tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24383767041372109192024-03-14T06:11:59.367+08:00PR AdvocateThe trials and tribulations of a PR expat in Hong KongPR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.comBlogger51125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-49393166273422632482010-10-29T10:01:00.003+08:002010-10-29T10:04:01.484+08:00Twitter RevolutionHere is a link to an interesting article by Malcolm Gladwell in The New Yorker on the passivity of the Twitter Revolution.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/10/04/101004fa_fact_gladwell">http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/10/04/101004fa_fact_gladwell</a><br /><br />As usual Gladwell illustrates his opinion with colourful examples. I've always been a fan of Gladwell, but I don't agree with him on this one.PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-5915761151054840422010-10-29T09:50:00.002+08:002010-10-29T09:55:45.200+08:00Socialising your CEOWeber Shandwick recently released research about socialising your CEO, which found that 64% of CEO's are not engaging with stakeholders online. Obviously, online engagement is not for everyone, but in an online world, we should see the number of social CEO's increase over the next few years.<br /><br />Below is the announcement for your reading pleasure - one section definately worth reading is the 'How to socialise your CEO' section.<br /><br /><strong>64 Percent of the World’s Largest Company CEOs are Not Social Online, According to New Weber Shandwick Study</strong><br /><br />Social CEOs Have Higher Reputational Status, Use Multi-Channels, Are More U.S.-Based and Are Longer-Tenured<br /><br />In a new study released today, global public relations firm Weber Shandwick found that the majority of CEOs from the world’s largest companies—64 percent—are not social, that is, they are not engaging online with external stakeholders. “Socializing Your CEO: From (Un)Social to Social” examines the publicly visible communications activities of CEOs in the world’s top 50 companies.<br /><br />“Strong evidence exists that CEOs are not silent in these turbulent times. They are extensively quoted in the business press, frequently deliver keynote speeches at conferences and participate in business school forums. But when it comes to digital engagement externally, CEOs are not yet fully socialized, often with good reason,” said Leslie Gaines-Ross, Weber Shandwick’s chief reputation strategist and online reputation expert. “As we continue to track the rise of the Social CEO and chief executives become more comfortable with the new media, we expect that this will change and change fast.”<br /><br /><strong>Limited Pool of Social CEOs</strong><br />Over nine out of 10 CEOs in the world’s top 50 companies (93 percent) communicated externally in traditional fashion: 93 percent were quoted in the major global news and business publications and 40 percent participated in speaking engagements to an external, non-investor, audience.<br /><br />Online communications did not fare as well among this executive set. Most CEO online visibility is limited to what is said about them on Wikipedia, the web-based collaborative encyclopedia which CEOs and their communications teams are not responsible for. Removing Wikipedia leaves the online CEO space rather barren—only 36 percent are engaged through their company websites or in social media channels in any way (e.g., CEO messages on company websites, video/podcasts on company websites or company YouTube channels, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace, company-affiliated blogs).<br /><br />[Note: The analysis did not examine how CEOs are engaging internally using social media. It should be noted that this is a critical form of communications to align employees and distribute news and information.]<br /><br /><strong>Who Is a Social CEO?</strong><br />The research identified the following characteristics of Social CEOs:<br />· Social CEOs lead companies with higher reputational status. Most admired company CEOs in our study had greater online visibility profiles than less admired company CEOs (41 percent vs. 28 percent, respectively).<br />· Social CEOs are multi-users. When they engage online, social CEOs employ more than one channel, with 72 percent using more than one channel (on average, social CEOs use 1.8 channels).<br />· Social CEOs are more likely to represent American companies. CEOs of companies with headquarters in the U.S. are more likely to engage online than those in EMEA (60 percent vs. 12 percent, respectively). Although the sample sizes of CEOs in Asia Pacific and Latin America are too small to allow for reliable comparison, indications are that they too are at low levels.<br />· Social CEOs are more tenured. Newer CEOs (3 years or less) are less likely than those in their middle (3 to 5 years) or later period of their tenures (more than 5 years) to engage online—30 percent vs. 38 percent vs. 43 percent, respectively.<br /><br /><strong>Which Online Channels are Social CEOs Using?</strong><br />When CEOs go Social, they are most likely to post non-shareholder letters or messages on their company websites (28 percent). This content is primarily focused on corporate and CEO leadership news. Social CEOs are next most likely to be featured in video or podcasts on their corporate websites or company YouTube channels (18 percent). Less than 10 percent of the CEOs analyzed used Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn or participated in external blogs. "It’s not surprising that CEOs are less inclined to participate in social media given the perceived risk and time commitment required to engage in two-way conversations," said Chris Perry, president of Weber Shandwick Digital Communications. "What's surprising, however, is how few CEOs are using social technologies as mediums to share information and company perspective. These are potentially powerful tools for real-time communication."<br /><br /><strong>Why are CEOs Not More Social?</strong><br />According to Gaines-Ross, “There are several reasons why CEOs are not more Social. Time is better spent with customers and employees, their reputations are at an all-time low among the general public, the return on investment has not yet been proven, legal counsel tends to caution against it and anything that smacks of ‘celebrity CEO’ is a no-win.”<br /><br /><strong>Why Socialize Your CEO?</strong><br />There are also solid reasons why CEOs should engage online. ”In this increasingly digital age, CEOs should embrace the value of connectivity with customers, talent and other important stakeholders online. With 1.96 billion Internet users around the world, CEOs should be where people are watching, reading, chatting and listening,” said Gaines-Ross.<br /><br />“Our analysis of leading CEOs around the globe revealed that traditional media still remains the preferred outlet for CEO external communications. What is changing is how CEOs are slowly coupling their traditional media communications with social networks and channels where they can reach more stakeholders and give their companies a much needed human face or connection,” says Gaines-Ross. “The nearly four in 10 Social CEOs in Weber Shandwick’s comprehensive analysis may be trailblazers now but in short order, will be expected from leaders who want to portray their companies as transparent, accessible and trustworthy. The Social CEO will one day be commonplace.”<br /><br /><strong>How to Socialize Your CEO</strong><br />Weber Shandwick recommends “six rules of the road” for CEOs to enhance their social reputation and interactivity: <br /><br />1. Identify best online practices of your peers and best-in-class social CEO communicators. Then establish and stretch your own comfort zone.<br />2. Start with the fundamentals (e.g., online videos or photos). Inventory and aggregate existing executive communications for repurposing online.<br />3. Simulate or test-drive social media participation. Understand what you’re getting into before you go live. Start internally although recognize that internal employee communications spreads externally seamlessly.<br />4. Decide upfront how much time you can commit to being Social. It can range from once a week to once a month to once a quarter or less often. Be your own best judge of what feels right.<br />5. Craft a narrative that captures the attention of audiences that matter and humanizes your company’s reputation. <br />6. Accept the fact that Getting Social needs to be part of your corporate reputation management program. Purposefully manage your social reputation as well as your corporate reputation.