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Sandy Wilson, Public Relations, Media Relations, Communications in Jacksonville, Florida

Wilson Communicates Eco-Blog

Thinking Green ~ Eco-Blog ~ Highlighting green resources and social media resources for individuals and businesses.
Tags >> Twitter

March has been a busy month for me! Working on client websites and building strategic social media channels has been great fun and sometimes challenging - however, in the process, I've neglected my little blog. 

March Tip:

Need help managing your Twitter account? Here's pretty much everything you could possible need to move Tweetward: The Only Twitter Application List You'll Ever Need.    I really love Twitter Keys, though I wouldn't use this for business Tweets. 

A lot of folks have asked me recently about the value of using Twitter for business.  Twitter is not for every person or business so the value of leveraging  Twitter truly must be determined on an individual basis.

That said: in almost all cases, Twitter is a great way to connect with targeted media.  In fact, you can identify some of your your media sources by researching the directories listed in the link above. 

This process also requires good old-fashioned research.  Identify your target media outlets.  Visit their websites.  Discover their Twitter identities.  Follow them.  Pay attention to their posts.  Does your business have information or services that appears to be a good fit for their readers?  Begin conversations.  Post resources.

It's a simple process that requires time, research, & thoughtful planning -  which brings me back to my little neglected blog. 

So, I've been busy but I'm back.


When a Click Isn't Just a Click

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I've noticed a trend on Twitter lately where folks post an article link that supposedly drives readers to an article but the link actually drives readers through a Facebook page that only displays the article "teaser"and where the reader finally accesses a link to the article in question.



I'm tired just writing that. What in the world are you thinking? Are you actually trying to use Facebook as an aggregator?



If you want to drive folks to your Facebook page, then DRIVE FOLKS TO YOUR FACEBOOK PAGE and let folks know that you're driving them there.  Most folks use FB to drive folks to their content pages not the other way around. Which social media genius sold you this bill of goods?



It's extremely annoying to land on a basically useless page to finally access an article that may have been interesting. It's a virtual bait and switch and is not good for your business because regular old folks like me eventually quit clicking on your links.  More important, folks like me quit trusting you.



I'm not a ranter, but consider this a rant.


Everything Old Is Virtually New

Posted by:

I stumbled on this very cool Elon University website:  Imagining the Internet: A History and Forecast this past weekend.

"The Imagining the Internet Center's mission is to explore and provide insights into emerging network innovations, global development, dynamics, diffusion and governance. Its research holds a mirror to humanity's use of communications technologies, informs policy development, exposes potential futures and provides a historic record. It works to illuminate issues in order to serve the greater good, making its work public, free and open."

I especially enjoyed reading the 2008 Survey.  Air-typing, ever evolving mobile platforms, and virtual integrity and forgiveness?  (Read the survey.) We still have a lot of work to do to produce the 2008 Survey's anticipated results by 2020.

Communications professionals have been circling around virtual conversations for over a decade and three elements remain constant:  To communicate successfully online requires independent thinking, thoughtful action and the ability to write well.

On Twitter, I observe a ton of folks who seem to automatically Re-tweet posts and suspect they don't investigate the linked content contained therein.  Readers often click through those links to a sales/marketing landing page with an introduction to the article and another link that directs the reader to the actual article or web page.

I'm still forming my opinion of "content aggregators" and will Re-tweet posts from a variety of news sites because they offer free valuable resources for readers. That said, several "content aggregator" sites seem to be managed by folks whose main focus is to filter  readers through a website designed to sell something/anything and I do have an issue with *that* as my time - like yours, no doubt - is precious.  I often wonder how others feel about being manipulated in this way?

I guess this leads us back to Elon University's prediction of  virtual  integrity and forgiveness : )


I love Jacksonville.com - the Times-Union online paper.


They added me to their Twitter Business List.

 

What's not to love? 


I'm just back from IABC's 2009 Social Media Conference and am playing catch up.



Go to my Twitter.com page @sandyawilson for a collection of Social Media resources that I found online today.  More later.



Speaking of:  I literally stumbled on a Social Media Conference going on right NOW in California. Attendees are doing a great job illustrating the conference topic through ongoing tweets and streaming video - or they *had* streaming video going @TimMoore.  The video stream is quite the Panopticon and really well-done.  

 


For me, Twitter is a communications platform offering endless opportunities to send a message to a target audience AND throw this message up against the wall to see what sticks.

A quick way to measure Twit-cess: Your target audience will respond to a successful Tweet via Direct Message (or text or email or even a phone call) or by Re-Tweeting your message.  Your Wall Splat audience will respond by becoming a Follower after your Tweet.  Simple, right? 

