Helping You Build Relationships
21 Dec
I just read an interesting study from the Young Presidents’ Organization (YPO) that said, “80% of businesses plan to boost investment in social networking.” I can’t say this surprises me too much and don’t know what their definition of “boost” might be going into 2010 budgets:). I do think that as communicators and advocates of social media we need to be cognizant that social media isn’t our savior.

Okay, I won’t go as far to say that social media isn’t right for business – I actually do think there is a place in social for every type of business. What gets me the most excited is what the practice of social media has now uncovered in business communications. For example, I believe that businesses are now smarter about how they are distributing their stories to the audieneces that matter most…through social and traditional means.
As a result, here are 3 ways your organization can benefit from implementing a formal Story Distribution process:
1 – Leveraging Existing Communications – One of the biggest mysteries in the world of corporate communications is why so many useful and amazing studies, stories and facts are bottled up internally as if it were a map to the Holy Grail. Instead, look at each of these valuable communications tools, wrap your company messaging around it in an email and send it off to your employees, clients, investors and prospects.
2 – Actually Deliver an ROI – There is nothing more frustrating as a communications professional than having to quantify how awareness and branding effect a company’s bottom line. You know why? It doesn’t! Before you jump all over me…give me a chance to explain. There is significant value in landing a media story, having bloggers buzzing about your brand and unbelievable engagement across your social platforms. It may even result in a sale or two or several for your company. But it isn’t and shouldn’t be a direct tie into sales…until your Story Distribution process came along. Now imagine all of the validity, awareness and branding that you’re helping establish for your company is repurposed throughout the organization and among your targeted audience by the sales team, HR, investor relations, customer service, etc. In essence, you would be hedging your bet by doing so and allowing your communications to actually tie into your company’s bottom line – a true ROI.
3 – Because It Already Exists – What I mean here is the communications tools and channels already exist within your organization. Your sales, HR, investor relations, customer service and marketing teams already exist. You just need some real time communications tools developed around each story being distributed in a way that is complimentary to the platform and process that already exists. If Sales need it in a PowerPoint slide – it happens. If HR needs it in a 500-word article for their weekly newsletter – it happens. If Customer Service needs it in scripted bullet points – it happens.
I’ve always been a big believer in Story Distribution processes although I have also been caught up in the traditions of clip reports and focusing on the results. Today, I’m happy to say that I believe my job begins when the story takes place because now it is time to share that story with others…through social media, through additional media coverage, and through hand-delivering the story to your key audiences.
Do you use Story Distribution in your communications strategy? If so, how is it working and what makes it happen? If not, why not?
Share on Facebook17 Aug
I had to chuckle when somebody left an online comment about a Chicago Tribune story this morning. The article, ”Twitter forcing a strategy shift for business,” was lambasted by someone as “glorious nonsense.” If you haven’t read it yet, I urge you to do so for the impressive social media usage stats that reporter Julie Johnsson shares.
Glorious Nonsense? Not one bit! Any business person who laughs at Twitter’s future potential does so at his/her own peril. I agree with Forrester researcher Josh Bernoff- the dialogue is happening on Twitter, Facebook and other social media sites. As we remind those who attend our Social Media Workshops, the dialogue will happen with our without you, so why not glean valuable business intelligence and engage with customers as well?
Threadless‘ Jeff Kalmikoff makes an excellent point – this is a new marketing frontier, and first arrivals and risk-takers will be viewed as leaders. Yes, it’s a big experiment now & what better time to try new things when business is hurting for creative marketing tools that are free and can attract loyal customers.
Besides ceding control, companies must also be transparent on social media. Twitter and Facebook are not places for corporate mouthpieces. Comcast and Ford Fiesta are two brands that have demonstrated the benefit of being genuine and really engaging.
While Twitter and Facebook are free, they require a commitment of staff resources. Too many companies jump on the social media bandwagon and pump a lot of time into learning about, creating a fan page or a Twitter handle, and then do little more. If you’re going to take the plunge into social media, assign someone internally who is committed for the long haul.
Share on Facebook13 Aug

As a marketer and PR professional I am targeted (weekly if not daily) with a new seminar, conference or webinar on various ways I can leverage social media and the various platforms for my profession. A recent example includes a “Twitter Boot Camp for PR & Internal Communications Workshop” hosted by Ragan Communications (a very trusted source in our industry) which is actually being led by two folks I really admire – Allan Schoenberg (CME Group) and Barbara Rozgonyi. In fact, I recently led the conversation for a “Twitter 101″ webinar for PR professionals with CISION, the leading media relations software provider. Over the course of two sessions we had more than 2,000 participants!