<br /><br />Weber Shandwick provides counsel on how CEO and corporate reputations are best built in today’s shifting business landscape. Included in that counsel and research-backed advice are recommendations on building Social CEO reputations both internally and externally. For more information on how to communicate in ways that keep customers and other audiences buying your products and hearing your messages, please visit Weber Shandwick at <a href="http://www.webershandwick.com/">www.webershandwick.com</a> or download the executive summary <a href="http://www.webershandwick.com/resources/ws/flash/Socializing_Your_CEO_FINAL.pdf">here</a>.PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-45620502678058130392010-03-22T13:56:00.002+08:002010-03-22T13:59:27.424+08:00Foursquare – the game that has everyone all a twitterAdaline Lau, reporter at Marketing Interaactive Magazine, examines the potential benefits of FourSquare as a business tool. See whether you agree with the experts' opinion:<br /><br /><strong>Foursquare – the game that has everyone all a twitter</strong><br />If you are at an industry party filled with digital gurus, but not sure how to break the ice, try this one liner: "Will you be my stalker? I mean foursquare friend!"<br /><br />A recent Mindshare report exploring the foursquare phenomenon, predicted that if 2009 was the year of Twitter, 2010 may be the year of foursquare.<br /><br />In January this year, foursquare went global, introducing the ability to add places and check in from anywhere in the world.<br /><br />Tech blogger Scobleizer, says foursquare has some 300,000 users, while its rival Gowalla has more than 100,000 and MyTown at more than 600,000. So do marketers need to start taking notice of this new web fad? The answer, says Mindshare, is a definite maybe.<br /><br />Its report states foursquare itself may not end up being a world beater on the scale of Twitter, let alone Facebook or Google, but the cultural and behavioural trends it showcases could have a lasting impact on how we interact with each other and with brands.<br /><br />What's worth noting is foursquare has announced a number of partnership deals with major players in a wide range of sectors, including Bravo TV, restaurant-rating service, Zagat, film producers Warner Brothers, TV channel HBO and The New York Times. In the UK, it has partnered with Debenhams and Domino's Pizza.<br /><br />The partnership will see the pizza chain offer free pizza to the "mayor" of its branches every week. Those who check in at Debenham on its Oxford Street store on Fridays will get free coffee.<br />Three digitally savvy agency professionals using foursquare in Hong Kong argue the "stickiness" or foursquare is hard to ignore, but the benefits to marketers is still emerging.<br /><br />Brandon Cheung, strategic planning director for wwwins Counsulting, describes the tool as a location-based game that introduces the concept of "check-ins" to real- life locations. It uses the GPS in your phone to locate you and the people and places around you. The key difference here is that location tagging is controlled by the users as opposed to auto-tagging such as Google Latitude.<br /><br />"The user opt-in approach is preferred to the follow-me-everywhere-like-a-stalker method of location tagging," Cheung says.<br /><br />By inviting players to check in to their favourite locations, Cheung says a crowd-sourced list of businesses is created in each city where foursquare is played. The location-based list creates a new opportunity for local businesses to reach out and seek consumers actively.<br /><br />Nic Tinworth, digital director at Fluid, which is implementing the tool to its sister company Graze Cafe, adds that foursquare is a "sticky" mobile social network as it gives you bragging rights to become "mayor" at a venue and gets you invested after the initial "fun" aspect of gaining points.<br /><br />But what are the benefits? Yeelim Lee, account supervisor at Weber Shandwick, says the location-based service allows you to monitor where people are visiting. If you're the marketing director for a chain of restaurants, bars or tourist attractions, you can monitor the footfall and who your customers are.<br /><br />He says it is very useful intelligence as it allows you to offer promotions directly to users or reward loyal customers. With foursquare, the action of internet search has moved beyond the local search engine. Cheung explains that as consumers roam the streets with mobile phones, foursquare can deliver a relevant list of friends and places in their location.<br /><br />Given the nature of local businesses, he says foursquare provides more benefit as a sales driver. Listing yourself in foursquare is similar to placing a promoter in front of your store or restaurant to capture nearby foot traffic. Besides, the success metrics is measured by how many people have checked in or recommended your location on foursquare - a direct link between digital interaction and physical action.<br /><br />Other benefits as Tinworth points out include the ability to gather behaviourial data such as who is going where, when and for how long. Some third-party developers are creating new sites to introduce behaviour-based offers and this holds expansion promises for foursquare as developers will increase buzz via their APIs.<br /><br />Another key benefit is to enable hyper target messaging and offers. For example, Starbucks can send you a special offer-notice for a free drink if you check into a bookstore nearby, via the "special nearby" alerts.<br /><br /><strong>Challenges ahead</strong><br />Cheung says getting listed takes a few seconds, but what needs to be planned out is your business approach to creating incentives around the game.<br /><br />"Some marketers may not be ready for this yet, but those that move first will gain an advantage from the passionate first-mover audience," he says.<br /><br />Tinworth is more concerned that people might not be ready for a location-based application as a lot of people are private and those on Twitter and Facebook might get annoyed by the constant "I am here, doing this" status check-in messages.<br /><br />He says if foursquare is to succeed, it will need an explosion of users to make it worthwhile for the average internet user to feel compelled to register and see what the fuss is about. He adds that foursquare must address safety concerns raised after a Dutch website provided minute-by-minute updates on people who had left their house.<br /><br />In Hong Kong, Starstreet has listed all of its tenant locations in foursquare, but the promotional angle is still being co-ordinated.<br /><br />At Graze Cafe located in Sheung Wan, it hopes to convert the virtual community into real customers by incorporating foursquare in its marketing initiatives.<br /><br />While the mobile marketing potential is obvious, whether or not marketers see value in another fad in the fast-moving online world is yet to be seen.PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-52684023330776224882010-02-24T14:36:00.004+08:002010-02-24T14:39:39.709+08:00Corporates Using Social MediaThis article in Marketing Magazine regarding research conducted by Burson-Marsteller on corporate enterprises using social media across US, EMEA and Asia Pacific makes for some good reading:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.marketing-interactive.com/news/17999">http://www.marketing-interactive.com/news/17999</a><br /><br />Key points include:<br /><br />- Almost 80% of the Fortune Global 100 companies are using at least one of the top social media platforms<br />- About 65% of the Fortune Global 100 have active accounts on Twitter, 54% have a Facebook fan page, 50% a YouTube channel, and 33% employ corporate blogs<br />- Corporate Twitter accounts averaged 1,489 followers, while each Facebook fan page averaged 40,884 fans<br /><br />So, it's plain to see that many corporates are fully on the bandwagon and using social media tactics. The question now is, how many have a strategy?PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-69685314759048922732010-01-29T14:53:00.004+08:002010-01-29T15:03:41.309+08:005 Ways Apple’s iPad Will Impact B2B Marketing<a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/S2KH_PmqOXI/AAAAAAAAAIY/69PQ0LLmV7w/s1600-h/apple-wallpaper-xp.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5432053621152430450" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 320px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 240px" alt="" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/S2KH_PmqOXI/AAAAAAAAAIY/69PQ0LLmV7w/s320/apple-wallpaper-xp.jpg" border="0" /></a><br /><br />I really liked this take on the Apple iPad launch which comes from <a href="http://socialmediab2b.com/">socialmediaB2B.com</a> blog. It looks at the impact of the device for maketers and sales from a B2B perspective, rather than the much preferred consumer perspective. I really didn't have too much to add, so have reposted the article in full. Hope you enjoy it too:<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><p></p><p></p><a href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SocialMediaB2b/~3/zTxLLMax3e8/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email">5 Ways Apple’s iPad Will Impact B2B Marketing</a><br />Posted: 27 Jan 2010 04:57 PM PST<br /><br />Before you come through the computer and smack me, yes, I am adding to the endless amount of blog posts all dedicated to Apple’s newly released <a href="http://www.apple.com/ipad">iPad</a>. With this tablet device Apple is trying to create a new category of portable computing device. How will this device impact your planning as a B2B marketer?