferences that pretend some speaker is going to show how a PR person will 'control' the bloggers, it can't even get a blog to work on its site.

The whole Hezza empire is surrounded with subscriptions, passwords and restrictions that, even if I get a copy of PRWeek because of my membership of the CIPR, there is no way I can use it here except in passing.

Fake metrics in evaluation by fakers in PR

I note from the Institute for Public Relations site that they have bitten the bullet on multipliers.

There are some limited and highly specialist areas of our work where long experience shows there is a statistical correlation between and out-take and outcome. It is rare. I have no evidence to support this but have friends who say they have.

This week's Conversations column introduces a new paper (free on the Institute website) by Mark Weiner, president of Delahaye, and Don Bartholomew, senior vice president of MWW Group. In "Dispelling the Myth of PR Multipliers and Other Inflationary Audience Measures," the authors describe the ways in which multipliers are used by public relations professionals to report total impressions and value.

Multipliers are fake figures. Having evaluated millions of press clips - yes MILLIONS, I have no evidence to show there is a consistent multiplier.

The agencies who apply fiddle factor are conning their clients....

yahoo paid for search on mobiles

Yahoo! has started a beta trial of paid-for search results on its mobile internet service in the UK and US.

The launch, starting with a group of just under 100 advertisers, forms part of the portal’s plan to extend pay per click services to mobiles.

Both it and Google, which has not yet provided advertising on its mobile search service, are in a race to attract mobile users through partnerships with operators.

There is a load of confusion out there

Nielsen//NetRatings has released a survey that shows the latest internet trends and technologies are still a mystery to many UK consumers. Another gem from e-consultancy.


The report shows 52% of British web users believe online and digital technologies make their life easier, but a similar percentage say they find them difficult to follow.

The least-heard-of terms include VOD (75%), Wikis (70%), and IPTV and Really Simple Syndication (both 69%), while 67% aren’t aware of Web 2.0. One in seven also know of the iPod but don’t know what one is.

Financial PR has to solve this problem

For financial PR there is a real problem with material information notes Andy Lark.

In a blog entry on Monday, Schwartz ponders why public companies like his must issue paper-based press releases or stage "anachronistic" telephonic conference calls every time they want to reveal information considered material to their financial performance.
There has to be a better way and the XBRL evolution with XPRL has to resolve this issue.

Games - a communications Channel

Sony's PlayStation is to challenge Microsoft's Xbox in its one undisputed area of dominance - the online world.

The PlayStation 3 will be "network ready" out of the box when it launches in November and will offer a range of services similar to Xbox Live.

Darren Waters covers the story for the BBC.

For years I have been telling the tale of how games on-line are a channel for communication and on-line they are really powerful.

IBM - the blog case study

We encouraged employees to externally. They did, and we got tons of press without ever issuing a press release or calling a reporter - IBM

It is one of the great case studies.

UK Online advertsing up 40%

The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) has predicted that UK online ad spend will overtake national newspaper advertising by the end of 2006, after reporting that the web’s share of the ad market reached double figures in H1.

The study, conducted by PricewaterhouseCoopers on behalf of the IAB, showed firms spent £917.2m on online advertising in Britain between January and June, a 40.3% rise over the same period last year.

The IAB said the web continued to be the ad industry’s fastest growing sector during the six months, having increased its market share to 10.5% from 7.3% a year before.

Evaluation problems

Eric T. Peterson is a veteran of web analytics and author of Web Analytics Demystified, Web Site Measurement Hacks and The Big Book of Key Performance Indicators.

He spoke to us about how Web 2.0 features and concepts are shaking up the measurement space, the need for standards and the implications for site owners and advertisers.

In a nutshell, what are the challenges associated with measuring Web 2.0 traffic? asks e-consultancy.

Blogs are being measured with, Visual Sciences , MeasureMap , Blogbeat etc, and RSS with Feedburner . Top-tier vendors like WebSideStory are announcing new measurement options.

On-line shopping keeps growing

Tesco has posted a 28.7% rise in sales at its online division, with revenues coming in at £554m in the first half of this year.

The supermarket giant, which dominates the UK’s online grocery sector, said profit at Tesco.com increased 43.1% to £33.8m, excluding the launch costs of its non-food operation Tesco Direct.


The John Lewis Partnership has launched a direct services company called Greenbee , which will market a range of financial, travel and leisure products online and by phone.

