Blogged by: Andrew Stroehlein
Khartoum has ordered Jan Pronk, Special Representative of the Secretary-General of the UN in Sudan, to leave the country by Wednesday because of comments Pronk made on his blog. Some may dismiss this as hardly surprising because diplomacy and openness don't exactly mix. I'm always a bit cautious of claims about the revolutionary character of blogging, and in some respects, I remain so in this case. After all, a diplomat can get kicked out of a country for saying the wrong thing in any forum, and annoying a host in a blog is little different from doing so in a media release or op-ed. But there has been something unique about Pronk's blog. While it hasn't been as casually written or as frequently updated as many bloggers' fare, it has provided a running log of a high-level diplomat's thinking quite unlike anything we have seen elsewhere. What other top envoy dealing with such delicate matters of conflict resolution regularly pens such an ongoing account and commentary?
Concerning that complex whole which creates cultural acceptance for people including knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society to contribute values through the creation of effective relationships and safe productive environments.
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Diplomacy exposed
Don't mess with the soccer barons
A football fan site that has links to YouTube showing Premiership goals has been told to stop this practice, according to reports.
NetResult, the company monitoring internet activity for the Premier League has warned the website 101greatgoals.blogsport.com to not put any more links on the site.
See also http://www.copyrightcontrol.com/
Video conferencing is moving on
Cisco has a new 'telepresence' product which uses three large-screen televisions with a resolution of 1080 vertical lines. It requires a high speed network connection of 10 megabits per second.
Telepresence is essentially videoconferencing on steroids, using high definition (HD) streaming video on large-screen televisions.
"Telepresence can do for business networking what Myspace and the other social networking sites is doing for social networking," said Marthin De Beer, general manager of emerging markets for Cisco.
"It will create new relationships with people you may have never met before and enable you to do business in a much broader circle than what you are able to do today."
I will be interested to see if this really is as smart as they say. There are other products like Skype, that can offer a lot too.
Why Journos dislike PR's
A new training workshop for PR (Public Relations) executives explains the well-intentioned behaviour that consistently annoys journalists in contact with them – and how to avoid many of the most common errors when seeking to place a news story or feature, to secure media coverage for PR clients. The post goes on to list many of the things Journos hate...
Campaigners use a wiki -
Here is another wiki application. It provides information for campaigners and other interested bodies.
NHS 23 wiki (http://editthis.info/nhs_it_info/ ) is a dossier of documents, reports, letters and press coverage about concerns with the direction and progress of England's National Programme for IT in the NHS.
This is a reason for PR people to monitor wikis and to be able (within a strategy of course) make contributions and edit content.
Digital Divide hardens
The digital divide is deepening in the UK, with the most tech-savvy households embracing the internet while a growing number of standouts are being left behind, according to new research. The reasons for not getting internet access were found to fall into three broad groups – lack of need or interest; cost or other material constraints; and lack of the necessary skills. Almost everybody has at least heard of the internet, but only 26 per cent of respondents from non-access households believe they have a good knowledge of how to use the internet.
The network has intelligence
Symbian's research VP, David Wood had an excellent comment reported by Guy Kewney.
He is reported as saying:
"In Web 2.0, the network itself has intelligence, rather than just being a bit-pipe for pre-cooked information".
Evaluating online 'engagement'
Ashley Friedlein talks about measurement for online marketing: He says: "My own feeling is that the usual Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) should still apply, be they ‘hard metrics’ like sales, clicks, conversion rates, or ‘softer metrics’ like brand favourability, purchase intent. Engagement metrics need to be understood in terms of how well they contribute to delivering these KPIs, rather than be seen as the KPIs themselves.
But what how can we measure “engagement”? A few thoughts:
- Number of friends, connections etc. on social media sites
- Volume and quality of mentions in the blogosphere
- Network analysis of the above, as well as inbound link mapping and analysis
- Dwell time on site / Depth of visit / Page views per session / % repeat visits
- Customer satisfaction (e.g. how likely are your customers to recommend your brand to a friend of theirs?)"
This is very client oriented. What about the invisible buzz. The comments between, for example, bloggers who do not link to the client?
The blogger is the news
Interesting to find that the newspapers' blogger' becomes a news story in the newspaper.
"It occurred to me while sifting through the winners in this year’s Hollywood film Awards on Monday just how pointless these ceremonies seem to have become, writes our Movie Blogger Carl Jones.
And the winners are . . .: Shropshire Star - www.shropshirestar.co.uk/...
Young people pay to read a newspaper!
Dominic Ponsford has found that a new Dutch daily newspaper is attracting thousands of new young readers – but unlike most other new dailies around the world, it is paid for.
NRC Next is attracting “young, well-educated people who were not regular newspaper readers” – according to the World Association of Newspapers.
Blatherings of the old
Jeff Jarvis makes the point that opinion is cheap and there are now new rules in publishing. He says:
"The problem with old guys on newspapers trying to attract young people is that they pander and insult the people they so desperately want to attract. They create lite products because they think the young have no attention span when, far more likely, the young have no patience for the overlong blatherings of the old"
Crayon - a new new company
Well, I have been working with on/off electricity at home with teaching and so I am late with this great news. Good luck to Joseph Jaffe, veteran communicator Shel Holtz and podcasting pioneer CC Chapman Gary Cohen, Aaron Greenberger, Chris Trela and Michael Denton with Neville Hobson for thier new company crayon,
We will hear a lot about this new company and its a great venture.
Neville's Blog post describes more here.
Technorati : Shel Holtz, crayon, edelman, rubel
Monday, October 23, 2006
More on Planning and Management
It occurred to me, after comments in on the Hobson and Holtz Report show 183, that I should make it available here to add to the debate proposed for show 184.
Thursday, October 19, 2006
Citizendium goes live
In an era when trust and recommendation make or mar content this could be a valuable tool for PR to use when providing background information.
Tayhoo to make money from Flickr or de.lic.io.us?
Using a wiki for campaigning
The NHS 23 wiki, available at http://editthis.info/nhs_it_info/,
features links to articles tracking problems with various suppliers and coverage
of the academics' open letter and the agreed statement. It was developed over
the past few months as a resource and reference tool for those interested in the
progress of National Programme for IT (NPfIT).
This is a interesting application of social media for campaigning PR.
Thumbnail re-sized for your site or blog
WebThumb’s brainchild – and AJAX guru - Joshua Eichorn has made the code available as an open API, allowing you to do something lovely with it.
An alternative is Bluga.net .
30,000 blopg posts
The National Trust said the entries - which range from the mundane to the extraordinary - have created "Britain's biggest blog".
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Broadband customer service sucks
However, a quarter of the 2,122 people surveyed earlier this year were unhappy with the standard of customer service offered by their internet providers.
I go along with that (BT).
Camcord and upload in seconds
The Pure Digital Point & Shoot Camcorder is currently available in the US for $129.99 (around £70) and features 30 minutes of storage capacity, with a 60 minute version also available.
from e-consultancy.