<br /><br />Initially this device won’t be a major factor to B2B marketers, because even if it is very successful, it will take 6 to 12 months to have enough devices in use to warrant attention. The device, which won’t even be out for a couple of months, offers users the ability to consum all types of media on the go using a software interface that many people are accustomed to due to their use of iPhones and iPod touches. Starting this summer B2B marketers need to begin looking at their web analytics to determine how many people visiting online sites are using this device, as well as the iPhone.<br /><br />5 Potential Impacts Of The iPad On B2B MarketingNew device and adoption aside, in the future this device, or one similar, could have several important impacts on digital B2B marketing. Now is the time to think ahead and position for these possible changes in your business.<br /><br />1. Improve Product Demos – The iPad will likely be most utilized in the business world for demonstrations. If you are a B2B company, especially a software company, this will be a great device to show off products and demonstrate new features. The iPad’s ability to display keynote presentations will also make it easy to shift from up-close demos or product sheets to slide presentations. I could see sales teams using this type of device to go over pricing and calculating business impacts of a product in real-time.<br /><br />2. Trade Show Info Capture – Speaking of sale people, I would imagine that we will see iPads in the hands of savvy B2B sales people at a variety of industry tradeshows. A device like this removes the need to get people into a booth and have them in front of a computer to get their contact information into a CRM tool. I can see companies developing internal applications for the iPad that can easily add people into remote CRM systems and enter them into giveaway contests at the booth.<br /><br />3. Less Flash Ads – An issue that some people have about this device is that it does not support Adobe Flash, a software that enables us to view many of the videos and advertisements on the web today. If devices without Flash like the iPad increase in popularity, it could motivate B2B marketers to produce less flash advertising, as it would be invisible to iPad and iPhone users.<br /><br />4. More Multimedia Content – Regardless of its success, the iPad reinforces a trend that shows the way people consume media is changing. People are becoming more accustomed to a multimedia experience. For example the New York Times on the iPad includes video clips in articles that are viewed on the device. As B2B marketers strive to remain effective story tellers, becoming multimedia focused will be key.<br /><br />5. Need For Customized Customer Experiences – With this new category of device, Apple has create yet another user experience to go along with the iPhone and traditional personal computers. The ways in which people interact with information on this type of device is different. Subsequently, B2B marketers need to plan digital experiences that are different for each device.<br /><br />Cool new gadgets don’t replace boring online content. Take time to ensure you are telling a compelling story online now, because as digital information consumption changes, so will your marketing executions.<br /><br />What do you think about the role of tablet computers in B2B companies?PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-40425978627013564322010-01-26T11:27:00.003+08:002010-01-26T11:31:15.529+08:00Is PR giving ‘Social Media’ a bad name?Here is my article that was published in the December / January issue of Marketing Magazine.<br /><br />I'd be interested to hear your thoughts!<br /><br /><strong>The bell has rung: social media play time is over.<br /></strong>Digital media is now a way of life for most, becoming a fundamental element of brand reputation management, yet the PR industry is still having trouble getting to grips with some of the fundamental basics. Play time is over and the industry needs to recognize the importance of digital communications. <br /><br />Given that PR people have always been experts at building advocates, much more so than other disciplines, this creates a huge opportunity for PR agencies. However, agencies must upgrade their staff skill sets if they are to capitalize and survive in the future. Agency bosses must take digital communications seriously by investing in the right staff and training existing staff so that social media is ingrained into the fabric of the agency. <br /><br />The social media pie is still relatively small in terms of revenue, but the pie is growing and clients are seeing it as a priority. A recent Forrester study, entitled ‘Global Social Media Planning Survey’, found that 53 per cent of marketing managers globally plan to increase their investment in social media. Bear in mind this was during a recession year! Furthermore, research conducted by Weber Shandwick across six major European markets, entitled ‘INLINE Communications’, found that online advocacy – defined as online user reviews and recommendations – has replaced recommendations from friends and family as the most influential source of information. Anectodal research confirms that Asian audiences are also relying more and more on internet dialogue for their information(while this isn’t Asian focused research, Weber Shandwick is working on this!). Therefore, creating an environment where conversations about your brand is encouraged and rewarded can play a key role in building your brand reputations. <br /><br /><strong>Social media smoke and mirrors?<br /></strong>There is a great deal of hype without any real social media proof points within the industry. Part of the blame lies with those agencies that have no expertise but pretend they do. Sadly, social media expertise is increasingly being ridiculed coming a bit of a joke as so- called ‘experts’ do not understand the relationship between social media and a brand’s business outcome. The ‘fakers’ are making money consulting brands about engaging customers and brandishing buzzwords like ‘transparency’, ‘authenticity’ and ‘blogger engagement’. But they are failing to demonstrate how social media channels can really help businesses achieve theirits goals, and as a result, causeing serious damage to the reputation of our industry.<br /><br />In addition, advertising, digital, media purchasing and PR agencies are all vying for ownership of the space. Of course, different disciplines will approach social media from different angles, but we need to consider which tactic/tool/platform/application in our toolbox will best help the client achieve its objectives. Agencies from different disciplines need to work better together to clearly define the use of social media for different objectives – whether it is to drive brand awareness, build communities of advocates, internal communications or to drive sales. By ceasing the bombardment of noise about social media and better aligning it to the overall strategy, clients will be clearer about how it will benefit them.<br /><br />Digital communications should not be about campaigns or projects, but an approach that requires long- term planning and commitment. The real benefit of digital communications is that you can build communities of advocates that genuinely like a brand. These advocates have their own network of communities that in turn learn about a brand in an organic way, which may influence them to become customers and advocates themselves. Most importantly, as advocates for a brand, they are engaged and are not just viewers.<br /><br /><strong>Social media in PR</strong><br />From a PR standpoint, social media should not be considered in a silo, but rather an additional weapon tool in our PR arsenalkit. We should not be talking about an online or offline approach, but rather an inline approach; a strategy that utilizes tools and tactics that best helps a business achieve its goals, whether it is online or offline. By adopting a response-oriented and lead generation approach to social media, we can help brands build communities of advocates, increase their customer/follower database, increase search traffic and, thus create more brand awareness, thought leadership, and all those things that help make brands exceptional.<br /><br />However, to do this, the PR industry as a whole, needs to build its own credibility to convincingly own its share of the pie. Agencies must develop expertise in PR and Digital – they are not mutually exclusive.! This year saw PR agencies taking the first step on the ladder by recruiting digital specialists. But this is just the first step. Agency bosses must continue to embed digital communication skills into the fabric of the agency, ensuring PR consultants are sufficiently trained in the new skills available to them and helping them to consider integrating digital channels as part of the work they are already doing. For example, let’s say a team is working on crisis communications on behalf of a client. Rather than just using traditional methods, they should also be thinking about the impact of online media and how social media channels can be used strategically. <br /><br />To all those PR agency heads, here are three suggestions you may wish to adopt as your New Year’s Resolutions:<br />- Eat more pie: Build the agency’s digital communications expertise to better consult clients <br />- Be more truthful to clients: Don’t be a social media faker. It harms the credibility of the industry as a whole, not just your agency<br />- Invest in staffHelp my staff more: PR as it was will be no longer.! Arm employees with the knowledge and skill- sets they need to consult clients in this ever evolvinge new world of communicationPR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-72781299184802276992010-01-05T10:00:00.002+08:002010-01-05T10:24:03.779+08:00Happy New Year<a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/S0KitSDOIEI/AAAAAAAAAIQ/FXGaXlBn7-0/s1600-h/Happy+New+Year.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5423075800130658370" style="FLOAT: right; MARGIN: 0px 0px 10px 10px; WIDTH: 150px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 113px" alt="" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/S0KitSDOIEI/AAAAAAAAAIQ/FXGaXlBn7-0/s320/Happy+New+Year.jpg" border="0" /></a><br />This is my first blog post in five months, and for this I am both ashamed and apologetic. I won’t be making any excuses, but rather will say that this year I will try much much harder.<br /><br />The second half of 2009 was very interesting, wasn’t it? Social media related enquiries continued to soar from all sectors and some were even spending some marketing dollars on it. Traditional PR programmes started to embrace digital communications, with many organizations now incorporating an element of social media tactics into activities. On the other side of the fence, bloggers and social media platforms became more savvy and better understood the potential influence they have for brands and as such changed the way they work.<br /><br />I won’t try and pretend I know what will happen in 2010, but a few things are clear in the world of PR. Below are my top three observations on the way things are moving:<br /><br />1. Any agency or PR consultant who still does not want to, or cannot, embrace social media to some degree will be out of the job within 5 years (probably less). PR is about creating, communicating with and influencing advocates and more than ever this is moving towards digital.<br /><br />2. Any journalist who does not, or cannot, embrace social media to some degree will be out of the job within 5 years (probably less). Most of them already have done, using social media platforms for research, networking, raising their profiles etc.<br /><br />3. Any media outlet that does not, or cannot, embrace digital communications will cease to exist within 5 years (probably less). Most publications now have some sort of online presence whether it be a standard website or a fully fledged online only version, but some smaller publications are still in the dark ages, and for them I fear.<br /><br />On a final note, I just wanted to say that my background is in traditional PR and I hoped my blog would reflect this. But more and more, I write about digital communications. This is due to the way my role has been evolving, but I have not forgotten my roots!<br /><br />Till next time….<br /><div></div>PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-89079819099344681062009-07-28T17:20:00.002+08:002009-07-28T17:34:32.699+08:00Rogue Traders<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/Sm7FT21KFdI/AAAAAAAAAII/ZrwVL8n96jU/s1600-h/Watchdog.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5363441151171499474" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 127px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 85px" alt="" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/Sm7FT21KFdI/AAAAAAAAAII/ZrwVL8n96jU/s320/Watchdog.jpg" border="0" /></a><br /><div><div><p><span style="font-family:arial;">A quick search for social media consultant (or something similar) will bring back page after page of self proclaimed digital media experts on Twitter, Facebook and blogging platforms. Since the beginning of the year, I have noticed that there has been a surge of people describing themselves as experts or gurus in this space. This is no surprise given the proliferation of social media as a legitimate communication channel for brands.</span></p><p><span style="font-family:Arial;"></span><span style="font-family:arial;"><br />There are numerous online guides and presentations detailing how to ‘brand yourself on Facebook’ or ‘Get real RoI from Twitter’. Most of which are very slick and would have me reaching for my wallet!</p><p><br />What concerns me is that a handful of these ‘experts’ have more resemblance to the dodgy plumber who will do the job at half the price than a seasoned professional. Yes, they have a Facebook profile. Yes, they have a Twitter account. Yes, they have a blog. Yes, they may even dabble on a few discussion forums from time to time. But is this all that is required to counsel brands on building their online brand reputation or manage an online crisis situation?<br /><br />Some of these rogue traders are selling digital PR campaigns to clients via a slick presentation that demonstrates their agency is on the pulse with the latest platform or application, but when it comes to the execution of the work, they don’t know where to start. This ultimately leads to clients and industries becoming even more skeptical about digital PR and whether it is really worth investing in. </p><p><br />I regularly talk to real social media / peer media / digital communication experts and they very rarely call themselves experts. Yet, they have worked with household brands, executed creative and effective campaigns and learnt their trade. They have gotten their feet wet by actually executing campaigns and, sometimes, learning from their mistakes. More action less talk!<br /><br />The industry (and clients) needs to be aware of these rogue traders. They are giving the real professionals a bad name. They are slowing down the adoption of a legitimate communication channel. They are holding back the potential of digital communications! </p><p>Rant over!</span></p></div></div>PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-43681516568910231762009-06-05T11:31:00.003+08:002009-06-05T11:37:12.404+08:00Social media in Asia<span style="font-family:arial;">It's been a long time since my last post. The reason is that the sheer number of social media related enquiries I have been received over the last few months has increased dramatically. This is good, not only from a business stand point, but also from the fact that social media is being seriously considered by organisations in various sectors. </span><br /><span style="font-family:arial;"></span><br /><span style="font-family:arial;">However, see below for a Q&A interview about social media in Asia that I conducted with Media Magazine that may be of interest.</span><br /><span style="font-family:arial;"></span><br /><span style="font-family:arial;"><strong>(1) Which are the key social media tracking tools (paid and unpaid) that you use, and why? How do they compare in terms of (a) price, (b) functionality and (c) ease of use.<br /></strong>We have always advocated the combined use of paid and free tools. Radian6 is one paid tool that is used globally by our agency, in conjunction with free online tools such as Technorati, BlogPulse, Twitscoop amd Twitter Grader amongst others, depending on the objectives and country. Each of the mentioned tools have their strengths and weaknesses and play a part in our monitoring process, however there is no one single tool that is able to meet all our requirements. For instance, many free online tools do not have double-byte functionality that allows us to track Chinese language.<br /><br />Radian6 is one of the most sophisticated tools available, and Weber Shandwick has a special partnership in which we’re working very closely to make it even better. For example, we recently added Asian language capabilities. </span><br /><br /><strong><span style="font-family:arial;">(2) What are the challenges and pitfalls involved in using the tools described in (1) to track social media?</span></strong><br /><span style="font-family:arial;">Each country in Asia has its own set of unique user characteristics, which can vary as much as the countries themselves. For instance BBS sites are very popular in China, discussion forums dominate Hong Kong while blogging leads the way in Korea. So, clients interested in their online presence or reputation across Asia will need to understand local nuances before embarking on a project.<br /><br />I am not aware of any single tool on the market that allows us to automate the dissection of data to meet client needs. Most tools are able to track conversation trends, capture conversations from different sources and measure share of voice but clients often need more than this rudimentary information. They often require sentiments specific to products, and insights into key influencers, their sentiment and who they are able to influence.<br /><br />That said, social media tracking tools are in their infancy and monitoring companies continue to invest heavily in the development of advanced systems that meet increasingly complex business needs. Weber Shandwick remains close to these developments and we continue to look for the best possible solution to meet our own clients’ diverse and very specific needs. </span><br /><br /><strong><span style="font-family:arial;">(3) To what extent can you really automate tools? How important is the human element and can you provide any examples of this?</span></strong><br /><span style="font-family:arial;">Human intervention is crucial to any accurate and in-depth analysis. Whilst automated tools provide content, it is the human element that provides context. It is precisely for that reason that firms like Weber Shandwick are engaged to both source and interpret data in a way that allows us to define a strategic approach to stakeholder interaction. For example:<br /><br />Data searches will often contain inaccuracies due to strength of key words, industry terminology and variations in vocabulary. Without it you simply won’t garner insights and understanding of the data;<br /><br />Automated tools can only present raw data. It requires industry expertise to provide in-depth analyses and insight when interpreting the conversations. Clients require content rich analyses and strategic counsel on how the online conversations are affecting their brand, which only comes from consultants with an understanding of the client or industry. Clients in healthcare, technology and even financial services all have their own terminology that may seem alien to an outsider. <br /><br />For example, our Hong Kong office recently conducted an online landscape audit for a healthcare client in the dialysis industry. We simply would not have been able to provide the in-depth analyses and counsel without consulting colleagues in that industry. This makes agencies with a deep bench across industries very important.</span><br /><br /><strong><span style="font-family:arial;">(4) Recent research (from Weber Shandwick) reveals that Asian CEOs are considerably less concerned about their online reputations. Why is this finding of concern - and why is social media monitoring important in this context? Do you have any specific examples?</span></strong><br /><span style="font-family:arial;">This issue needs to be looked at in the wider context. I understand from the research that Asian CEOs are not ‘unconcerned’ with their online reputation, it’s that there is a lower level of ‘realisation’ compared to some Western countries. According to commScore, 35% of the social networking population is based in Asia, and CEOs here are quickly realising that this entire area will play a large role in their future success. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:arial;">So you could say that Asian CEOs are quickly coming around to realising the potential of the online medium and they are amongst the most prolific users in terms of using the internet to measure reputations of competitors and business partners. There is a slight disconnect between what they think is happening and what actually is happening. But, it would also be fair to say that globally, all communications specialists are on a steep learning curve regarding the significance and potential impact of digital communications on brand perception. Which is why business intelligence has, and will continue to, become so profoundly important to clients.</span><br /><br /><strong><span style="font-family:arial;">(5) What are the key things for a client to remember when:(a) selecting social media monitoring tools?(b) determining how best to put a monitoring plan into action?</span></strong><br /><span style="font-family:arial;">When selecting tools, do not underestimate the resource required to achieve quality and accurate analysis. To my knowledge, there is not one tool capable of delivering quality, in-depth and accurate analyses on its own. Like traditional media monitoring, the larger your target pool, the more resources it will take to get the job done well. There are companies out there who offer good services that can help companies shape their online strategy.<br /><br />When embarking on a monitoring programme, companies should be realistic of what is achievable with the available resources and determine the objectives from the offset. This will help them deliver on set criteria and allow measurement of the programme. </span><br /><br /><strong><span style="font-family:arial;">(7) How can social media help a brand's reputation - do you have any specific examples?</span></strong><br /><span style="font-family:arial;">Social media is as important to a brand’s reputation as traditional media. We know that some online personalities have as much influence as the most respected newspapers, magazines and broadcast programmes. To ignore the communities that are advocates—or badvocates—of your brand, product or service would be a huge mistake. <br /><br />In an era of transparency and authenticity, companies can use social media to build relationships and engage with brand advocates. Some brands have even turned potential crisis issues into a positive interaction with the end user via social media. No longer can brands hide behind a façade, like any great relationship, listening and communication is key.<br /><br />Examples of brands using social media to preserve, manage or build animage vary from the likes of Barack Obama (one of the most recognized global brands today) using Facebook, Myspace, YouTube and Twitter to win the presidential election, to Dell selling millions of dollars worth of products via Twitter. </span><br /><br /><strong><span style="font-family:arial;">(8) Do you have any other comments you'd like to add?</span></strong><br /><span style="font-family:arial;">The entire social media and digital communications space is evolving at an incredible pace. Trends change and it is difficult to predict what the next big thing will be because it will be the people’s choice. We are in the business of monitoring human behaviour and aligning this with how our clients communicate to their audiences, while choosing the right communication vehicles to deliver these messages. </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:arial;">Also, remember that each country has its nuances. Cultural differences, languages, and preferences vary from country to country, so it is important to remember that there is no one-size-fits-all solution.</span>PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-46132446047167929482009-04-16T10:09:00.003+08:002009-04-16T10:12:56.682+08:00PR in 140 characters (or less)Below is a short article I recently wrote for the Weber Shandwick Asia Pacific newsletter:<br /><br />No longer can brands bask in page-long text rich press releases, now, thanks to Twitter, brands need to communicate their messages succinctly in 140 characters or less. Although there are no official user numbers, it is rumoured that Twitter, the micro-blogging social media tool, has amassed around nine million users in its short existence.<br /><br />The broadcasting of short messages to global followers is the latest explosion on the social media scene, attracting everyone from the tech savvy digerati to celebrities and government officials. It has pushed the boundaries of internet conversation, allowing you to interact with celebrities as if they were your best friend (I recently engaged with Will Carling and Stephen Fry!).<br /><br />But beware, the darker side of Twitter enables viral word of mouth to spread faster than ever before – a crisis can now be communicated to a global audience in the time it takes to type 140 characters.<br /><br />As a result, the communications industry has quickly pounced on the potential of Twitter as a tool for broadcasting company messages, creating communities of advocates, engaging with consumers and even an avenue for crisis communications. To bring this to life, here is one recent example of crisis communications involving PepsiCo and an ill-thought-out advertising campaign.<br /><br />Huw Gilbert, communications manager for PepsiCo International, approved a Pepsi Max advertisement, which depicted a cartoon calorie committing suicide. Twitter users condemned the advertisement as insensitive to those affected by suicide and a raft of criticisms were posted. Gilbert soon caught on that Pepsi’s online reputation was taking a beating and “tweeted” the following public apology:<br /><br /><em>“We agree this creative is totally inappropriate; we apologise and please know it won’t run again.”</em><br /><br />Several critics saw Gilbert’s tweet and one user responded:<br /><br /><em>“Thank you...for having the guts to get on Twitter on behalf of Pepsi and give us an update on the suicide ad.”