So, why not add Twitter in your corporate marketing mix?  Not all companies should spend time and money on Twitter, but they must use their own critical thinking skills to determine if they should spend a portion of their marketing/advertising budget on any available Social Media platforms.  Public relations consultants  can help companies make informed decisions by providing information about Social Media options and helping companies think through possible Social Media strategies, including whether or not Twitter should be part of their communications/marketing mix.

Despite what you've heard and will continue to hear, there are no Social Media rules.  Your strategy works if it works for YOU.  Common sense, critical thinking, goals and benchmarking are key to developing and implementing a successful Social Media plan, whether you plan to leverage Twitter, Facebook, YouTube or other emerging platforms.  While it's smart to pay  attention to the plethora of commentary, articles, blogs, etc. to help you make informed decisions, I personally don't believe in paying for white papers or for opinions.  It makes more sense to me to conduct your own research and determine your own strategy.  A good PR consultant will help you think through the process, not hand you a set of rules that may or may not have worked for another company. 

I've gathered a list of quotes that reference multiple perspectives on the development of the World Wide Web and its relationship to  communication and economy.  It appears in reading these quotes that determining how best to leverage and monetize emerging media platforms  among communications and public relations professionals is an ongoing disconnect - I mean, discussion.

It seems that the most successful communicators are the ones who throw the traditional "rules" out the Window instead of trying to force emerging platforms to fit into outdated "rules."  Successful communicators and public relations  professionals will shift the way they think about emerging communications platforms and begin to think around and through these targeted and Wall Splat opportunities for the benefit of their clients.     

 

History of the World Wide Web in 17 Quotes:


If I had taken a proprietary control of the Web, then it would never have taken off. People only committed their time to it because they knew it was open, shared: that they could help decide what would happen to it next... and I wouldn't be raking off 10% - Tim Berners-Lee (World Wide Web Founder)


First, we thought the PC was a calculator.  Then we found out how to turn numbers into letters with ASCII - and we thought it was a typewriter.  Then we discovered graphics, and we thought it was a television.  With the World Wide Web, we've realized it's a brochure.  - Douglas Adams (Author)


The Internet is becoming the town square for the global village of tomorrow. - Bill Gates (Microsoft Chairman)


The Internet is just a world passing around notes in a classroom. - Jon Stewart (Political satirist, writer, television host, actor, media critic)


The Internet is an important cultural phenomenon, but that doesn't excuse its failure to comply with basic economic laws.  The problem is that it was devised by a bunch of hippie anarchists. - Thomas Nolle (Founder and president of CIMI Corporation)


The Internet is based on a layered, end-to-end model that allows people at each level of the network to innovate free of any central control.  By placing intelligence at the edges rather than control in the middle of the network, the Internet has created a platform for innovation.  - Vinton Cerf (Computer Scientist often called the father of the internet, Google Internet Evangelist)


The Internet isn't free.  It just has an economy that makes no sense to capitalism. - Brad Shapcott(Internet Product Architect and Software Engineer)


Five years ago, we thought of the Web as a new medium, not a new economy. - Clement Mok(Digital Pioneer)


Sooner or later the Internet will become profitable.  It's an old story played before by canals, railroads and automobiles. - Paul A. Samuelson (Economist)


If you look at our corporate culture, we've always had a customer obsession, and we've always been pioneering.- Jeff Bezos (Amazon.com)


I think Amazon is the preeminent pioneer in building a new way of doing commerce: personalized, database-driven commerce, where the big value is not in the purchase fulfillment, but in knowing as much about a customer base of ten or twenty million people as a corner store used to know about a customer base of a few hundred. In today's mass-merchandising world, that's largely gone; Amazon is trying to use computer technology to re-establish it.- Andrew Grove (Intel Corp.)


When I started eBay, it was a hobby, an experiment to see if people could use the Internet to be empowered through access to an efficient market. I actually wasn't thinking about it in terms of a social impact. It was really about helping people connect around a sphere of interest so they could do business.- Pierre Omidyar (E-bay Founder)












I’m writing an article about generational communications as it applies to the evolution of business communication and would love to hear your thoughts.



I'm not interested in a positive vs. negative dichotomy.  I'm specifically interested in the communications, public relations and marketing arenas.  I'm looking for observations from fellow communications professionals as to how you believe age affects or does not affect the way you communicate with your colleagues.



I'd also love hear your thoughts on the relationship between age and (whatever your definition is of) professional behavior.  



I've learned that I'll have a more productive experience with the incoming generation of media professionals when I communicate via SMS or Twitter.  Specific example: when I'm looking for media coverage for a client and the media contact is under 35, I'm going to text or direct message the information and follow up with an email (or flip that).



Click on Contact Us  and share your multi-generational communications and public relations experiences.  Be sure to include whether you'd like to be quoted or prefer to remain anonymous.


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