Births, deaths and marriages – according to Twitter

May 27th, 2010
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After what seems like an eternity of ‘will she, won’t she’ an official tweet from Cheryl Cole’s press office confirmed the divorce from Ashley.

It was a PR match from heaven, another beautiful popstar marrying a successful and equally successful footballer, but alas, as seems to be increasingly common, they couldn’t stand the test of time or the continued infidelity of the randy footballer!

The marriage appeared to the outside world as a constant rollercoaster of cheating mixed in with perfectly airbrushed photos, but there’s a little part of me that feels disappointed when a celebrity marriage crumbles. The Keatings, Henry & French, Medes & Winslet . . . these couples appeared unbreakable but it shows that however many copies of HEAT you read, you never know what goes on behind closed doors.

The fact that Twitter has become the platform for announcing anything from births, deaths and marriages to the rest of the world,  no longer surprises the masses. Our transient modern world means vows made to last a lifetime can be unraveled in less than 140 characters.

Oh well Miss Tweedy, sure you won’t be alone for too long …

Facebook gets private

May 27th, 2010
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I do feel sorry for Facebook at the minute. They’re getting battered again over their privacy settings in the papers today;  The Mail tastefully adding its previous headlines of deaths its attributed to the site.

The changes are simplified here by the BBC but essentially Facebook is now forcing you to choose who sees all your content. It sticks to the same options as ever: ‘friends’, ‘friends of friends’ and ‘everyone’ but now pushes these options in your face rather than having them sit on a privacy settings page.

Facebook is feeling the internet bite back. No longer is the internet the utopia of a group of Californian nerds, all humanity is there and we’re starting to get to grips with the need to apply the same caution in the online space as we would in the street.

We’re anticipating a big positive PR push from the Facebook gang as they attempt to squash the privacy issues. Watch this space for a focus on re-kindled relationships, friends reunited and the important moments of life shared wherever your network extends around the world.

Check out Crains

May 24th, 2010

If you’re reading Crains this week, keep an eye out for our good friend Neil Morris who we think gives a great interview!

A Great Big Manchester Run

May 19th, 2010
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I agreed to do the Great Manchester Run two days before it actually took place, which as you can imagine gave me little time for preparation or panic and when Sunday morning came, I found myself walking towards the start line with little more than a banana for energy and the soundtrack of Glee on my iPod to keep me going for 10 kilometres!

This is the first race i’ve ever taken part in and I have to recommend it to everyone. The atmosphere was incredible and represented the spirit of Manchester through the people running, the supporters (I felt like Tinkerbell, revived by the constant applause) and the route we ran.

The sense of achievement is fantastic (I feel like a bit of a demi-god for making it through in 51 minutes!) and the next time I run, i’ll hopefully have the time beforehand to prepare and collect sponsorship for one of the many incredible charities that people ran for this year.

I have to say a huge congratulations to everyone who took place, it’s really not as easy as it looks!

Richard Duerr gets a second invite to BBC Radio Manchester

May 14th, 2010

Richard was so well behaved last time that they asked him back for coffee on BBC Radio Manchester. His previous host for the morning coffee slot, Heather Stott, was covered for by Becky Want and Richard once again managed to charm the ladies with his talk of Cougars, pies and Angel Delight.

Twitter’s bug bite

May 12th, 2010
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What a stressful 10 minutes celebville must have had when the world of Twitter cleared all followers from our favourite celebs pages. One minute you’re bragging about being a member of the ‘million followers club’ and the next you’re sat wondering where all your thousands of adoring followers are hiding, “I feel so lonely” P Diddy tweeted, “come back soon. I can’t live without ya!!” The ‘Twitterbug’ even confused Stephen Fry, “I was sure I had more followers. Must have imagined it.”

Popularity on the site isn’t an indication of influence however; size doesn’t necessarily matter on Twitter, except to boost delicate celebrity egos. A study by Harvard Business School says, “Our claim is that follower count is not sufficient to capture the influence of a user (i.e., the ability of a user to sway the opinions of her followers). It only shows how popular the user is (i.e., the size of her audience).”

Actively searching out people who’s opinions and voice you find engaging and subsequently mentioning and retweeting them is a stronger indication of a person’s influence… so feel free to get mentioning and retweeting me (@hannahtelford28) as I work my way up to my millionth follower!

Northwest Business Insider

May 10th, 2010

Agency founder Jennifer O’Grady shares some thoughts on social media with Northwest Business Insider

If you want to read the piece in full click here.

Celeb snooping with Rightmove

May 5th, 2010
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As a seasoned house hunter and Rightmove.com addict, imagine my surprise when they announced on Twitter that they had Steven Gerard’s house for sale. Surely they aren’t allowed to release the personal information of the property owner, especially such a high profiled one? But no, they went as far as tweeting “celeb property snooping, here we come!”

Although i’m sure Steven (we’re on first name basis now i’ve seen his house) was happy to have his house, sorry I mean mansion, placed on the house-hunting website, i’m not so sure he’d be thrilled that they tweeted the fact to the world and now everyone knows the exact address of his 3.3 million pound house and the colour of his bedroom (cream with accents of faux fur, if you’re interested!).

Rightmove must realise their little mistake in posting  this tweet, there has to be some privacy limits when selling your property. Not that i’m complaining… we all love to have a good old nosey at the inside of celebrities ‘humble’ abodes. In fact… I may take a little trip up to Liverpool and book a viewing! Mind you, now it’s been released to the public who’s house it is, i’d better get in the queue and get out my cheque book!

The revolution will be televised

May 4th, 2010
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Whilst trying to write a blog today that isn’t election based, I seem to be writing an election based blog; it’s just everywhere at the minute.

Before we get to the election part though, the inspiration for this blog is my parents, and particularly a conversation they had on Saturday night that followed the lines of: Dad: ‘shall we watch [ITV Morse sequel] Lewis?’ Mum: ‘let’s record it and watch it tomorrow or we’ll have to sit through all the adverts’.

I’ve been aware of this trend in my own viewing behaviour for a while, most things I watch are on series link and I simply whiz through the adverts and back to the action. Part of me though thought that this was a symptom of being the online generation; of wanting everything closer and faster. Apparently not as my parents proved.

One of the few things I’m so addicted to that I will actually watch it live is Glee (as previously mentioned on this blog) and in that case I am forced to watch the adverts  in the interlude before the next song and dance number, and actually I’m often pleasantly surprised by what I see. Adverts at their best can be funny, touching, informative and beautiful. Take this teaser released today by John Smith’s for their new Peter Kay fronted campaign.

Also widely reported today is research stating that we now watch four hours of TV a day (although this is to be taken with a pinch of PR salt as it’s been carried out by the marketing body for TV advertising). We are sitting ducks for the messages of advertisers and if they can get it right, with a Russian meerkat for example, then adverts can seep into our cultural conscience as effectively as they have ever done.

TV is still as powerful as ever, if there was need for further evidence, look no further than Nick Clegg. Getting your face, or product in front of millions of viewers is a powerful tool, but the pressure is on to keep our attention as we  now have the power to fast forward  if you bore us.