I think its great our profession and industry are embracing social media advocacy and I can honestly say that I’ve never been on a call, webinar or attended a conference on this subject that didn’t provide at least some value. Most advice has been pretty solid for myself and I can only assume for the other marketers involved with each…but what about everyone else in business??
I’m a firm believer that as marketers and PR professionals we often operate in our comfortable “silos” (or departments). Some common examples of this are when your company receives media coverage and the marketing team might put a link to such coverage up on the website and perhaps have professional reprints made of the story for the sales team. Instead, shouldn’t the coverage be leveraged and packaged for all of your departments to effectively communicate with each of your targeted audiences? Probably…but we don’t.
I bring this up because I believe we’re missing the boat as social media advocates for business (as a whole). Instead we continue to educate within our own comfort zone, to our own people, and in ways that matter to our profession.
- What about the CEO who thinks social media is a waste of time…as he observes his teenage kids constantly communicating on Facebook?
- What about the Sales VP who doesn’t believe Twitter can generate any sales for her company?
- What about the SVP of HR and Legal Counsel who are trying to figure out how restrict their employees’ social media participation while at work?
I think you see my point. What can or should we do? I’m all ears:).
Share on Facebook5 Aug
Together, they’re now etched in history as “Broman,” thanks to the August 4, 2009 seminar held via Conference Call University.
I wisely spent an hour and $50 yesterday listening to social media gurus Chris Brogan and Peter Shankman talk about how businesses can take advantage of social media. If you already paid that fee to listen to Conference Call University’s hour-long session, you can re-listen to it at http://bit.ly/BZqEy.
I love the pearls of knowledge and wisdom I get from these exceedingly bright and wise sages of social media, and I’ll bet you do too. So I’ve created this summary of the key points I picked up from their conversation.
My notes reflect the flow of topics and conversation as I heard them. If I’ve omitted something, please feel free to add it as a comment, because I was multi-tasking during the conference – tweeting about it from @michelledamico while taking these copious notes. So I admit, the following is not an exact transcription of the vibrant conversation that took place. But it does capture the essence of what was discussed and I think it’s definitely worth a read. So here are the best nuggets I culled from their seminar:
Listening is more important than talking. Social media provides the opportunity to enhance your personal/corporate brand. It’s the place people go for valuable information. So provide a value for your info. Utilize social media listening. You can’t listen if you’re constantly talking.
The tools are just tools. You’re not going to save the world. If you’re not considering a better way to interact with customer, these tools won’t help at all.
The number one rule, improve your customer service. We’ve seen companies being raised to new heights by rabid fans who fall in love with something the company marketed to them or fixed a problem for them. A company that uses social media tools and fixes problems for them through social media will attract happy customers. Their customers will get the feeling that “I matter.”
In social media, your big job is to get customers and clients to do your PR for you. You can do great things on this scale.
Look at Facebook – Fan Page, a rudimentary way to communicate with your audience. The first hard-and-fast Fan Page rule: a fan page only works with interaction. Shankman said he had inside knowledge from Facebook that people who join fan pages, will soon be able to see month and day of their birth. What does that mean for the company that owns the fan page? Make it your routine to go into Facebook on a daily basis and reach out to each person celebrating a birthday and wish them a happy birthday. That generates a smile and top-of-mind presence, you’re generating interaction. Social media is not a one-way street; Radio is a one-way street. With social media, you ou have to communicate back.
Information used to flow from outside the network in. Now it flows from inside the network, out. It’s all about listening at the point of me. Bloggers and tweeters are asking Questions every day. There’s an opportunity to do business fast with people who are asking for it.
Are your competitors on there? Are they doing a hell of a job? It’s a defensive move as well. If you’re competitor is on social media, you have to get in on defense.
Chris Brogan said posts case studies at del.icio.us.com (I didn’t have great luck finding the case studies, and will tweet him for the link).
B-to-b use of social media: Thing to remember in b-to-b, people are still in business with people. There are large b-to-b businesses that are doing well in social media, particularly technology companies such as EMC (a storage company) Cisco, IBM.
If you’re a b-to-b company, the first thing you should do on social media is to determine what people are saying about you. Go to search.twitter.com and find people talking about you. