Marketing Blogic

Mr. Z. and ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’

February 18, 2009 · Leave a Comment

“A little sincerity is a dangerous thing, and a great deal of it is absolutely fatal” Oscar Wilde

the-importance-of-being-earnestThe Facebook community was hit by a mega blow this week from Zuckie and his fellas at the FB headquaters. To cut a long story short, basically what they had decreed was that from that time on they would own whatever we published on FB even if the account was deactivated.

Following a populistic (People Against the new Terms of Service) outcry echoing across the social network, M Z. decided to drop the changes.

“Over the past few days, we have received a lot of feedback about the new terms we posted two weeks ago. Because of this response, we have decided to return to our previous Terms of Use while we resolve the issues that people have raised. For more information, visit the Facebook Blog. If you want to share your thoughts on what should be in the new terms, check out our group Facebook Bill of Rights and Responsibilities.”  

Mr Z. said “trust us, we’re not doing this to profit from you, it’s so we are legally protected as we enable you to share content with other users and services.” read more here

What was this all about? Was that a bad joke or you guys thought we were that dumb and gullible? Do you really thought people would believe in your “good intentions”? I guess, we do in the same way we also believe in the tooth fairySanta Claus and the Easter bunny. Dude, next time be more EARNEST!

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New PR and Marketing Students blogs

February 15, 2009 · 1 Comment

network_spheresFollowing last year’s large number of students attending the PR and New Media module, Leeds Metropolitan University is running it again with students from MA PR, MSc Marketing and Business. I was invited to run and facilitate this year’s module and I am very confident we’ve got a very capable and enthusiastic cohort. Once again it will be a great opportunity to learn together in an exciting collaborative environment. Check below the new bloggers starting their journey in the blogosphere.

Amanda Gicharu – http://proclaim.prblogs.org

Andrea Phiniefs – http://andrea.prblogs.org

Anette Gangnos – http://anegan.prblogs.org

Anuj Ralhan – http://ralhan.wordpress.com

Clara Ng – http://clara-ng.blogspot.com

Friederike Graesser – http://friederikegraesser.prblogs.org

Jennifer Fairhurst – http://jwibwigan.wordpress.com

Joy Brettshneider – http://joyfleur.wordpress.com/

Kianoush Badakhsh  - http://kianoushb.wordpress.com/ 

Kine Hvinden Dahl – http://kinehvindendahl.prblogs.org

Laura Fischer – http://laura610.prblogs.org

Michelle Allison – http://michelleallison.prblogs.org/

Neha Kalra - http://kneha.wordpress.com

Nicole Krahmann – http://nicolekrahmann.prblogs.org

Nomam Ayub – http://noman242.wordpress.com

Olga Chatzidaki – http://nmspace.wordpress.com

Rowan Wilkinson – http://prsketchings.prblogs.org

Sam Parish – http://principlepr.prblogs.org/

Saranya Luyaphand – http://ya49.blogspot.com/

Theresa Krautkremer – http://theresakrautkremer.prblogs.org

Tom Craik – http://postmodernpr.wordpress.com

Tongwei Zheng - http://tongweizheng.wordpress.com/ 

Vanessa Van De Venter – http://prinkinternational.blogspot.com

Uchechi Abakporo – http://uchechi.prblogs.org

Zhongli Wang - http://zhongliwang.wordpress.com/

 

Richard Bailey run the module last year and managed to attract some attention to the fact his students were starting to use blogs. There are some good discussions taking place online on forums and social networks involving students, practitioners and academics. PRopenMic is one good example of a social network which is growing organically at a fast pace by word-of-mouth and attracting a big number of students. I believe universities should really encourage their students to blog. Stephen Davies wrote a post commenting on last year’s students blogging initiative. In an earlier post (Where are all the student PR bloggers?) he mentioned about the apparent lack of PR students bloggers.

Other useful links:

Wiki: http://prbooks.pbwiki.com

Magazine: http://www.behindthespin.com

Tips for promoting PR student blogs

→ 1 CommentCategories: Academic · Marketing · New Media · PR · Social Network · social media
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Fancy a cuppa with your Twitter Friends?

February 14, 2009 · 2 Comments

twitter-mosaic-mugNow you can take all you Twitter friend for a coffee or a cup or tea. All that for just over £10!