Source e-consultancy

Google plays with images

Google is playing around with a new Ajax interface and novel search ideas at SearchMash. B2Day says: It gives you image results on the right, and you can drag results around if you think, say, the fourth result should be the top result instead. Click on the green URL and it gives you options such as "open in this window," "open in new window," and "more similiar pages." Click on "more web pages" and it scrolls the page down. Pretty nifty.

Putting the media channels together

News Corp has continued its internet shopping spree with the purchase of UK graduate recruitment site Milkround.com.

The deal – reported to be worth around £20m – will see the site being integrated with the media giant's UK business News International. The full report is at e-consultancy.

The group, which saw off competition from Trinity Mirror and DMGT in an auction, hopes to use Milkround to strengthen The Times' employment supplements.

Mashing up print and online goes well beyond news online first. But Milkround is important for PR recruitment so interesting on two fronts.

Gadgets get green

A short-range, wireless technology that is more energy-efficient than Bluetooth has been unveiled by Nokia says the BBC.

Ben Wood at UK-based Collins Consulting told Reuters news agency "Bluetooth is clearly not suited to some of the cooler applications like intelligent jewelry, watches - a less power hungry, smaller, cheaper solution will open some interesting new opportunities."

This thinking opens up ideas for even more platforms for communications channels to work through.

Happily for those of us who try to keep up, its a few years (OK weeks) away.

Making notes fflexibly

Stepan Pachikov has a great one liner:

One person cannot ruin a good company. It takes a strong management team to do that.
He also has cool software and a new startup called EverNote. Like Google Notebook, EverNote offers a software download that lets you highlight and clip information as you surf the Web and stores your clippings for you online. But, says B2Day, EverNote goes much further than Google Notebook because you can also clip text from any Word document, Excel spreadsheet, PowerPoint slide, Outlook e-mail, or digital-ink scrawl. It stores all of these clippings on the Web in an endless, chronological tape that is highly searchable.

Sony sidles up to BT

Sony BMG has struck a deal with BT to offer on-demand access to music videos through the telco’s upcoming IPTV service, BT Vision.

Although it is yet to announce pricing, the move will give BT exclusive early access to newly released videos through the BT Vision Download Store, launched in July.

Its nuts!

This is going to be fringe stuff. It will make some money but will be diddly squat compared to the rest of the online video exchange.

Old thinking.

PRN buys USNewswire

Press release distribution business PR Newswire has bought US Newswire from Medialink Worldwide for £10 million.

The purchase of US Newswire will give PR Newswire, which is owned by United Business Media, a significant foothold on the government and public interest sectors and improve its distribution channels in the US says Journalism.co.uk.

Students blog about bars - an idea for PR

An undergraduate student at the University of Plymouth, Darren Jones, is launching a social networking website, Nights Out @ Uni (http://www.nightsoutatuni.co.uk), run by students for students.

The site will provide users with entertainments information including events listings for nightclubs, pubs, bars, restaurants and cinemas, as well as the latest offers and promotions in their area, and could rival the likes of MySpace and Bebo, says Press Dispensary.

One wishes it well but its a big mountain and there is a lot of competition.

There is a useful thought here which is that a PR practitioner can create such portals for groups of people with common interests. For example what about one for your company, industry sector or locality?

Wal-Mart scream marketing social media site a flop

Wal-Mart’s brief fling with online networking appears to have come to an end, with several blogs saying the retailer has closed its teen-oriented social networking site - called ‘ The Hub ’, among other things says e-consultancy.

The site, temporarily launched this summer as a promotion for the start of the school year, aimed to copy Myspace et al by encouraging ‘hubsters’ to set up their own personalised web pages.

Apparently, features such as parental approval and photos like the one below (courtesy of The Blog Herald) weren't as appealing as hoped.


My impression of the site was that it had been designed by a control freak who wanted to blast Wal-Mart adds at everything in sight.

Aimed at a generation that counts the number of pay-as-you go text messages left on their phone, the targeting was awful.


The issue here is that people imagine that these sites are a communications channel. Yes they are but only if they facilitate community building.

A LexisNexis sponsored survey reported in Silicon.com says:


When asked for their top three choices for accurate and up-to-the-minute information, 50 per cent of people surveyed chose network/local television, 42 per cent chose radio, and 37 per cent chose newspapers. Slightly more than a third picked cable news or business networks, and 25 per cent said they went to "internet sites of print and broadcast media". Only six per cent said they turned to "emerging media" sources.

