Archive for July, 2007

Podcamp Pittsburgh

Podcamp Pittsburgh

If you happen to be hanging around for some strange reason after the Online Marketing: Innovations That Work Conference, there’s another really exciting event taking place the day after for the whole weekend.

PodCamp Pittsburgh 2 is a FREE BarCamp-style community UnConference for people who create, enjoy or are interested in learning more about blogs, vlogs, audio podcasts, web video, content networks and new media monetization.

We’ll have a bit more about this one next week, but I know that I’ll be going.

Well it is free!

Have a lovely weekend people.

Truly Dumb Online Ideas #7,645: Human Generated Blog Spam

If you were a shy child and spent more than your fair share of time in a dreamworld of your own fabrication, I can imagine your mother may have spoken worriedly to her friends or devised the odd scheme to help you make more friends.

Then, as a business owner, you’re expected to go out and network so you can make connections and influence people.

Blogging and other forms of social media are a great way to network without having to press too much flesh. One of the first things you have to do is float around commenting on other blogs. It’s imperative that you manage to engage other bloggers within a related niche with how truly smart you really are.

But be prepared for it to take a little bit of time and effort to build the blogger/commenter dynamic. Especially with bloggers who are creaking under the weight of their own legend.

However, whenever you read a blog post and feel compelled to comment because you’ve been moved sufficiently to write one, you can be fairly rest-assured that the blogger will respond if your comment manages to move them sufficiently too.

New bloggers get so excited that they’ll almost invite you to dinner over any old comment. (Remember this when you’re five years down the line and jaded beyond recognition.)

Blog comments spam is the bane of many a blogger. We have more than a few methods and plug-ins set to stun in order to weed out this unpleasantness. No blogger worth their salt would be seen allowing a spam comment for a nanosecond.

So, to have somebody come along and offer a human blog-spamming service is one of the more ridiculous things I’ve heard in quite a while. It’s well worth reading Darren Rowse’s take on the whole sorry idea and the comments that follow.

The logistics of somebody being able to write 1,000 worthwhile comments on various blogs in a three-day timespan for a mere $239.99 are beyond comprehension. It’s also beyond stupid.

The kind of damage this blog commenting guy could do to his own business is quite frightening. He might be coming from the ‘there is no such thing as bad publicity school’, but I’m afraid I don’t always subscribe to that.

How do you ride out a storm if you haven’t built anything to ride on?

So, with all that in mind, I hope I haven’t frightened anybody off the idea of starting a blog. They aren’t difficult and can be awfully rewarding, both intrinsically and extrinsically. You just need to spend a bit of time so that you’re sure in your mind that it’s right for you.

That’s why it’s interesting seeing the mix of online marketing methods we have in store for anyone attending Online Marketing: Innovations That Work. You’ll get to find out whether blogging, mobile marketing, search marketing, and paid search advertising will fit into your online marketing mix and how best to measure their effectiveness. You’ll also be able to work out how to make them all play nicely together.

You’ll even be able to find out how to combat the sort bad publicity the blog comment spam guy is currently experiencing should you ever do something a bit silly.

Then again, if you listen attentively in the first place it should never come to that.

Q&A with Speaker Jose Mallabo of eBay Inc.

Jose Mallabo

Jose Mallabo is currently the Director of Financial Communications at eBay Inc. In this role he oversees and leads the company’s communications strategies around its financial activities and performance as well as setting strategy for internal and external communications around mergers and acquisitions globally.

His session will address how you can increase the reach and lifetime of your public relations campaign by using online methods such as press release optimization.

1. Do you see new online methods of public relations replacing or enhancing the more traditional means?

I don’t see the online methods replacing traditional channels as much as I see them as an evolution to the tools we use. When you look back to the pre-mass media days of public relations when what you might call a PR practitioner was promoting his cause or company you’ll see a lot of what is all the vogue today - a focus to drive word of mouth at the grass roots level. PR and marketing people tend to tout it like word of mouth marketing is some kind of recent discovery when in fact we’ve known intuitively and empirically for a long time that the most powerful information is that which is delivered by someone you know and trust. Because of the interactivity that online forums enable, it has proven to be more effective than traditional mediums at mobilizing people. Many mass communications researchers would argue that the media don’t tell people what to think, they tell people what to think about. The Web, in my opinion, empowers people to do something about what they’re hearing, feeling and thinking. That’s pretty powerful.