</em><br /><br />This example highlights how companies that have a Twitter account are better prepared to respond when something goes wrong. In an era where authenticity and transparency are vital to combat skepticism, this type of direct engagement can preserve online corporate reputation.<br /><br />Other well known brands on Twitter include Starbucks, Amazon, Gartner and Dell. There are a growing number of brands using Twitter to communicate messages, promote products and provide customer service.<br /><br />Another example is Bob Pearson, head of communities and conversations for Dell, who recently stated that his company had generated US$1 million in computer-related sales through alerts posted to Twitter alone.<br /><br />The wonders of Twitter do not stop there. We, as communications professionals, can leverage Twitter as a news monitoring tool, a crisis early warning system, a sales channel, a broadcast channel and an audience engagement tool. I consider Twitter as a vital tool in my job and make it my first port of call on my journey to work. We should be ready to identify potential problems and opportunities to effectively counsel our clients in a way that may be outside of our comfort zone.PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-64588972354954568582009-04-02T15:17:00.002+08:002009-04-02T15:20:53.406+08:00Social Networks More Popular Than Email<p>The latest data from Nielsen Online shows that two-thirds of the world’s Internet population visit social networking or blogging sites, accounting for almost 10% of all internet time. While search and destination sites remain the most popular online activities, social network and blog use exceeded that of e-mail, increasing their reach by 5.4% in the last twelve months.<br /><br />So, for companies looking to target consumers and end users, digital communications should be considered an important element of the communications mix. <br /><br />Other key findings include:</p><ol><li>Time spent on social network sites is also expanding: In 2008, social network activity accounted for one in every 15 online minutes. Today it accounts for one in every 11 (In Brazil the average is one of every four minutes and in UK it’s one in every six minutes.) </li><li>The social network and blogging audience is becoming more diverse in terms of age: The biggest increase in visitors during 2008 to social networks came from the 35-49 year old age group (+11.3 million).</li><li>Mobile is playing an increasingly important role in social networking<br />Nielsen found UK mobile Web users have the greatest propensity to visit a social network through their handset, with 23 percent (2 million people) doing so, compared to 19 percent in the US (10.6 million people). These numbers are a big increase over last year – up 249 percent in the UK and 156 percent in the US. </li></ol>PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-42357734778587736202009-04-02T15:14:00.001+08:002009-04-02T15:16:52.182+08:00Social Networking is Hot in Hong Kong<p>The latest figures released by Hitwise (an internet traffic monitoring company) shows that social networking is hot in Hong Kong.<br /><br />Social network Xanga (<a href="http://www.xanga.com/" target="_blank">www.xanga.com</a>)is currently ranked at #3 out of all sites monitored by Hitwise in Hong Kong, just behind Yahoo! Hong Kong (<a href="http://hk.yahoo.com/" target="_blank">hk.yahoo.com</a>) and Yahoo! Hong Kong Search (<a href="http://search.hk.yahoo.com/" target="_blank">search.hk.yahoo.com</a>). Xanga, is the highest-trafficked social networking site in Hong Kong, outperforming its competitors MySpace (<a href="http://www.myspace.com/" target="_blank">www.myspace.com</a>) and Bebo (<a href="http://www.bebo.com/" target="_blank">www.bebo.com</a>).</p><p>Over the past 12 months, Xanga's market share has rocketed from 2.49% to 3.22%, while traffic levels of its nearest competitor, Yahoo! Hong Kong Search, have stayed relatively stable. In addition, the Blogs sector has also experienced a phenomenal rise over the past year. Traffic to sites in the Hitwise Blogs & Personal Websites category in Hong Kong has increased by 52%. Xanga is the highest-ranked website in the Blogs category, consuming a massive 72.22% of market share.<br /><br />Digital communications is surely a cost effective way of reaching an audience that is far larger than the most popular newspapers and magazines - but why aren't more companies doing it?<br /></p>PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-3473146570178451622009-03-23T13:34:00.002+08:002009-03-23T13:36:38.975+08:00Is Twitter making you stand out?<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/Sccfx9mA-dI/AAAAAAAAAHw/Odo8kZWrwUU/s1600-h/dd.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5316252828342221266" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 118px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 94px" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/Sccfx9mA-dI/AAAAAAAAAHw/Odo8kZWrwUU/s320/dd.jpg" border="0" /></a> I’ve been avidly watching Mad Men of late and been transfixed more by the business related scenes than the other storylines (I’m really not bothered by who is sleeping with who, who had a baby or the incompetence of Betty Draper as a mother!).<br /><br /><p>This weekend Don Draper said something that really hit home with me, and I quote:<br /></p><br /><p><em>“The success of our clients is based on how we make them stand out from the crowd, not conforming to what everyone else is doing.”<br /></em></p><br /><p>When I heard this, I immediately thought of social media and how ‘experts’ are all advising their clients to get on Twitter, develop an online game, use social media press releases etc etc. Twitter is the current the fad, much like MySpace and Facebook before it. But what is the next great application we should be looking at to make our clients stand out?</p><br /><p><br />Digital/Social media is moving so quickly and in such unexpected directions that once you become familiar and jump on the current bandwagon, you worry that the next one is going to jump out and change the landscape again. How do we continuously make clients (or ourselves) stand out from the crowd?</p><br /><div></div>PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-56903895954817497632009-03-02T16:37:00.003+08:002009-03-02T16:40:51.060+08:00TwestivalHK a great success...see the video hereA great night was had by all at TwestivalHK on February 12. I, for one, was impressed to see the number of Twitterati come along to support Charity: Water.<br /><br /><object height="295" width="480"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/oi0P9gE5Mrg&hl=en&fs=1"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/oi0P9gE5Mrg&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="295"></embed></object>PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-15820245248265993892009-02-03T17:27:00.003+08:002009-02-03T17:34:51.676+08:00HK Twestival - join the unique eventI am proud to be helping out in the Hong Kong Twestival on February 12. It feels great to be part of a unique event that raises money for a great cause.<br /><br />Hong Kong has proudly joined the ranks of more than 175+ cities worldwide to participate in the world’s largest Tweetup for Charity: Water. You can see great promo videos and find out more information about the cause <a href="http://video.liveearth.org/">here</a>.<br /><br />Hong Kong’s Twestival will be held at the Yumla Bar (just off the top of Pottinger Street) on Thursday February 12. It kicks off at 8pm and will feature live music from N™ and a DJ. There is information on the Hong Kong event <a href="http://hongkong.twestival.com/">here</a>.<br /><br />Tickets are just HK$100 and include a free drink. All proceeds go to Charity: Water. To ensure that none of the money gets “lost”, tickets must be purchased from the Twestival charity website in advance. Space is limited, so get your tickets early <a href="http://hongkong.twestival.com/2009/01/29/ticket-is-ready-for-sale/">online</a>. (You need to have a Twitter account, so sign up and experience the joys of Twitter too!)<br /><br />I hope readers in Hong Kong can make it along on the night and join in the fun. <br /><br />See you therePR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-11815315407809736822009-01-30T12:12:00.001+08:002009-01-30T12:13:47.312+08:00Internet Yellow PagesThe variety of social and digital media platforms is growing at a phenomenal rate. Almost every day I hear about a new tool or application that is the ‘next big thing’. It is hard to keep track of everything that is happening and to keep up to date. <br /><br />A quick tip is to refer to ‘Go2Web20’ to update yourself with the latest buzz tools: <a href="http://www.go2web20.net/">http://www.go2web20.net/</a><br /><br />This tool provides a comprehensive directory of Web 2.0 platforms and gives you a synopsis of functionality. It's a great reference tool.PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-46924535513228388262009-01-29T17:44:00.002+08:002009-01-29T17:48:02.134+08:00Wikipedia becomes elite-istI’ve just come across this <a href="http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/01/23/wikipedia-may-restrict-publics-ability-to-change-entries/">article</a> in the New York Times about how <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page">Wikipedia</a> is considering changing the rules to editing and posting of information.<br /><br />In essence, the online encyclopedia is considering permitting only registered users to edit and post content. According to the article, because of ‘vandals’ changing facts on certain entries ‘"Wikipedia appears ready to introduce a system that prevents new and anonymous users from instantly publishing changes to the online encyclopedia."<br /><br />This will mean a much smaller group of people responsible for published content. This raises a few concerns for me.<br /><br />Firstly, it means the wide range of content will be reduced as the collective input will be smaller. Even if the content continues to be as wide ranging, it will surely take longer for the smaller group of people to come across new or interesting content. Secondly, we are relying on a smaller group of gatekeepers to decide what should / shouldn’t be published, what is fact or isn’t accurate and eventually what we actually see. Finally, part of the success of Wikipedia is based on user generated content from anyone who feels they have something interesting to share with the world or have a particular passion for a subject/issue. By introducing this type of ‘censorship’, is Wikipedia being elite-ist?PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-53647681424613149792009-01-02T16:14:00.000+08:002009-01-02T16:15:21.387+08:00Social networking sites on the rise...ComScore has just released its worldwide traffic stats for social networking sites for November (this does not include December). The top 20 sites and their unique visitor numbers are below:<br /><br />Interesting points to note:<br /><br />- The presence of regional sites like Baidu Space, hi5 and 56.com (China) and Orkut (India)<br />- Blogs are still very popular. Blogger tops the chart with an estimated 222 million unique worldwide visitors in November (up 44 percent from November, 2007). - Facebook is expected to dominate soon with 200 million unique visitors (up 116 percent).<br />- Facebook stands out as the social gorilla taking share from not only other social networks but blogs and other social media as well.<br />- Yahoo’s Flickr rises to No. 7, enforcing the popularity of photo sharing<br /><br />Top Social Media Sites (ranked by unique worldwide visitors November, 2008; comScore)<br /><br />1. Blogger (222 million)<br />2. Facebook (200 million)<br />3. MySpace (126 million)<br />4. Wordpress (114 million)<br />5. Windows Live Spaces (87 million)<br />6. Yahoo Geocities (69 million)<br />7. Flickr (64 million)<br />8. hi5 (58 million)<br />9. Orkut (46 million)<br />10. Six Apart (46 million)<br />11. Baidu Space (40 million)<br />12. Friendster (31 million)<br />13. 56.com (29 million)<br />14. Webs.com (24 million)<br />15. Bebo (24 million)<br />16. Scribd (23 million)<br />17. Lycos Tripod (23 million)<br />18. Tagged (22 million)<br />19. imeem (22 million)<br />20. Netlog (21 million)PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-15108143977666997732008-12-31T12:28:00.003+08:002008-12-31T12:31:04.620+08:00Top 5 Top 5’sThis time of year everyone is making lists of their most memorable moments of the year. So, here is my top 5 top 5 lists for 2008:<br /><br /><strong>Top 5 news stories (for me):</strong><br />1. The devastating Sichuan earthquake on May 12 2008<br />2. Barack Obama showing us all that ‘he can’ on November 4 2008<br />3. The collapse of Lehman Brothers on September 13 2008<br />4. The siege of Mumbai on November 26 2008<br />5. Russia’s attack on Georgia whilst the Beijing Olympic Ceremony was in full flow on August 8 2008<br /><br /><strong>Top 5 memorable 2008 events (for me and in no particular order):</strong><br />1. Beijing Olympics opening ceremony<br />2. Obama wins US elections<br />3. The credit crunch<br />4. George Bush dodges journalist shoe thrower<br />5. Lewis Hamilton winning the F1<br /><br /><strong>Top 5 2008 buzzwords:</strong><br />1. ‘Change’<br />2. ‘Credit Crunch’<br />3. ‘Rickrolled’<br />4. ‘Tweet’<br />5. ‘Social media’<br /><br /><strong>Top 5 videos (there are many I could have included, this was a hard category):</strong><br />1. Tina Fey as Sarah Palin (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FdDqSvJ6aHc">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FdDqSvJ6aHc</a>)<br />2. Sarah Silverman and Matt Damon (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WLG3S5WzHig">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WLG3S5WzHig</a>)<br />3. Jimmy Kimmel and Ben Affleck (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6lcmNaXmjvs&feature=related">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6lcmNaXmjvs&feature=related</a>)<br />4. George Bush dodges shoe-icide (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9uIj0YvDBKE">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9uIj0YvDBKE</a>)<br />5. Lewis Hamilton wins F1 on last lap (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l5g9ilv0UxM&feature=related">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l5g9ilv0UxM&feature=related</a>)<br /><br /><strong>Top 5 songs (this will reveal lots about my taste in music):</strong><br />1. Pocketful of sunshine – Natasha Bedingfield (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMRn2JcSrtg">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMRn2JcSrtg</a>)<br />2. Mercy – Duffy (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KE2orthS3TQ">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KE2orthS3TQ</a>)<br />3. Don’t stop the music – Rihanna (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsRWpK4pf90">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsRWpK4pf90</a>)<br />4. Hallelujah – Leonard Cohen (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJTiXoMCppw">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJTiXoMCppw</a>)<br />5. Hot n Cold – Katy Perry (<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMRn2JcSrtg">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KMRn2JcSrtg</a>)PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-4462358705959177802008-12-12T15:32:00.002+08:002008-12-12T15:38:23.699+08:00Rockin Robin, Tweet Tweet..<a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/SUIUzKKegDI/AAAAAAAAAHY/kdnXTKWT9hw/s1600-h/Twitter.gif"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5278804582365823026" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 200px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 50px" alt="" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/SUIUzKKegDI/AAAAAAAAAHY/kdnXTKWT9hw/s320/Twitter.gif" border="0" /></a> I’ve been using <a href="http://twitter.com/home">Twitter</a> a lot recently and explored a number of applications that have been recommended to me. Here are my top five, in no particular order:<br /><div><br />1. Twitter Grader (<a href="http://twitter.grader.com/">http://twitter.grader.com/</a>): This is great to see who the ‘influential’ Twitterati are, or who just spends way too much time on Twitter. Incidentally, I’m 35th in the Hong Kong rankings… </div><div><br />2. Twitter Vision (<a href="http://twittervision.com/">http://twittervision.com/</a>): I can see in near real time what people are Tweeting and where they are from. I can spend hours watching this and am trying to convince my company to have this running in the reception. Much more exciting than CNN! </div><div><br />3. Qwitter (<a href="http://useqwitter.com/">http://useqwitter.com/</a>): Sign up to this to see who stops following you. You can then send them rude messages! </div><div><br />4. Twit Scoop (<a href="http://www.twitscoop.com/">http://www.twitscoop.com/</a>): See what the hot topics on Twitter are at any given time. Also, use the search function to search for particular terms and see who is talking about it. </div><div><br />5. People Browsr (<a href="http://www.peoplebrowsr.com/">http://www.peoplebrowsr.com/</a>): I’m still testing this out, but initial signs look good. It essentially allows you to manage Twitter in different ways and link to other tools.<br />Have any others you would recommend?</div><div><br />I am loving Twitter and all its uses at the moment, though I am worried when it stops becoming a free service. Somewhere along the line, the guys at Twitter are going to have to start making money from the platform – my guess is that once they have enough loyal customers, they will start charging a nominal fee to use it. </div><div><br />So to do the maths, let’s say the Twitter population reaches 20million. 10% of this 20million are loyal users and will pay a nominal fee to continue using it. Let’s then say, Twitter charges US$10 a month – which most loyal users will probably be happy to pay. That’s US$20m per month….that’s a good business model! </div>PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-21989091546712542482008-11-19T12:07:00.003+08:002008-11-19T12:12:56.208+08:00Rise of Asia and the InternetThanks to <a href="http://www.nextfiftyyears.com/2008/11/did_you_know.html">Next Fifty Years blog </a>for bringing to attention this video presented by Richard Sanders, President of Sony BMG International on May 4, 2008 to for Sony BMG's annual Global Management Meeting.