Going Round In Circles

July 28th, 2011
Screen shot 2011-07-19 at 18.30.23

Google+’s system of sharing information is a refined (if not quite intuitive) and intelligent application of something we’ve been doing here at Democracy PR for some time: sharing the right information with the right people.

Whereas Facebook’s privacy settings are lax by default and continue to be until you adjust the settings, Google’s model of sharing permits us, encourages even, to share with the right people. Placing people into your private circles (no one but you is aware of which circle you put them into) allows you to define separate groups with whom you can share content. You may have circles for colleagues and friends (depending on how happy you are at work there may well be some crossover here!) or groups for distinct people; The boss, The wife and the kids maybe?

Share and Share a ‘Like’

Now, as an agency with real strength in social media we’re unsurprisingly well-versed in sharing carefully online. We’re all huge advocates of twitter in the office but unless we create two profiles, or more, it’s difficult to find one voice to manage all your followers. We introduced a hashtag, #dpr, to differentiate work and industry related tweets from all other stuff, be it reality t.v., rants about public transport or poor customer service, and nights out. While it doesn’t remedy the difficulties of managing a mix of followers it’s certainly a smarter way to manage the content on our twitter feed on the website.

The web is littered with stories of employees who have tweeted inappropriate messages due to a mix up between personal and professional profiles. Just as when a Red Cross social media specialist tweeted about getting drunk from the Red Cross account and the tweet exploded. Searching for the Red Cross Twitter account? You’ll likely see the negative story just as quickly as the twitter account on a Google search results page. To avoid any such confusion I am very careful about linking client accounts and my personal accounts to the same twitter client. I have opted to use twitter’s very own android app to manage clients and Hootsuite for my own tweeting!

Billy No-Mates

Facebook is similar and potentially more problematic. Using the platform as we do in several guises for various clients it would be difficult to use our normal public profiles to manage various profesional brand pages, instead we create separate professional identities to manage them. I masquerade online as a professional billy no-mates, but one that has still got his job.

That Google+ immediately solves these issues is a huge boon and furthermore demonstrates that the search giant has privacy at its core; or as a cynic might claim, realises that privacy is the key to users and therefore revenue. I’ve been trialling circles for over three weeks now and i’m really taken by the service and enthusiastic about the introduction of business accounts.

Is it the end of the World as we know it?

July 14th, 2011
Screen shot 2011-07-14 at 10.38.00

 So, in the face of a united House of Commons, Rupert Murdoch drops his bid to take over BSkyB.

The leading news mogul has been in the constant media spotlight since he landed in the UK on Sunday, for all the wrong reasons – and what a fortnight it has been for the news makers themselves.

News Corporation’s press comment that the BSkyB deal was too difficult to undertake in such circumstances was an understatement to say the least. And now, there is the possibility that Murdoch will withdraw more papers from the UK – something that was unthinkable just two weeks ago.

Alleged hacking of the phones of the parents of murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler and the friends murdered in Soham, as well as, apparently, families of those killed in the terrorist attacks in London by investigators working for the News of the World have made News International one of the most despised brands in the country in a huge crisis of trust.

Murdoch has been bidding to acquire 100% of BSkyB, a very successful media business -  indeed one that would have been a business opportunity of a lifetime – and this failed bid translates to potential disaster across the pond, where there are more allegations that families of the 9/11 disaster also had their phones hacked.

And the speed at which the News of the World closed down and rolled its last presses on Sunday, was down in no small part to the power of social media.

When the news broke, thousands of people tweeted their disgust and disappointment that ‘real’ people were being targeted in such a way – and almost immediately national brands, feeling the force of that public revolt, pulled out of advertising with News of the World in their droves.

  • Websites linked directly to pre-written tweets so that twitter users could select a brand to target and tweet the question ‘are you going to continue to support News of the World in the light of these allegations’.
  • Links to an online petition at Avaaz.org, the campaigning community, spread like wildfire across twitter, and quickly amassed over 80,000 signatures
  • prolific tweeter John Prescott lent his support to the campaign too.
  • The sheer volume of tweets dwarfed anything we’ve seen on twitter before.

Here at Democracy we saw first hand with some of the brands that we represent how quickly companies needed to act in the light of pubic outrage – and they too swiftly withdrew their advertising from the News of the World website.