When asked to choose the top five topics that interested them, consumers were more into pop culture than politics. The most popular topics, chosen by about a third of the consumers surveyed, are popular entertainment (books, movies, music, TV, plays), hobbies, weather and food/cooking/dining. Almost a quarter of the people chose sports.


Of course, social media as a whole is one thing but I am reasonably happy with the sources I use but RSS is not well understood in domestic circumstances yet.

For the PR practitioner this suggests that there remains an imperative to work across all media - as always.


Mobile, TV and Games gardgets get juices going

A new survey reveals where a sizable chuck of our income is going each year – on buying new gadgets and gizmos suggests an article in Pocket Lint.

The research says that over 60% of Brits spend £5000 on gadgets every year, with 30% of those surveyed saying that they have 15 gadgets in total.


These are all Internet platforms offering a wide range of communications channels and channel convergence (e.g. watch TV on your mobile and text message from your game).

The popularity of communications platforms suggests that there is enthusiasm backed with hard cash to enjoy the Internet.

MySpace is taking ads

Social media website MySpace has struck its first-ever UK television deal which sees it promote drama series Brotherhood.

As part of the agreement, the first episode will be available in its entirety exclusively on the MySpace site ahead of its debut on the FX channel on 9 October says Mad.


It will be interestiung to see how MySpace users take to this new departure.




Ouch!

Peter Cochrane had some pithy comments to make to Information managers this week but his points if fire off in the direction of senior managers in PR would hole them below the watermark.

I reproduce some comments here but suggest you read the whole article and where you rile most - act.

  1. Throughout the 70s, 80s and 90s people who knew deep technical stuff (nerds) were derided and discounted. The management attitude was that these people were irrelevant and a pain. Deep tech understanding was not seen as necessary to manage anything. How the world has changed - today some of the richest people in the world are ex-nerds!
  2. This retrograde management attitude had a lot to do with the greater than 85 per cent failure rate of IT programmes through that era, that continues today in industry, defence, education and healthcare. Know-nothing managers are a menace to any industry and profession.
  3. Not including the end user, not understanding the technology and not understanding the difference between data, information and knowledge is not only dangerous - it turns out to be very expensive!
  4. The biggest universal mistake has been to take the old paper processes and transplant them to the screen, and then create even more paper! IT presents a much bigger opportunity to change organisations and operations but, unfortunately, people seem unable to adapt and change in more than one dimension at a time. Contrast the old (50- to 100-years-old) companies to the new (10- to 20-years-old) and it is stark in the way they use IT to create, run and advance the business.

School PR - watch the social media as well

TWO Sheffield secondary schools have become the first state schools in the city to employ a professional public relations firm to improve their image.
The Sheffield Star reports that
Myers Grove and Fir Vale are paying Sheffield agency Pickard Communications which also works with fee-paying independent schools in the city.
The firm's director Chris Pickard said he thinks it is money well spent - although he acknowledges some parents will wonder why a portion of the schools' budget will be spent on his services rather than paying for more teachers, books or equipment.
"Schools are increasingly becoming a focal point for their local communities, offering services far beyond classroom teaching. It is therefore ever more important that schools communicate effectively with local people," he said.

There is also a good case for monitoring and working with social media when dealing with schools. Over half of students will have a presence on channels such as MySpace or Bebo and almost all students will be suing Instant Messaging very heavily. This is both a PR opportunity and a threat.

Managing vulnerabilities

Cyber-Ark Software has announced the surprising results of its 2006 Privileged Password Survey.

Privileged passwords are the non-personal passwords that exist in virtually every device or software application in a company.

Managing Information reports on vulnerabilities.


2006 Privileged Password Survey reveals that privileged passwords are far more common in enterprises than previously thought: approximately one-half of all enterprises contain more privileged passwords than individual ones.

Secondly, although these privileged passwords provide "super-user" system access, the survey exposes that up to 42% are never updated, a frightening prospect in today’s environment of increased audits and hacker attacks. In fact, half of the IT professionals surveyed reveal that they’re concerned about audits, and 6 out of 10 state that their organization has been hacked.


This reveals a problem for mangaging issues in PR. You may find just asking the question for your issues management programme may save a lot of future embarrassment.