<br /><br /><object height="344" width="425"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/jpEnFwiqdx8&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&hl=en&fs=1"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/jpEnFwiqdx8&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object><br /><br />I particularly like the fact that it is much less US centric than many other similar videos I have seen - it focuses much more on the rise of Asia and elludes to its impact. For too long we have had to rely on US centric statistics and look embarrassed when clients ask about the region in which we work and then claiming that there currently are not any statistics for this region.<br /><br />I hope to see lots more like this.PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-21052079019019173582008-11-07T14:16:00.002+08:002008-11-07T14:18:52.056+08:00Social media scorecardHere are some additional stats from <a href="http://adultaddstrengths.com/">Adult Add Strengths</a> blog that highlight the gulf in Obama and McCains social media presence.<br /><br />- Barack Obama had nearly 6,000 percent more pages on his main website than John McCain did on his (1,820,000 vs 30,700)<br />- There’s almost 3 times as many results for Barack Obama in Google images (24,200,000 vs. 8,620,000)<br />- Obama has 51% more hits in Google Video as there is for John McCain (136,000 vs. 89,800)<br />- Flickr, the photo sharing site, had nearly 5 times the search results for Obama than McCain. (50,000 photos on Obama’s flickr page and 7,000 contact)<br />- Facebook had 3,032% more hits for Obama than McCain, Obama’s Facebook page had nearly 4 times more followers and posts than McCain’s page<br />- Barack Obama’s added 400,000 new friends on Facebook in the last 2 weeks, a 20% surge.<br />- On Youtube, Barack Obama had nearly twice as many search results for his name as John McCain, and more than 5 times as many videos posted<br />- On MySpace, Obama had nearly 4 times the number of friends as McCain, and 269% more search results for his name<br />- On the microblogging site Twitter, McCain put out nearly twice the number of tweets as Obama, but Obama had 5213% more followers, and 1,129% more search resultsPR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-51011196510102658842008-11-07T11:55:00.002+08:002008-11-07T12:04:28.895+08:00Obama: the aftermathSo the US elections were very exciting weren't they?! Or do you think it was a done deal way before the vote?<br /><br />There has been a huge amount of discussion on the US election and Obama's successful campaign. It is virtually impossible to miss, from donating Facebook profiles to support the cause, to Twitter updates, from blogs analysing the campaign to YouTube videos of the latest news commentary.<br /><br />I'm going to add my tuppence worth to the conversation by saying this:<br /><br />Social media was critical to campaign success as I previously discussed <a href="http://pradvocate.blogspot.com/2008/07/learning-from-obama.html">here</a> and as highlighted in this ComputerWorld <a href="http://www.cw.com.hk/article.php?type=article&id_article=2633">article</a>.<br /><br />Sarah Palin was key to McCain's failure highlighted by Matt Damon <a href="http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=C6urw_PWHYk">here</a> and demonstrated in this interview with <a href="http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=XbQwAFobQxQ">Katy Couric</a>.<br /><br />That's all I'm saying!PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-38203940053300851462008-10-24T11:18:00.003+08:002008-10-24T11:26:44.454+08:00Busted by FacebookThis is my favourite story of the week courtesy of <a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/">The Register</a>.<br /><br /><br /><p>In short, an Australian call centre employee is exchanging email with HR regarding a sick day and the need to produce a doctors note. This email chain has been doing the rounds across Asia and made my Kyle Doyle an instant celeb! Enjoy... </p><p><br />From: Niresh Regmi<br />Sent: Wednesday, 27 August 2008 9:35 a.m.<br />To: Kyle Doyle<br />Subject: Absence on Thursday 21st 2008<br /><br />Hi Kyle,<br />Please provide a medical certificate stating a valid reason for your sick leave on Thursday 21st 2008.<br />Thank You<br />NIRESH REGMI<br />Real Time Manager, Workforce Operations<br />________________________________________<br /><br />From: Kyle Doyle<br />Sent: Wednesday, 27 August 2008 9:38 a.m.<br />To: Niresh Regmi<br />Subject: RE: Absence on Thursday 21st 2008<br /><br />Niresh,<br />1 day leave absences do not require a medical certificate as stated in my contract, provided I have stated that I am on leave for medical reasons.<br /><br />Thanks Regards,<br />Kyle Doyle Resolutions Expert - Technical<br />________________________________________<br /><br />From: Niresh Regmi Sent: Wednesday, 27 August 2008 9:39 a.m.<br />To: Kyle Doyle<br />Subject: RE: Absence on Thursday 21st 2008<br /><br />Hi Kyle,<br /><br />Usually that is the case, as per your contract. However please note that leave during these occasions is only granted for genuine medical reasons. You line manager has determined that your leave was not due to medical reasons and as such we cannot grant leave on this occasion.<br /><br />NIRESH REGMI<br />________________________________________<br /><br />From: Kyle Doyle<br />Sent: Wednesday, 27 August 2008 9:43 a.m.<br />To: Niresh Regmi<br />Subject: RE: Absence on Thursday 21st 2008<br /><br />Hi Niresh,<br /><br />My leave was due to medical reasons, so you cannot deny leave based on a line manager's discretion, with no proof, please process leave as requested.<br /><br />Thanks Regards,<br />Kyle Doyle<br />________________________________________<br /><br />From: Niresh Regmi<br />Sent: Wednesday, 27 August 2008 9:50 a.m.<br />To: Kyle Doyle<br />Subject: RE: Absence on Thursday 21st 2008<br /><br />Hi Kyle,<br /><br />I believe the proof that you are after is below<br /><br /><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/SQE_7_d6NrI/AAAAAAAAAHQ/i80YzR84RNA/s1600-h/Busted.JPG"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5260556139627165362" style="FLOAT: left; MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 320px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 161px" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_MDCqdk5rprU/SQE_7_d6NrI/AAAAAAAAAHQ/i80YzR84RNA/s320/Busted.JPG" border="0" /></a><br /><br /></p><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />To his credit, the busted Doyle concludes:<br /><br />From: Kyle Doyle<br />Sent: Wednesday, 27 August 2008 9:55 a.m.<br />To: Niresh Regmi<br />Subject: RE: Absence on Thursday 21st 2008<br /><br />HAHAHA LMAO epic fail No worries man<br /><br />Regards,<br />Kyle DoylePR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2438376704137210919.post-12547742516826836742008-10-06T14:27:00.003+08:002008-10-06T14:45:26.591+08:00The ugly side of social mediaBeing a big advocate of the possibilities of social media, I was saddened by two stories I came across today. The first is a blog <a href="http://publicrelationships.blogspot.com/2008/10/who-do-you-trust.html">post</a> by Jeremy Woolf of Text100 Hong Kong questioning the ‘trustworthiness’ of information that filters through via social media. Jeremy alludes that each of us, whether we are PR professionals, editors, journalists or ordinary citizens should take responsibility for the information we pass on, as the consequences can be very damaging. I agree that just because technology has made it easy for us to spread rumours, it shouldn’t take away or conscience or responsibilities.<br /><br />This view has been further enforced when it has been reported that the suicide of Korean actress <a href="http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2008224410_choi03.html">Choi Jin Sil</a> was the result of malicious rumours that were spread via the internet – this is the second case following from the suicide of Korean pop singer Yoo Na after cyber-bullying over her plastic surgery. Korean Police have now decided to crack down on malicious new media rumour spreading.<br /><br />It’s a shame that a small group of people would use such a powerful vehicle for malicious actions. It almost makes a case for internet censorship!!<br /><br />I hope we don’t see a rise in cases such as <a href="http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/UK-News/Girls-Aloud-Obscene-Blogger-Charged-Over-Internet-Article-About-Rape-And-Murder-Of-Girl-Group/Article/200810115112957">Darryn Walker </a>case, in which he is being charged under the Obscene Publications Act after postings about girl group Girls Aloud in the UK.PR Advocatehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13808852192519858059noreply@blogger.com0