I thought I had seen it all when it comes to Twitter apps/services, but I was sadly wrong. I have just found out that you can have your twitter friends as a mosaic, on a mug, t-shirt, bag, mouse pad among other things. This service is being advertised on a site called Twitter Mosaic

I am wondering how many Twitter APIs and related service/products there are out there? Has anyone listed them all?

Twitter has paradoxically managed to survive without a specific revenue stream yet lending its brand, fame and success to third-parties who are monetizing on it. If it is a genuine altruistic web 2.0 business model or a good old profitable one it still remains to be seen. Meanwhile we will all continue to have fun with it, use it for work and life, discovering new ways to communicate and monitize.  

Not long ago I asked a PR practitioner and director of a UK PR and Marketing firm why he had left Twitter out of his presentation on new web social tools. He answered me that He could not see any use for Twitter in PR. Whether you agree with him or not it is worth cheking out this post by Drew B, A guide to Twitter: 10 ways Twitter is useful for a PR practitioner 

See below my Twitter Mosaic friends - 

You can have your twitter mosaic here.

Bookmark and Share

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Great 2009!!

December 27, 2008 · 2 Comments

Hey bloggers and readers,

Hope you guys have a great 2009!!!

That is a year to focus on the main thing. Get light and ready to walk in a different pace, letting go of anything that is not essential. It is the year to journey with essentials. it will be a year for cutting down and pruning so that the primary focus will get stronger and sharper. Go for it, reach out for your dreams and fnd it when you are out there also helping someone else’s dream!!!

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Coke has poked me!

September 11, 2008 · Leave a Comment

We’re living in an exciting time for on-line branding, the new social web environment is forcing the rules of business to change dramatically. Since the launching of the ground breaking book The Train Clue Manifesto much has changed in the corporate world and how global brand relate to the web, yet many corporations are still defiant against the on-line social phenomenom.

This new interactive environment and the fast growth of two-way communication fuelled by the new digital media and disruptive technologies and social media platforms has called for a rethinking in the area of marketing and PR communication in search of a fresh understanding of what these new on-line customers and their communities want from companies, products and services, what they are looking for and how on-line reputation may help companies to be found and rewarded by those communities of consumers.

Coke is another good example of how global brands are ‘poking’ people on-line, the goal is community building, engagement with great transparency, excitement and creativity. Global brands are learning to ‘poke’ people or in Facebook language, they are ‘throwing a sheep at’ their on-line community.

Blog relations is one of the most important elements within the world of the social web today. What is really important about the Social Web and its embodiment called social media, is that it is created and nurtured by communities. A blog may be linked to a Youtube videos, which may be posted to a social network such as Facebook updating Twitter feeds and so on.

This is just an example of how a message can be transmitted virally. Soon the whole of the web, no matter which social media utility tool it is being used, will get to know about something or will have at least a slice of the story.

David Meerman Scott advocates what he calls “on-line thought leadership” content. A well-crafted on-line strategy combining the right mix of social media tools can, according to D. M. Scott, contribute to a business positive reputation and on-line. ‘Thought leadership content’ challenges the traditional approach to marketing and PR since it does not focus on the message the company wants to convey about its products or services but on how to sort out people’s problems, ex. Whitepapers, e-books, webinars, etc. It also seeks to listen first and then engages with the community offering well-thought out solutions. Conversely, those communities are talking about their brands, products as well as those of competitors; they discuss, promote or demote products and services.

In Brian Soils own view “customer service will fuse with marketing to become a holistic inbound, outbound campaign of listening to and engaging with customers that will rewrite the rules of the game. And, most importantly, the lessons learned in the field will be fed into the marketing department to create and run more intelligent, experienced, and real world initiatives across all forms of marketing, PR, sales, and advertising.”

As a consequence marketing and PR activities are converging with on-line technology to create an ultimate and maximised communication strategy to fully grapple with the power of the new social web with its social media relations, brands are now starting to investing in their corporate social map. A vital question managers should be asking themselves as they set out to the task of managing their brands and reputation is how can companies move from a transactional paradigm to a new relational paradigm where branding management is co-shared.

Somehow the answer to this question may lie in the fact that communication is becoming what it was back in the beginning – a dialogue instead of a monologue. If markets are conversations then marketing and public relations have to embody these new social media values and the new rules of engagement where according to Solis marketing and PR will be participating rather dictating.


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