Be careful what you mean when you write

When they think of the word ‘industry’ young people see ‘money and computers’ whereas older people see ‘dirt and decline’, reports Onerec.

Younger people’s attitudes towards ‘industry’ have almost nothing in common with those of older people, a new national survey of 1000 people has found.

This is an interesting survey and useful for copywriters in PR.

Spoof is always with us

A video blog by the Conservative leader has been targeted by cyber-hoaxers supporting the UK Independence Party reports The Times.

A group called UKIPhome, which claims to be “unauthorised but proudly pro-UKIP”, has produced a video parodying the similarities between Mr Cameron and Tony Blair, which appears on a website with a similar address to the Tory leader’s own blog.


The parody video on webcameron.info has already been viewed more than 7,000 times while the authentic Cameron website on WebCameron.org.uk had received 160,000 hits, according to a spokesman.


It was inevitable and is just the kind of thing that every company involved in Social Media outreach should consider in their plan. It is an issue but nothing to get too excited about.

Computers - part of the furniture

As movie and TV downloads become more popular and the hard drive replaces the DVD drawer, people may want a nicer look, and a lot more storage suggests C|net.

Suissa, a new company featured at the Canadian design conference IIDEX/NeoCon, launched a line of wood-encased computers on Monday, Slashdot reported.


As people use thier computers in the living space (to watch on-line video, multitask etc). It is only to be expected that this would b ecome a 'must have'.

The key for Public Relations is the extent to which practitioners can accept that the PC is part of domesic life.


Social Media to turn on youth vote

The Conservatives say they are turning to blogs, or online diaries, to talk to the "iPod generation" of 16- to 25-year-olds who are less likely to get their news from traditional media, says Reuters.

They say blogs allow politicians to be heard without the filter of the traditional press.

"There is a crying need for intelligent use of the new media," Conservative member of parliament and former shadow Home Secretary Ann Widdecombe told a meeting dedicated to the topic at the party's annual conference this week.

Smart PR.

A Case study worth watching.

PR's have new comms channel in South Wales

The South Wales Argus has become the first Newsquest title to launch a reader blogs section on its website.

Readers were invited to write their own online diaries at www.southwalesargus.co.uk three months ago and since then their blogs have proved to be a popular part of the site.

Green Communications - Social Media unit

Green Communications has launched a new division advising business how to deal with the rapidly expanding world of web logs - or blogs for short reports the Yorkshire Evening Post.
The launch coincides with the release of research showing nearly half of small and medium-sized firms understand the business benefits of corporate blogs, but only three per cent have plans to start one.

Hoe to run a party the Google way

e-consultancy reports the speech by Google boss Eric Schmidt at the Tory conference, Schmidt said party leader and blogger David Cameron should adopt the search giant's internal model.

"We run Google in this bizarre way which we call 70-20-10. Seventy percent of our resources are applied to our core business, 20% on our adjacent businesses and 10% on new and innovative things that nobody could possibly ever have thought of," he said.

"I was thinking Mr Cameron and the leadership could say 70% could work on our core activities, 20% could work on our adjacent activities, and 10% of you are in charge of inventing completely new ideas - half of which are wacko, and half of which are brilliant."


In such fast changing time perhaps this would be a good model for PR departments too.

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Convergence and Murdoch

Timesonline has started broadcasting video news packages supplied by Sky News on its TV service. Says Journalism.co.uk.

Times TV already carries video news from Fox News and Reuters but this is the first time that it has carried news from the UK-based 24-hour news channel.

The Times simultaneously launched its online TV service and an e-magazine in June, this year.

Niche marketing with podcasts

Dr. Taffy Wagner and Ms. Bettye Jamerson, better known as the ‘virtuous women’, have done it again with the advent of their new Literary Corner podcast that spotlights new, non-fiction, men and women authors each week. Dr. Wagner and Ms. Jamerson were inspired to create and produce this podcast after facing marketing challenges of their own when promoting their non-fiction books. Bettye often comments on the struggles she experienced early on when learning the process of how to market and promote her own book. They decided to come up with a strategy for new authors to help them with promoting their book and themselves, whereby making their promotion process easier. “Knowing what to do and how to do it really takes the pressure off and gives new authors that necessary immediate exposure” said Bettye.

Making money from podcasts

Peter Kay is jumping on the podcast bandwagon, by charging fans up to £1.50 to hear him read the first chapter of his autobiography.

