Archive for April, 2009

Books I read – No. 1 – Ireland’s Burning

April 23rd, 2009
Paul Cunningham's Book Ireland's Burning

Paul Cunningham

The Irish Times interview with James Lovelock gave me a nudge to finish the final chapter of RTE Paul Cunningham’s book called Ireland’s Burning.  James Lovelock is a world thinker on environmental issues and takes a very grim view of the earths future – that global warming is in fact irreversible.

Paul Cunningham, RTE

Paul Cunningham, RTE

Paul Cunninghams book take a slightly less pessimistic and more hopeful view of things.  Paul is RTEs environmental correspondent and his book reflects the years of covering environmental stories on behalf of RTE.  Overall the book is a collection of 20 or so interviews/essays on people/initiatives from around the country that give guidance on environmental issues or are doing something to help reduce our impact on the environment.  Some of them are extended versions of news items that would have at some point been aired on RTE.  In the book he can obviously go into more details than a 30 second news item.  The stories themselves are pretty varied with some featuring ground breaking steps (tidal energy projects) and some that feel extremely mundane.  In each of the stories he takes time to build a detailed personal profile of the person concerned while explaining the areas they have action in or their expert opinion.  Some gave interesting backgrounds into international government negotiations on environmental treaties where Environmental Minister at the time Noel Dempsey and current John Gormley detailed the late nights and almost horse trading/blackmail in reaching consensus.  More mundane accounts were also given in other chapters such as the efforts made by the tourism industry in Donegal which really appeared very inadequate against the drama of global warming.  It is important to have examples at the two extremities and in general he covers most of the key areas.

The books is obviously designed to raise awareness on the impending crisis which is an extremely difficult balance to get right.  Too much doom and gloom and people switch off or are too frightened to think straight.  Too low a level and people reject the need for any pain as the danger does not appear great enough.

Telling this story responsibly from an Irish perspective is even more difficult.  I was expecting some more of the Lovelock type doomsdays stories but the impact of global warming in Ireland will not be as severe as else where- some issues for potato growers, some small changes in rain fall and some coastal erosion- all means that in the short term Ireland will do fare pretty ok.  This is also reflected by Lovelocks hypothesis that Ireland could become ‘a life boat for humanity’ and our biggest challenge could be deciding who to save.

This presents a problem in getting people to take the issue seriously.  Our recent reluctance to bear a reduction in our lifestyles in accordance with the economic collapse does not bode well for taking serious measures to save the environment.  Even in the face of disaster we tend to want to cling to what we have and leave action for others.  Lofty ideals of helping to save the planet have to compete with our creature comforts.  The economic crisis is a lot more real for people than global warming where individual action can appear insignificant.  People are happy to recycle while its free but you would face rebellion if you tried to limit car/plane journeys, increase taxes or impact on comfortable living.  If we feel that we may be ok then we forget that if everyone took that perspective the entire planet would be at great risk.

I do feel that all the awareness programmes are important but even if Irish people took the most extreme measure for these it would still be scratching at the surface.  People need some level of fear coupled with some element of empowerment where they can effect change.  Problem is that no one really knows how serious it all is.

Paul does put this succinctly where he says “focusing on the concerns of today rather than the consequences of inaction tomorrow” poses real danger.

There is an interesting  web chat on RTEs site with Paul Cunningham.  Although a huge amount of work went into this book I dont imagine it will be his last one on the topic as grim predictions become a reality.

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Nice tool for checking the strength of your message

April 8th, 2009

I have stumbled on lots of online tools that are interesting but trying to find an application for them in PR is sometimes a struggle.  Twitter Mosaic for example is a nice tool but does not have huge amount of PR useage potential.

At Search Marketing World 2009 Ciaran Norris from Altogether Digital mentioned a service called Wordle in his presentation where he showed the tag cloud it created on Obama inauguration speech which clearly showed the key words he was emphasising.

Basically the service allows you to input text or a url and it will create a tag funky tag cloud from it.  Frequently mentioned words are emphasised as in any tag cloud and the layout is pretty intuitive and easy to interpret with nice colour coding and layout.

