Celeb spotting or stalking?

June 29th, 2010
LoveMeterCS

Take one top celeb magazine add smart geo technology and out comes the new ‘celebspotter’ iphone App from OK!

For a mere £1.79  the App allows you to hunt out regular celeb haunts in your area,  giving you a stronger chance to potentially spot one of your favourite celebs or  simply eat and drink in the same venues as your favourite local stars.

The information used is already available in the public domain, and OK! magazines group internet controller assured; “It doesn’t tell you where celebs are and it doesn’t tell you where they will be”,  so no privacy issues are crossed, the app simply gives you an easy route to cruising like the… well, the Cruise’s!

Although this App has got the ‘privacy police’ up in arms, it’s the ideal app for those with a  soft spot for celeb culture to feel like they are walking in the steps of the stars…. that’s walking people, NOT stalking!

Naughty twhispers

June 25th, 2010
whispers

I very nearly fell off my chair today with an anouncement on twitter that brand Beckham was about to call it a day.

Although i’m not allowing myself to feel shocked anymore about the break up of these seemingly blessed celeb marriages, the thought that the Beckhams were on the verge of announcing their split had me practically screaming into the office ‘noooo…not the Beckhams! I can’t read  OK! without the Beckhams’.

Not to fear though, as with a number of rumours that are filtered through twitter, this has turned out to be nothing more than chinese whisper that have got out of hand, and the fabulous couple’s PR rep has strenuously denied the rumours, stating “there is no truth to them”.

Well, it would’ve been particularly poor timing during the world cup now wouldn’t it? There wouldn’t be nearly enough space in the tabloids to cover the both. So tweeps, would you please stop spreading naughty rumours about our favourite sporty hunk and his poutiful wife? You nearly gave me a heart attack.

Get yourself some summer threads

June 24th, 2010
Threads

We’ll have some exciting fashion news to announce later this week but for the minute I thought I’d share my favourite ‘social fashion’ site.

I found Threadless, via a friend, while I was a student and have been kept in charming and original t-shirts ever since. If you’re not familiar, the basis of the American site is that users submit sketches that they think would look good on a t-shirt, everyone votes and the winners get made into t-shirts (and hoodies and plenty of other things).

The social benefits don’t end there though as the designer takes a cut from each of their t-shirts sold, and if you buy one you can upload a picture of yourself wearing it to a gallery on the product page.

Threadless is a great example of encouraging your community to get really involved with the things you make and sell and they’re clearly not doing too badly out of it.

(image from incurable_hippie Flickr)

Sun in blogger shock

June 17th, 2010
world cup ball

This week The Sun has been giving a crash course in how not to engage the blogging community. In executing a perfectly good idea they’ve managed to annoy some respected bloggers and make themselves the poster boys for bad blog campaigns.

A perfectly harmless football sweepstake idea to promote their new sweepstake app went a little bit wrong when they didn’t get permission from the bloggers concerned to use their sites.

They did ask, but just didn’t manage to pay attention when the replies were a firm no, or nothing at all. One blog had been inactive for over a year.

The fact that this story has spread through the tech and media community at speed illustrates the keen interest in all things blog and reflect a widespread unease about how to deal with the blogger.

Actually the truth is that bloggers are both journalists (of a sort) and real people. Offer them something they’re interested in (in our case anything from baby food to Jack Daniel’s Barbecue Sauce) and treat them like people and you’ll find that ‘the blogosphere’ isn’t really that hard to work with.

(image from www.shine2010.co.za Flickr)

Bring on the bling

June 17th, 2010
Horse and hat

The fake tan will have been applied, the outfit carefully chosen, the hair coiffed to perfection and most importantly a hat selected….. it’s ladies day at Royal Ascot.

From the moment Beau Brummell introduced a formal dress code for the Royal Ascot enclosure in the 1800s, the drama on the tracks has been nothing campared to the fashion theatrics. From the flapper dresses of the ’20s to the risque Mary Quant miniskirts of the ’60s, Ascot has always been just as much about clothes as it is about the horses.

People have been pushing the boundaries between respectable head attire and  headline grabbing creative pieces  from the very beginning, with PR agencies making hats out of whatever they’re trying to promote in the hope that it’ll be photographed and appear across the broadsheets.

Fashions may come and go over the years, but  hopefully  there will always be a Royal Ascot so that Britain’s fashion savvy hoards can challenge the traditionalists and showcase our British sense of style humour.