All this left Murdoch with no choice – shut down the paper – and who knows, possibly more will fold. But whatever happens, this is certainly not the last we have heard of this media mogul.

McDonalds Advertising Pongs

June 6th, 2011
Burger chain PR advertisement

McDonald’s in-house PR firm has pulled another great engagement trick out of its hat with an interactive billboard, Pick n Play.

The beauty of this idea is that with or without a smartphone McDonald’s still has its name up in lights; even if you don’t have a smartphone you’ll see the advert and those who do, well addictive gaming and a fast-food freebie await.

The concept is a hi-tech, but seemingly lo-fi, idea. A huge billboard allows smartphone users to play a Pong-like arcade game live on-screen through a mobile website. If players manage to keep the ‘ball’ in play for more than 30 seconds of increasingly difficult gameplay they are rewarded with a choice of;

  • Free milkshake
  • Burger
  • McFlurry

Redemption is simple too. The website will display a code to all successful players that they can show over the counter.

PR genius

It’s a shrewd PR move, not least because of the increased footfall, and store awareness (the one closest to the billboard that is) but the PR coverage across media channels not normally frequented by the fastfood chain shows the burger empire in a different light, a positive one that has introduced a bit of unexpected fun into the lives of shoppers and commuters.

What’s more old arcade games are nostalgia-inducing and addictive; players will come back time and time again.

What’s clear is that the time to embrace smart phone marketing is here. Those who tried it too early and had their fingers burned need to step back, reassess and reconsider how the smallest screen has the potential to deliver the biggest returns on your bottom line.

 

 

A Fashion Fabulous Day!

May 27th, 2011
fashion

It’s only Wednesday and I’ve already had THE most fabulous, productive and successful week (if I do say so myself!).

Yesterday was a media visit day of the most glamorous variety… fashion darling, talking nothing but beautiful clothes with our fashion fabulous client Jo.

Our day started with what could have been a very normal train journey down to the ‘big smoke’… a coffee, muffin and Grazia (my little train ritual), as I eagerly flipped to The Fashion Charts… I spotted the lovely Zoe Karssen tee and a link to BWD the result of lots of hard work from the Democracy team!

We whisked our way around London to meet Grazia, Emerald Street, Stylist and Drapers, with a bag full of exclusive designer clothes and stunning accessories.

Relationships strengthened …. it’s time to hit the phones and covert those visits to column inches (or live links).

Royal Wedding Fever!

April 29th, 2011
will-and-kate1

The bunting is up (on the Democracy website anyway), the champagne is chilling and I’ve bought the tackiest, most patriotic earrings I could find… Yes people, I have it… ROYAL WEDDING FEVER!

You can practically smell the excitement in the air, and it’s not just because we are all getting another luxuriously long weekend, or that we have been given yet another excuse to crack open the wine in ‘celebration’… us Brits (especially me) love a good old-fashioned boy meets girl, boy turns out to be a prince, girl becomes a princess kind of story.

We can all feel like we are a part of this wedding, because in this ‘access all areas’ world we live in, we have witnessed Wills and Kate (sorry, Catherine) meet, fall in love, break up, wear a see-through dress, get drunk, get back together and finally prepare to get married.

In fact, I don’t actually mind so much that my invitation went missing in the post, as I can sit in the comfort of my own home and watch the day’s events on YouTube, follow tweets from Clarence House, check the wedding procession out in 3D thanks to the wonders of Google Earth, and if that’s not enough, I can watch/listen to it on one of the MANY channels out there.

Yes, I may not actually be in Westminster Abbey, but I will be among the billions of people across the globe giddily lapping up every moment of this epic fairytale, and I can hear you wondering what I’m going to do with my time once it’s all over; well their first baby can’t be too far off can it?

Gmail Labs: Preventing you carbon copying Harry’s email nightmare

March 31st, 2011
Gmail labs

You can’t have missed the widespread news reports over the recent email ‘mishap’ involving one bitter ex giving permission to his buddy to ‘have a go’ at his former girlfriend. The inappropriate male banter would probably have remained between the two of them … until he accidentally cc’d the ex into the email(!)