Wordle Example using eoinkennedy.ie/blog

This one is from an analysis of this blog.  The more words the trickier it is but at a glance the main areas that you wish to cover should become pretty apparent.  So how is this of help to the PR industry?  This has great use to test the messaging validity of things like press releases and speeches.  It wont replace the manual intervention but it should give you a snap short.  It only does words and most messages are more complex than words but it should help to make sure that what you are trying to communicate actually comes across.   Consider that most people absorb huge amount of information but simple repetition of key words can stick.

Here is one I did on a press release we did for Repak on recycling at Christmas time.

Repak Green Christmas Wordle Example

Repak Green Christmas Wordle Example

Packaging Recycling at Christmas time was the key message we wanted to get accross and it shows in the tag cloud.  I would suggest that if you put in a press release or speech from a CEO and the tag cloud bares no resemblance to the core messaging then something may be wrong.

One note of caution – do not add to the gallery unless you are comfortable with people seeing it.

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Social Media Emphasis on ORM at Search Marketing World 2009

April 7th, 2009

Social Media engagement seemed to be the big winner at Search Marketing World this year.  The beauty and horror of these events is that you get to pick and choose the sections you can attend but invariably the ones you want to see clash.  The three that I was particularly struck with were the Brand and Reputation Management, Social Media -Redefining the customer and The Ad Industry and Online Marketing.  Too many learnings for this post so here I will deal with the Online Reputation Management one only.

Web Brand & Reputation Management

Brian Marin from Marin Software (not related believe it or not) began this session with an overview of the drop in levels of public trust from the Edelman Trust Barometer, where 83% of Irish people reported that they trusted brands less, before giving some examples of companies who have experienced bad karma online.  The are some really strong examples of where the negative online activity can really impact on brands.  Some of the ones he touched are worth reading and included:

TicketMaster is Evil and Must Die

Walmart Watch, which is a nationwide campaign to reval harmeful impact of Walmart

United Airline and customer compliants

Concast Sucks

Ryanair Sucks

Moben Kitchens – Destroys Your Health

Boycott De Beers

Alitalia Sucks

Countrywide Home Loans Sucks

Kentucky Fried Cruelty

I Hate Starbucks

Some of these are fully set up sites dedicated sites that have a damaging effect on the search engine traffic but the examples shown went beyond this to include facebook profiles that also mirrored above including

Acer Sucks

Comcast Sucks

Starbucks Sucks (interestingly there are a number in this category)

The main point coming from this was that a lot of negative commentary is taking place and that most companies are blissfully unaware of it.  Stage one being the obvious to establish resonable methodologies and automate the process of monitoring.  Some good aids here are Brandwatch, BrandsEye and Yasni (for people searching).  These can tell you a lot about trends but as Brian Marin pointed out you also need to watch downstream traffic using tools such as hitwise.  He pointed to an example where HSBC were seeing lots of traffic to their site from Facebook (positive you would think)  but when they tracked it back, it led to complaints by students about the bank.

All of this caught everyone interest but the pencils really started to scribble down notes when he covered actions you could take – some very ill advised –  some reasonable.  Most of the other sessions contained some element about the perils of trying to be more clever than the search engines so best to stick within the rules.

So what can you do if you are the recipient of negative online coverage especially when this pops up in search engine rankings before or after you company listing.

All of these are fairly dramatic efforts but the real ways to protect your brand comes back to a lot of the basics in PR including:

These strategies are very positive news for the PR industry as the core skill set of communication is engrained in everything we do.  Again the Edelman Barometer but a 91% figure was reported in response to being asked how important “communicates frequently and honestly on the state of its business” was to the overall reputation of a company.

Brians summary was also useful but in brief:

Rob Shine from Cybercom had some additional gems to share.