Do remember ladies, there is a fine line between a chic yet dramatic ensemble and a tangoed WAG attacked by a flock of parrots.

The Queen, Bruce and Facebook

June 14th, 2010
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This morning, GMTV interviewed TV comedy legend Bruce Forsyth about once again missing out on a knighthood in the latest Queen’s Honours.

The annual event is promoted to reward exceptional people and those honoured work in a wide range of fields including sports, education, medical research, heritage, and local arts and sports projects.

According to the official Gov website: “The people honoured this year include a pathologist, a nursery nurse, the coach of the England women’s football team, a GP, and a number of youth workers and volunteers. Among the more unusual professions on this year’s list are a station announcer at Fenchurch Street Station and the organist at the Tower Ballroom, Blackpool.”

Bruce, who picked up a CBE in 2006, missed out on his knighthood again this year. On the GMTV interview he mused that the support that he’d received from 25,000 Facebook fans and the media, promoting his long years of service to the entertainment industry, may have influenced the final decision in the opposite direction.

If true, then this underlines how out of touch the decision makers are with the power of the ground swell of public opinion now harnessed by Facebook and other social platforms.

We’re not suggesting that knighthoods are given out based on the same voting system as the X-Factor, but a good leader (just as a good brand) uses all the methods available to listen to what’s important to their public, learns from them and makes decisions accordingly.

Who knows Bruce – next year …. the Queen will be saying ‘nice to see you to see you nice’, and you’ll get that Brucie Bonus you so rightly deserve.

Social Media Virgins

June 9th, 2010
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Last night, i  headed into Manchester for my first experience of a Social Media Surgery. Held at the offices of the MDDA and attended by a rounded mix of people eager to understand the hows and whys of social media.

Social Media Surgery is like a beginners guide to helping people struggling with how to maximise the opportunity and to someone living and breathing it on a daily basis – it was something of a reality check.

Friendly and informal, the debate of the night Facebook vs LinkedIn. Although eager to learn, the group was apprehensive. Struggling against the self imposed barriers that they’d already placed on themselves or their business. Who could or should be a friend? How to say no to requests on Linked In? How can this help my business? Why doesn’t bombarding my social group with special offers not work?

Twitter inevitably became a strong topic of conversation. As a platform the announcement of everything from product launches to births and deaths was supported by the panel’s discussions.

I found it an easy going and informative environment. The reality is that people with true experience of using social media for business are few and far between. As each new topic was explained and then questioned I could see many faces filled with fear start to brighten as they considered how the boom in social communications would change their business.

Social Media Surgery events are informal, free-to-attend and are clearly doing a great job of giving people real world advice about how to use social media in every day life. Why not take a look.

The digital future of the BBC

June 9th, 2010
BBC Coat of arms

This is a rather bold headline but I’m feeling very cheerful about the digital future of the beeb this morning after an informative evening last night spent at the second There Will Be Blood event at Common in Manchester. (That’s the BBC coat of arms in case you’re wondering.)

The second speaker, Hugh Garry, although at pains to make clear he was expressing his own opinions and not those of his employer, outlined an interesting creative vision for the potential of the future of the BBC’s audio content. I probably won’t be able to recap as well as him so here’s Hugh’s blog with links to a few of the projects he mentioned.

I, of course, threw in my two pence worth with the idea that I was happy for user generated content to pop up on radio stations, websites and the BBC’s social profiles but I was less keen on the idea of the user generated Middle East Correspondent or host of Question Time; and thankfully Hugh agreed.

Alongside being a classic early adopter and evangelist for new social technologies he also issued a note of caution citing ITV’s snapping up of Friend’s Reunited before it had had a chance to prove itself, and the subsequent substantial loss.

Although the next big thing can be tempting it’s always worth sitting back and watching it grow with its audience, as he pointed out it’s unlikely to be Foursquare or Gowalla that make their millions from location based technology but another company that right now is watching, waiting and thinking.

A selection of film clips from the night will be uploaded later in the week – so do check back.

Using Twitter to make news

June 8th, 2010
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The anti-twitter brigade often don’t see the potential of the medium, opting to believe that time wasted engaging the public online is worth less than shouting from a hill with a loud hailer.

So we like how much news twitter is making lately, not just as a way of assessing the groundswell of public opinin on everything from politics to Glee, but as a tool that’s making news across the traditional press too.