Although the two chaps could not have predicted that a private conversation about a potential conquest would make a full page in The Sun, we’d like to think that he’s learnt his lesson and will never make the same mistake again. Should you ever find yourself in the same situation, we thought you might like a few tips to help avoid the terrible mess.

Tip 1: Migrate your email account to Gmail and activate a few handy ‘labs’ functions to help keep your discourse secret.

Tip 2: Install ‘undo send’, a personal lifesaver, allowing a 15 second window within which to cancel the email and save yourself from a very public dressing down.

Tip 3: Install ‘Got the Wrong Bob’  meaning Gmail learns from previous emails and highlights when you include someone unexpected.

These three tips could have saved him (and may save you one day), but with the backlash against him flooding in from all corners of the UK I imagine he might want to take a look at some other Gmail labs to help him out of this mess.

Hint 1: He should enable ‘Message Sneak Peak’ allowing him a quick glance at emails without opening them to decide whether it’s an email from the boss or vitriolic hatemail in his inbox.

Hint 2: Finally he should enable ‘Smart Mute’ so that once he hides an email it stays out of sight. Better keep those spiteful emails locked away hey Harry?

Sadly there’s no ‘auto-grovel function’ or ‘apologise to all’ but given the OS nature of Gmail it probably isn’t far away.

Technology vs the traditionalists

March 31st, 2011
gruffalo_head

Julia Donaldson, author of the bestselling children’s book ‘The Gruffalo’ explained in an interview with The Guardian over the weekend, how she has refused permission for her award winning title to be published as an eBook, citing that if every publication was available electronically this would add to the decline of ‘real books’.

Now I could sit here and give you are number of positive arguments about how the ebook is the next big thing (there are certainly some fans in this office) etc but really, there is one overriding issue.

Liz Thomson, editor of the website BookBrunch was also quoted “There’s a lot of stuff at the moment that we’re doing because we can. It’s a question of whether you can really add value to the story”. What she says here rings true, and highlights the importance of assessing what media is right for not only books, but indeed any brand/product/service, and not necessarily jumping on the bandwagon because everyone else is doing it.

Social/digital media IS for everyone, but choosing the right platform is fundamental, and some will deliver better than others depending on what message you are trying to get across.  Essentially it should not be seen as a replacement, but as an enhancement working in harmony with more traditional communications.

Spotify valuation is music to my ears

March 3rd, 2011
spotify

Spotify has recently been valued at $1bn following a recent drive for investment and for me it brings some sanity to the current digital media market that has seen big social media sites receive valuations that seem to be based on guesswork alone.

Happily Spotify bucks this trend as it seems to be well monetized. Guaranteeing no advertising ‘wastage’ and offering a unique mix of audio and visual formats are huge revenue-generating tools. Spotify also offer their premium service which allows users  to avoid ads thereby generating money from people wishing to avoid ads they generate money from!

Now while I’m a complete convert to twitter’s microblogging service I don’t understand where the revenue is! Yes there’s a huge reach, but will Promoted Tweets bring in the dough? Does twitter have a viable business model to explain its recent valuation of £6bn on this year’s predicted sales of just £67m?

Perhaps I shouldn’t worry and just thank my lucky stars that there are seemingly plenty of backers willing to pay big money.

Here’s a video that asks a similar question

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=ZRd-xX5zk0A (check out the rise of Groupon)

Maybe you disagree? I don’t pretend to be an expert on the subject so if you can show me the light then I welcome your comments below, but beware-i’m charging 10p per comment!

Webuyanycar.com – Fuelling The Sun Campaign

February 11th, 2011
We Buy Any Car

Find out more about our work for webuyanycar.com 

 

 

 

Few bowled over by Groupon ads

February 8th, 2011
Groupon

Groupon find themselves in the news for the wrong reasons following ill-judged adverts aired during Super bowl 45.

Making light of the Chinese oppression of Tibet the advertising space, rumoured to cost 3 million dollars for thirty seconds, sought to explain its group purchasing power to an estimated 100 million viewers but the PR-gaffe could not have happened at a worse time.

Last week Facebook announced it will allow brands to issue vouchers to users who check-in on their GPS-enabled phones. While Groupon, who recently rejected a 3 billion dollar buyout offer from Google, is in a powerful position this badly judged advertising campaign has just given a PR coup to Facebook, the only platform that could topple it, shortly before it launches its new service in the U.S.