The advent of Universal Search where other third party content is pulled high in search engine rankings, such as YouTube videos, is something people have seen but have not really thought about the implications.  The Taco Bell video of rats running through the restaurant at night was followed by a huge online and traditional media coverage including footage of the reaturant opening up the next day.   The Ryanair snoozing air hostess BBC coverage on YouTube also ranked high in Google.  Interestingly enough the anti blogger stance by Ryanair, which for most would have been a near disaster, actually resulted in higher bookings to the site (higher visits to the site was expected).  This sparked a debate about no PR being bad PR.

On the defenive tactic side Pay per Click advertising supported by good content can help to push down negative mentions or at least point to your side of the debate.  One of the earlier presentations by Anthony Quigley pointed out that although many people ignore the ads on the side the paid for sponsored ads at the top of organic searches are frequently percieved as organic listings.  This involves buying the negative keywords that people are using to find the story and then using google adwords to link to some positive aspect such as a balancing statement on the story.

Influecing the blogging community was another tactic mentioned but can take a long time and is uncontrollable.

Two other tactics were also covered including

1. Push down the critical site by having more positive pages rank above it.  This covers optimised YouTube videos, optimised press releases, blog posts, social profiles etc and is well within the remit of PR companies.

2. De-legitimise the link in the eyes of the search engine.

You can always complain to Google through the editors of its Open Directory DMOZ.  To be effective the critical site needs to be out of compliance with the DMOZ rules and can theorically decrease the importance of the site.  However any action, if any, can be many months in actually taking place.

Rob finished up by highlighting the importance of establishing positive online PR as part of the marketing mix rather than waiting for negative commentary.  He pointed to their work with blogger Guy Kawasaki who they brought over to the store house to show him how to pour the perfect pint.  His subsequent blog posts on it resulted in 100,000 additional readers and an approximate 5% lift in visitors to the Guinness Store House site.  He also spoke about an joint initiative with Irish photo sharing site Pix.ie.  They realised the potential of tapping into the power of the thousands of amateur photos that are taken at the store everyday by creating a photo gallery on the site.  In promoting this they did some blogger outreach where they targeted a group of influential photo bloggers and after a tour of the facility got 70 blog posts that helped generate an additional 400,000 extra readers of the site.  Some of the photos that he showed were of an extremely high calibre and would have been difficult to achieve with a professionally contracted photo session.

Some of his summary tips were useful including:

The final speaker was Krishna De.

She open up with some more online reputation horror stories such as Motrin negative experience with a minor revolt in the blogosphere and social media sites over an ad they ran.  Some users found the language and tone offensive (that interestingly was launched over a weekend) and resulted in a back peddling by the company.

She also pointed to an issue that blogger Emily Tully had with a mobile provider where the debate raged on IGO People.  Interestingly the competing providers had a presence on the site and gained judos by interacting on the issue.  It also made its way into main stream papers.

Krishna heavily endorsed using communications specialist to help decide the tone and nature of engagement when dealing with online reputation issues.  One of the really obviously things that is overlooked by companies mentioned was the - Online Reputation Management Plan.  We prepare these plans for clients for events in the real world but they are still very new for dealing with crisis and reputation issues in the online world especially with social media.

Krishna also pointed out the obvious step of making sure you own the url for high profile CEOs or management.   She pointed to an example with Fast Company whose the CEO Shel Israel was parodied on a website in his own name following a volley of criticism over a inteview he did.  This tactic also covers buying the domainname’sucks’.com address as this is a popular one for people who have an axe to grind with a company.

Another good practical measure, especially as brands are on the fence in relation to engaging with social media, was to at least claim ownership of the name.  While not exactly cybersquatting there are many examples of multiple unofficial versions of sites/profile/brands on Facebook and Twitter.  Apparently an Exxon Mobil Twitter account that was being lauded for being proactive was not officially part of the company.

In terms of engagement she also recommended getting in early rather than late and not necessarily staying until the bitter end.

Once again listening to the online conversation, understanding the medium and building relationship are key and should be done before a disaster strikes.

Overall some great learning and some new tricks.  If PR people ever needed a reason to get to grips with adwords then this is a really strong one.

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Posted in Events, ORM, Online PR, Online Reputation Management, Uncategorized | Comments (0)