Posts Tagged ‘Online PR’

The Biggest Mistake in Business Social Media

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

Social Media (especially when combined with Online PR) is the hottest thing to hit marketing, PR and advertising since TV. But many business organisations are finding that it is not the magic bullet that has been hyped.

 

It’s a bit like the blues harp (or ten hole harmonica to you non blues folk). It looks enticingly easy to play but it is very hard to play well.

 

Many businesses are only now thinking about jumping in. But when it comes to Social Media you should paddle about before you dive. The best piece of Social Media advice for business that I have come across in a long time is contained in a new posting from the Washington Post*. Basically, you should not do too much at once.

 

I was that soldier. I am on LinkedIn. At the beginning, like a junkie in a headshop, I joined every group that was relevant from Social Media and PR to technology and cloud computing. Guess what? My email in box became swamped with so many discussions that I ended up ignoring them all.

 

It is much better to join one or MAXIMUM two that interest you and participate fully by starting and joining in discussions. Assign other members of your firm to follow one or two relevant groups and participate.

 

Similarly with blogs. Blogs have a key role to play in boosting your Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) and thought leadership. However, blogs are notoriously easy to initiate but hard to maintain. But you can start by contributing to others. One good example for B2B firms is our client’s O2’s Business Blog, The Ideas Room at www.O2.ie/ideasroom

 
 * Source: Washington Post (free to subscribe) http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/25/AR2010062504382.html?sub=AR

How Online PR Revived the Humble Press Release

Monday, April 26th, 2010

The revolution in Online PR has meant that it is once more important to know how to write a good press release. In the past, if it had news value, your effort might be whipped into shape by a long suffering journalist.

 

Now, through your own and other websites, wire services etc your opus magnum can be displayed to the world forever in all its glory, warts and all.

 

In the words of Brian Solis and Deirdre Breakenridge: “This means that you can publish a release riddled with hyperbole, spin, buzz words and hype that will not only dissuade your customers from doing business with you – it will send them to your competition.” *

 

In order to help overcome the most common pitfalls in press release writing I have written a blog for the O2 ideas room entitled: “10 Ways to Write Great Press Releases”.

 

Sunday Business Post journalist Adrian Weckler also has some great advice in this area. His (more modestly) entitled blog is: “How to Write a Competent Press Release”.

 

* “Putting the Public Back in Public Relations: How Social Media is Reinventing the Aging Business of PR” published by FT Press.

Tech PR and New Media – Why the Fuss?

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Tech industry website Irishdev.com has published a list of the Top 10 most read technology stories in 2009. I am chuffed to see that our clients took two  out of the top three places. Simpson FT PR was the only PR firm to have two entries in the Top 10 most read stories.

So what you might say. It’s not the Irish Times. That rather misses the point. Apart from boosting Search Engine Optimisation, Online PR has reach far beyond the local market. As a result of a story used by top site siliconrepublic.com last year, the client had a serious call from a potential venture capital investor in Paris.

For example, while 55% of IrishDev.com technology readers are from Ireland, 25% are located in the US and UK. The site is a content source for numerous online partners including Google News (Ireland and world editions) and is optimised for search engines.

I have to say that it has been a great year for us on the Online PR front as we also won the 2009 PR Excellence Award for New Media for an international campaign for Irish web analytics company StatCounter. (See latest market analysis story from StatCounter on Google’s threat to leave China).

The business of Public Relations and marketing communications has been transformed by New Media. It represents a huge opportunity for Irish technology companies to cost effectively market themselves both globally and locally.

IrishDev.com’s top read story of 2009 was a Sogeti Ireland release announcing a drive to boost skill levels in the Irish software industry through a collaboration with the Irish Software Association sponsored Software Skillnet. Saaspoint’s announcement that it had sold Irish developed cloud computing applications to over 40 companies in three continents was the third most read story on the site.

Ends

Ronnie Simpson BBS, FPRII is founder of Simpson Financial & Technology Public Relations which won the 2009 PR Excellence Award for New Media. He was one of the first Irish PR bloggers. (ronnie@simpsonftpr.ie).