Who is Worth Following #1

Twitter and Facebook run on the law of diminishing returns. The more you follow the less you can pay attention to. Friends shrink to acquaintances who become ingredients of the great trail of irrelevant content that whizzes by every day, all day. After a while a new thought or a clever link is a headache and a burden. Twitter twaddle insomnia? Dreaming in YouTube segments?  How do you break through the endless stream of digital space junk?

If you’re in PR, who is worth following? Here’s my list of PR Blogging All-Stars. I am free to change my mind any time, according to my mood.  This is as close as I’ll get to a “Blogroll.” What’s required to be “Worth Following”? Original thinking, personality, a broad range of interests. A bunch of Twitter sheep or Facebook friends of friends of friends is not required.

#1 tomforemski

Die! Press release! Die! Die! Tom ForemskiComing in at the top of the list is the guy who rocked our world with the iconic blog post: Die! Press Release! Die! Die! Die! If there was a PR blogger All-Star team Tom would be playing center field and batting clean-up. His call to arms to slay the press release has catalyzed many a social media warrior. Tom blogs prodigiously and Twitters consistently. His blog posts tend to be inside-the-valley tech nuggets from an astute observer and former FT journalist. He gets looser on Twitter with a stream of catchy 140 character or less infotainments (I like his lunchtime entertainment links). Tom is a pioneer and a survivor and he blogs because he has something to say and news to share. Yeah Tom. 

Twitter: @tomforemski
Blog: Silicon Valley Watcher
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/tom.foremski

Good PR Masters Program?

Can anybody help this guy out. I believe he is from Virginia Tech.

Gandhi is a maxim master. “Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.” If I wanted to learn PR in a masters program, what school would you recommend to someone with strong GRE scores and an undergrad GPA of 3.9?

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FTC Forces Bloggers to Get Real

As expected, the Federal Trade Commission yesterday issued new guidelines for bloggers to disclose freebies or payments they receive in return for reviewing products. Although the regulations are still vague and will be judged on a case-by-case basis, this is a big step in cleaning up the blogosphere from the proliferation of content trash floating around.

Social media guru Brian Solis argues that the FTC is not showing bloggers respect because “traditional reporters and journalists have long received products and services to review.” Yes, with several key distinctions. Real reporters are schooled, apprenticed, trained, and are usually part of an organization that has adopted standards and oversight. News organizations have guidelines about accepting gifts and returning products they review. Bloggers are not reporters and, in the case of those who stoop to write positive reviews on products or services they receive without disclosing the relationship, they are hardly behaving ethically.

There is a mad rush to get exposure on the web and game search results – hence pay for play bloggers. Blogging is hard work. It takes thought, research, and a bit of tech savvy (not much), and understanding of basic journalistic principles. Bloggers don’t usually do ‘original’ research – we comment on what has already been reported. Bloggers can have value, the same as any op-ed contributor to a news organization.

This goes back to that big question – what is more important, content or SEO. I argue that content is more important. If you produce articles that have insight and value to the market, search engines will pick it up and you will receive deep, long-lasting benefit. If you’re out to game the search engines through slick SEO tactics and prostituted bloggers, then you will always be at the mercy of Google’s next algorithm that boxes you out and government regulations. 

For bloggers, the FTC stopped short of specifying how they must disclose conflicts of interest. Rich Cleland, assistant director of the FTC’s advertising practices division, said the disclosure must be “clear and conspicuous,” no matter what form it will take.

Mahatma Gandhi & Business

Mahatma GandhiToday is the birth date of Mahatma Gandhi. Take a moment, look away from the computer screen, breathe freely, relax. Life is a continuum, even deadlines pass, there are more important things than the press release on the new Jell-O flavor.

Even as we conduct business in the course of the day, we can behave in a way that is at peace with our surroundings, even if those around us are not at peace.
 
Mahatma Gandhi, Born – October 2, 1869 Porbandar, India / Died January 30, 1948. A few quotes to cogitate on:

“A customer is the most important visitor on our premises. he is not dependent on us. We are dependent on him. He is not an interruption in our work. He is the purpose of it. He is not an outsider in our business. He is part of it. We are not doing him a favor by serving him. He is doing us a favor by giving us an opportunity to do so.”

“Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.”

“Truth resides in every human heart, and one has to search for it there, and to be guided by truth as one sees it. But no one has a right to coerce others to act according to his own view of the truth.”

Social Business By Design

Sometimes you run across a presentation that says it all, even without sound. Social media goes beyond PR – it’s key to a new way of doing business.

View more documents from David Armano.

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Google Sidewiki is PR Game Changer

The gig is up.  Any client who thought they could escape social media is now in it, whether they like it or not. Google Sidewiki, launched a couple of days ago, is a PR game changer – it exemplifies, perhaps more than any other application, how social media has infiltrated all communication and can undermine any PR strategy that does not consider social networks.

Here’s how Google spins it: What if everyone, from a local expert to a renowned doctor, had an easy way of sharing their insights with you about any page on the web? What if you could add your own insights for others who are passing through? In other words – what if Google can turn everybody into a content producer and then rank and control all that content?

Google SidewikiNow they can, and they will.It means that on this blog page you, or anyone with an easily installed Google Sidewiki app, can write notes that are then visible to anybody else. The general public – adversaries, friends, competitors, your nephew - can enhance your web page without your consent or knowledge.

This is what it looks like (left). In a way, every web page is now a blog, with unmoderated comments open to everyone.

Google will somehow rate these Sidewiki comments, through one of their mysterious algorithms, and present the most relevant first. You Sidewiki comments are then stored in your Google profile.  Sidewiki comments can be Tweeted, emailed, Facebooked.

So, my buried Google Sidewiki comment “Mark Rose is a big fat idiot,” follows this blog forever, and can be blasted out through other channels. Only Google could come up with something this insidious and mind blowing. Google Sidewiki is ready for Internet Explorer and Firefox, soon for Google Chrome. Download Google toolbar with Sidewiki.

What does this mean for public relations?

It means that all clients are now IN social media, whether they know it or not. Google is further connecting social media channels and controlling major social networks, such as Blogger and YouTube.  This is further proof, if we needed any, that a PR strategy that does not include social media has a huge hole in it.

Three questions to ask:

  1. What’s your social media PR strategy?
  2. What’s your Wiki strategy (Wikipedia, Wikimedia, Google Sidewiki)?
  3. What is your social media news creation and delivery mechanism?

These can seem like esoteric questions but just asking them moves you in the right direction. The primary function of PR is no longer “How do I get the media to cover me?” It’s now “How do we impact our audience through our own media?” Google Sidewiki further re-defines media, when anybody can ‘report’ their opinions and facts on any web page, or words, phrases, or sections of a web page. What makes this frightening from a PR perspective is that all this content is subject to Google’s ever-changing algorithms. It makes Google the most-powerful social media company out there.

From Google: In developing Sidewiki, we wanted to make sure that you’ll see the most relevant entries first. We worked hard from the beginning to figure out which ones should appear on top and how to best order them. So instead of displaying the most recent entries first, we rank Sidewiki entries using an algorithm that promotes the most useful, high-quality entries. It takes into account feedback from you and other users, previous entries made by the same author and many other signals we developed.