The book, The Sound Of Laughter, is out on Thursday – but those who cannot wait to hear how it starts can order the recording from his official website by text message.

The Phoenix Nights star wrote the memoirs after learning that journalist Johnny Dee was putting together an unofficial biography, which came out in June.

But even if it was reluctant, Kay’s decision appears to have paid off handsomely. More than 250,000 advance orders have been placed for the £18.99 book – making it the fastest selling autobiography this year.

The ROI question again

Charlene Li is asking for help.
Sge says:

One issue that keeps coming up over and over again is how to measure the ROI of blogs. I’ve written about this in the past and have been stewing over how to go beyond the intangible “blogging is good for your business” exhortations to quantify blogging’s benefit to organizations.

Well, we’re getting close but we could use some help. My colleague, Chloe Stromberg, and I have been interviewing companies about how they measure ROI and realized that we needed to throw the net wider – this is where you come in!

I have some questions about ROI as a measure. It is easy to take a simplistic view.




Medical science podcasting

Another case study for research organisations comes from Medical News Today.

Marking a major milestone in the delivery of Nanotechnology related information; AZoNetwork and Nanotechnology Victoria (NanoVic) announced the official release of the first in a series of Nanotechnology Reviews in a Podcast format.

This initial Podcast provides a short history of the development of Nanotechnology and interviews several key players from within the Nanotech industry, research community and government to draw out their current views on the likely impact Nanotechnology will have on healthcare, materials and the environment.
This is a serious production. It is a way of offering content to niche audiences very easily.

Trade Association podcasts

Todd Zeigler in the Bivings Report offers a case study for Public Relations practitioners who are working for trade associations in which he says:

It is just sort of a fact that very few trade associations blog. One of the few that does is the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), whose blog is called shopfloor.org.

Not only does NAM blog, it does so very effectively. What makes shopfloor.org work is that it is written by real live human beings who have opinions. Sure, some people aren't going to agree with NAM's point of view. But regardless of your politics you have to respect NAM's willingness to participate in the conversation online. What they are doing is extradinary for a DC-based trade association.

Monday, October 02, 2006

Monitoring using RSS and other tools

Simon Wakeman discovered an interesting post by Steve Rubel about how he finds news and material to blog about - Steve has created what he calls a blog feeder.

Simon notes the potential for this just got greater, as Steve has blogged that Technorati now offers RSS feeds for searches, which means that it’s a whole lot easier to include Technorati searches in a blog feeder (althoug it does not cover all blogs and sometimes takes a long time to index sites). Also spotted this news on i-wisdom and Webfeed Central.

Can I add that it is also possible to use RSS for Google News, Google Scholar and any web site can be monitored using Google Reader (When you find content you want to read on a regular basis, you can subscribe to it, and Google Reader will monitor that website for updates and add them to your reading list). There is an issue with how fast it will update with Google.

As I am now experimenting with Google Reader, it is an interesting option. In addition, of course, I do have my sumarisation software that allows me to load interesting items direct to my blog in summary form which is very quick.

Of course there is a ton of software out there to help you monitor changes on web sites.

If you can't monitor news, blogs and web sites these days you will be at least 20 hours behind the news so I do it and I expect every PR practitioner does it as well.

For some practitionser these tools are helpful to maintain modernity for thier client blog.

Monitoring using RSS and other tools

Simon Wakeman discovered an interesting post by Steve Rubel about how he finds news and material to blog about - Steve has created what he calls a blog feeder.

Simon notes the potential for this just got greater, as Steve has blogged that Technorati now offers RSS feeds for searches, which means that it’s a whole lot easier to include Technorati searches in a blog feeder (althoug it does not cover all blogs and sometimes takes a long time to index sites). Also spotted this news on i-wisdom and Webfeed Central.

Can I add that it is also possible to use RSS for Google News, Google Scholar and any web site can be monitored using Google Reader (When you find content you want to read on a regular basis, you can subscribe to it, and Google Reader will monitor that website for updates and add them to your reading list). There is an issue with how fast it will update with Google.

As I am now experimenting with Google Reader, it is an interesting option. In addition, of course, I do have my sumarisation software that allows me to load interesting items direct to my blog in summary form which is very quick.

Of course there is a ton of software out there to help you monitor changes on web sites.

If you can't monitor news, blogs and web sites these days you will be at least 20 hours behind the news so I do it and I expect every PR practitioner does it as well.

