Does this look like your SecondLife experience?
Posted by Keelan on July 23rd, 2007
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This video by DraftFCB is pretty funny/accurate if you’ve tried SecondLife.
This video by DraftFCB is pretty funny/accurate if you’ve tried SecondLife.
… like one of my good friends has a blog he doesn’t update, but I still found something cool on it.
This is the result of the “What Does Your Birthdate Mean” quiz:
| Your Birthdate: December 18 |
You tend to excel in work situations, but you also facilitate a lot of social gatherings too. Beyond being a good leader, you are good at inspiring others. You also keep your powerful emotions in check – you know when to emote and when to repress.Your strength: Emotional maturity beyond your years Your weakness: Wearing yourself down with too many responsibilities Your power color: Crimson red Your power symbol: Snowflake Your power month: September |
So I don’t know if that’s me or not, but still …
The Ottawa Chapter of the Canadian Public Relations Society has launched a new website.
The site was designed, built (on WordPress) and will be maintained (all in-kind) by Thornley Fallis and 76design.
The new site is built around a blog that board members of the local chapter will contribute to. There are already a few posts to check out.
Note: Keelan Green & Stephen Heckbert of Thornley Fallis and contributors to this blog are CPRS Ottawa Board Members.
Back in January, I did a post about FPinfomart adding blogs to their media monitoring service.
In it, I also commented that FPinfomart and Canwest papers should get with the program and begin offering RSS, which was long overdue.
I am pleased to report that both are now with the RSS program.
FPinfomart subscribers are now able to receive their personal profiles, current events and industry news via RSS.
And several (if not all, I haven’t checked) Canwest papers, including the National Post, Ottawa Citizen and Montreal Gazette, have added RSS feeds to their websites.
This will make my life and the lives of many others in the Canadian PR sector much easier. Props where props are due.
Check this out, and if it doesn’t restore your faith in humanity, you’re missing something quite extraordinary.
I’m not normally given to underdog stories, but I know what I like, and I love that the British audience — probably not filled with opera fans — nevertheless knew enough to know they were in the presence of true, unadulterated talent.
Bravo, Paul, and congratulations on winning Britain’s Got Talent. I don’t buy many CDs anymore, but I’ll be preordering yours.
Hat tip to Paul Wells for this.
Ted Demopoulos of Blogging for Business did a post last week with three facts to ‘get bloggers back to earth’.
Ted forecasts that, “the wild growth of the blogosphere is going to stop soon and there will be a lot of ex-bloggers”.
This got me thinking.
Our CEO, Joe Thornley started blogging about a year and a half ago.
My colleague in our Toronto office, Michael O’Connor Clarke has been blogging since 2001!
Both have successful blogs, but neither have quit their day job. In fact many social media ‘purists’ frown on ‘blogging for dollars’.
What constitutes a successful blog among the reported 60 million in existence? 400 subscribers? 1000? 5000? Whatever the number, its a lot less than what constitutes a successful newspaper or TV show.
Our firm has immersed itself into social media (blogs, podcasts, wikis, RSS, etc). As a leading PR/communications firm we needed to, but we also believe in it as a tool and we do it. Basically every member of our team has their own or is a co-contributor to a blog and/or podcast. We know our stuff in the area and have helped clients launch blogs, podcasts and other social media tools as part of their communications programs.
However, I often hear PR/communications professionals and bloggers/podcasters say they are uncertain about ‘where all this is going’.
I often wonder how many blogs of the 60 million are like this one and have less than 100 subscribers? How many of them haven’t had a new post in 6 months? How many of them have never received a comment?
I think blogging, podcasting, etc. is another part of the communications mix, not a replacement for the other channels. There still is and will be for the foreseeable future mainstream media, advertising, traditional websites, public events and even print materials.
Like financial investments, diversification in communications is important.
Can you have a successful communications campaign exclusively based on social media? Of course, there are many examples.
Can you have a successful communications campaign exclusively based on advertising? Yes again.
Would a communications campaign that includes both plus mainstream media outreach and public events be even more successful? Likely.
In the last year or so, the vast majority of communications programs our firm has developed for clients have included some form of social media in them. Some have been very heavily social media focused, but it depends on the target audience and the objectives – launching a blog is not the answer for everything.
The reason I’d like Ted’s post is because a lot of people that are really into social media are untalkable about anything else and do need to get back to earth a little.
Like many other people in my profession, I don’t know where social media is going. I do know that communications programs still require a mix of vehicles.
Tory blogger Stephen Taylor is the guest speaker at Third Monday tonight.
I’m looking forward to hearing more about this incident where Press Gallery officials and Hill Security removed him from Parliament Hill on Budget Day.
I was talking to a veteran journalist about this incident last week. He had an interesting take:
We’ve seen this before on the Hill, with radio and then with TV. This is the next form of media.
Todd Defren of Shift Communications recently posted on his PR Squared blog a template for a Social Media Newsroom.
One of Todd’s/Shift’s clients Neatreceipts has launched a Social Media Newsroom. Check it out here. (by the way, Neatreceipts’ Scanalizer looks like a cool product)
In his post, Todd has a couple of questions company’s should ask before launching a blog, podcast or Social Media Newsroom where anyone can post comments about their products and/or services:
I think both Shift’s template and Neatreceipts application of it are really good and hope the format will begin to be implemented by other organizations – maybe by one of my clients at Thornley Fallis.
Ryan Anderson of The New PR also posted his comments on it.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper has joined Facebook.