2. Which online public relations applications are most exciting to you?

Obviously I work in corporate PR because I still believe the most important (though somewhat underutilized by consumer programs) is the online conference call with reporters, analysts, customers and investors. The Web cast of the earnings call came to be the de facto tool for PR and IR people to use around quarterly earnings and material news in the late 90s - targeted largely at investors. But with today’s very accessible technologies this online tool can be used for so much more. Smaller firms that want to do a media tour without the expense of flying people around the country can do this all on a series of online calls that can be supported by Web based presentations, virtual product demonstrations that then can spur real-time chats, live blogging and of course a live Q&A. There’s a way to do this in an innovative, yet non-gimmicky way. I’d love to see what can be done beyond the same old stale corporate earnings call online.

3. Is the press release dead?

No. In fact, after Regulation Fair Disclosure was ratified (in 2000) to keep public companies from selectively disclosing material information, the overall volume of press releases increased dramatically. What used to be communicated in conference calls, meetings or filings began making their way into a news release. Mercifully, that knee jerk reaction has been tempered by time and companies have developed a better filter for what is material, what is news and what is simply better fodder for a blog post or email.

While some companies (large and small) continue to create unnecessary noise with non-news announcements, the sanity has come back to most PR departments. Reporters and editors don’t want to get feeds that touts about a Web site re-launch. They’d rather get a call or email telling them what that site re-launch might mean to the industry as a whole. The growth and legitimization of the blogosphere may well be the biggest in the use of the press release. With so many bloggers, companies pushing out releases need to keep them in mind when creating the content and tone of press releases. They cut and paste content from release much more so than traditional media, so if you write something you better mean it.

4. You’ve lived and worked all over the country. What do you think are the benefits of holding conferences such as Online Marketing: Innovations That Work in places such as Pittsburgh?

I’ve been fortunate enough to work and live in small and large markets over the past decade or so - most of which in high-technology and using the Web for communications. In the smaller communities where there’s some need for an economic makeover or resurgence, I think the benefit is to see just how much talent and interest there is in the area. The first time I attended a forum like this in Rochester, New York was as an entrepreneur looking for partners, education and a line into some equity financing. I thought we’d be the sole Web-heads in the room but it was standing room only for a full week of sessions. It was really empowering and heartening to see that there were so many great ideas, entrepreneurs and resources at our disposal - locally. And unlike some other industries, people involved in the online world are almost to a fault overly enthusiastic about sharing with you what they’ve learned. I think it just comes with the spirit of the Web.

Underage Mobile Marketing

We have reasons as to why we can’t do certain things until we are of a certain age. I’m fairly sure I don’t have to list the majority of them.

I find marketing to those who we have deemed to be financially immature in a legal sense to be amoral at best and immoral at worst.

As this article points out:

Protecting children under the age of 13 was one of the biggest issues addressed by the latest Mobile Marketing Association Consumer Best Practices Guidelines released on July 17. [report pdf]

The guidelines are there because there’s obviously a school of thought that believes children should be protected from over-zealous marketing. However, the only suggestions the article highlights are the use of ‘exhortative language’ such as ‘only’ and ‘just’ and adding mandatory double opt-ins when using interactive voice response or the mobile Web.

As effectiveness goes, we’re probably talking ashtrays on motorbikes.

I know the argument that children are going to spend their money on something, and who is anyone to dictate what that something may be. Children especially love their phones. They should have access to ringtones and other assorted modifications that suit their lifestyle choices and represent who they are as little people just like the big people. It’s their choice. It’s up to marketing associations to decide the moral boundaries as to what can or cannot be peddled.

In fact, this has more to do with the morality of marketers than those being marketed to.

But, I’ll ask anyone to find me someone under the age of thirteen who is able to purchase an iPhone and sign a two-year contract with AT&T independently without requiring a co-signer or raiding the ‘mom bank’. (Spoiled little brats with monstrous trust funds in place that they’ve been able to access since birth don’t count.)

Find me a child along those lines and then we can have a discussion.

Might As Well Face It You’re Addicted To Blogs

90%How Addicted to Blogging Are You?

Free Online Dating from Mingle2

I’m quite thoroughly ashamed to post this.

I have to be honest and say that I was actually trying to pull back on some of the questions.

We all know how to get 100% in these things do we not?

Somebody please beat me - either with a higher score or a big stick.

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