Charity site launch

Former Turner Broadcasting executive Richard Kilgarriff is launching a community-based broadband offering in November, allowing people and companies to promote their products and services online, while raising money for good causes, reports the Guardian.

Famous Top Fives offers users "best of" lists provided by celebrities, experts and members of the public for everything and anything - books, films, albums, DVDs, songs, wines, hotels, TV shows.

Celebrities already signed up to provide a list include Minnie Driver, Michael Stipe, Pete Doherty, Cliff Richard and Lennox Lewis.



This means that practitioner involved in not for profit and Charity PR may like to add this site to their 'little black book'.



If

Get involved with peer-to-peer media platforms

With a background provided by Kami Huyse, and a very interesting talk by Dr Kolb, considered Text 100’s ‘resident futurist’, you can join a discussion about how new media technology is changing PR practice. He outlines some new skills PR practitioners need to develop.


To my mind there is no alternative. Would one expect a PR person (what ever the domain of practice) to ignore the press, radio, television, or the web? Of course not.

In this Forward podcast, Dr Kolb encourages PR students and new practitioners to get involved with peer-to-peer media platforms, and also outlines Text 100’s involvement in Second Life. To begin the podcast, Kami Huyse gives some introductory information about what Second Life is and why PR practitioners should take notice of it.

TV is dead? Jarvis

Jeff Jarvis in the The Guardian suggests that the definition of television is up for grabs.

His article begins with a disagreement with Amanda Congdon - a daunting experience no doubt.

The video blog Rocketboom.com made Amanda Congdon a star on the internet. It earned her a guest slot on the TV series CSI. It got her considerable publicity in the major American media when she left the vlog. And it just plopped her into a hybrid car with her name emblazoned on the side for an internet-video tour of the US. That was what brought her to my den in New Jersey with three friends wielding cameras for an interview that is now online at AmandaAcrossAmerica.com.


Amanda and I got into a tussle over television. I said she was creating the new TV. She dismissed the label "television" and insisted she was making something else, a video blog. But I argued that the definition of television is up for grabs. What is TV now? We don't know yet, for every time I think I've spotted all the sticks of dynamite set to explode under old, linear television, I discover new fuses sizzling.

Apple has just announced iTV, a box that will wirelessly transport internet video on to our televisions. Thus, the line between broadcast and online - like the line between terrestrial and cable or satellite - is erased.

I have no trouble with this idea except that there is huge market inertia.

In the meantime, the success of Sixty Second View in its niche is an example of how powerful this new for of TV can and will be.

Blog alert goes mobile

Always-on reports that mobile search company 4info allows writers to upload their blogs so that mobile phone users can receive them as text messages or alerts.

This is a useful additional lever that PR can use to extent the impact of their on-line relationship management.

Watching on-line politcal PR - case study in the making

Stuart Bruce agrees with Anthony Mayfield's analysis analysis. Webcameron is a very good initiative.

He says that the key difference between what Labour is doing and what the Conservatives are doing is understanding. You get the impression that the Tories get what social media is really about, while Labour still just sees it as a set of new tools.

Simon Collister has some interesting thoughts about Webcameron on his eDemocracy Update blog. He also questions if "Politics needs a sea-change in attitudes, not a ride aboard the blogging bandwagon."


Watching what is happening in Politics offers an excellent case study for practitioners with commercial and not for profit portfolios.

Bebo worth mega bucks

Four-and-a-half years after Michael and Xochi Birch created www.Bebo.com it is one of the hottest properties on the internet. In less than two years it has acquired more than 27m users and claims to have overtaken MySpace to become the leading social-networking website in the UK and Ireland.

“At the moment there’s a race for traffic,” says Birch and for public relations practitioners this mantra is critical as well. It is worth watching how Birch is going about doing it.

According to The Sunday Times Bebo still has only 15 full-time employees, including four in London, and as yet generates modest revenues from advertising. But its huge and growing audience of young users has prompted suggestions that the business is already worth hundreds of millions of pounds.

Sounds fanciful? It might have been last year, before News Corporation (ultimate owner of The Sunday Times) paid $580m (£310m) for the company behind MySpace.

Birch is adamant that he has no interest in selling. “We used to follow conversations a bit more (when we received approaches). Now we pretty much just say ‘No’ immediately. I was more curious to begin with.