This week, twitter God Stephen Fry (and one, assumes festival organisers at the Hay Festival in Wales) revealed the most beautiful tweet in an international competition. Although I’m not convinced the criteria for judging has been explained in any of the press reports, the festival said the most beautiful tweet – posted by Marc MacKenzie from Canada – read “I believe we can build a better world! Of course, it’ll take a whole lot of rock, water and dirt. Also, I’m not sure where to put it.”

The winning tweet was revealed by Fry, who paused from his daily musings about Apple to praise the message for its humour.

The combination – new medium, social participation through an engaging competition and celebrity backer secured column inches in over 100 traditional and online titles and catapulted awareness of the Hay Festival in Wales to a new, wider audience.

With this much potential, are you missing a trick not including twitter in your communications campaign?

10 steps to writing a press release

June 7th, 2010
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A delayed, but promised post, to help fellow Leeds Barcamp attendees share the work they’re doing with their target audience in an engaging way.

Invented over 100 years ago, the press release is simply a way to supply a journalist with all the information they need to understand news from within a business. Today, despite the call that the press release is dead, at Democracy PR we understand that it’s simply evolved.

Those journalists may no longer be taking long boozy lunches on expenses, instead they could be a well respected tech journalist, a time pressed regional news editor or the reader of your own blog.

1. The Title

Needs to capture the attention of the reader and should use simple language. Think: Man bites dog …. and work to the simple rule of less is more. We often see our title puns being reproduced in print, so don’t be afraid to inject some personality e.g. Balloons! Bursts into App Store.

2. The Opening

The first paragraph of your release should be no more than three lines long and should sum up what makes the news news worthy. Featuring all the key information in the story, the Who, What, Where, When and Why. If you’re not sure how to start, begin by listing these out.

3. Hiding Information

One to avoid: journalists (and readers) are busy people. If you bury the news hook at the bottom of the press release, then they’ll bury your press release in the bin before they even get to it. The ideal structure adds detail to already presented information, each new paragraph expanding on the story summed up in the opening paragraph.

4. Quote

Quotes are an ideal way to inject real personality into a story, and should encapsulate the entire story from your personal point of view. This is the only part of your release that will be re-produced word for word if your story makes so think carefully. Try not to start with “we are thrilled…” or “we are delighted…” of course you are, tell us something interesting.

5. Tone and Style

This is a tricky one and depends on the brand you’re writing about and the type of story. A few tips though:

- Don’t embellish, who are you to say a food product is delicious or that you’ve created a ground breaking application? Stick to the facts.

- Avoid long sentences that ramble on and paragraphs that are thick chunks of text, you wouldn’t want to read it, so why should they?

- Present the information to the journalist not to the reader. This isn’t sales copy and you’re effectively just presenting a talented professional with enough information to write a story.

- They tend to be in 1.5 spacing, a throwback from copy editing by hand but it also makes your release clear and easy to read.

6. Sign Off

Press releases end with ENDS just so everyone’s clear the next page isn’t missing. This is also the place to include your contact details with an offer of a sample, image or interview.

7. Notes to Editors

This little gem of a section sits under your contact details and is a handy place to put information without cluttering your release. For example things like company turnover, number of employees etc if they’re not important to the story.

8. The Second Eye

This point is not really about you but about whoever you can get to take a second look over your release for you. As well as checking for typos ask them what they think it’s about and if it’s interesting. After all no-one thinks their own baby is ugly.

9. Sending

Almost all of our releases are sent out by email. Feel free to slip one in the package if you’re sending a sample but chances are your chosen journo will be able to find it much better in soft copy. It’s also easier all round if you copy it into the body of the email.

But don’t forget the basics you know and love – twitter, your own website etc – you already have a network around you so don’t forget to tap into it.

Quick tip: If a print journo is going to run your image, it needs to be high res (over 300dpi or approx 1MG), but don’t send it uninvited. Instead send a low res version or a link to an image online. Nothing irritates a news editor quicker than you crippling his email.

10. The Human Touch

If you really want this release to succeed you’re going to have to put some time in. The ideal position is to have relationships with all the journalists you want to write about you (although this takes time and commitment – which will distract you from doing your own job, which is why there is us!). The next best thing then is to be a real person and call them. Journalists are busy people so don’t expect a long chat but be ready to pitch your story in an engaging way in a sentence or two.

ENDS

There were a few questions from the floor at the end of the talk but if I revealed all those why would you come and see my talk at the next barcamp?

Good luck with your release writing and if you need a few pointers I’m @charliemorley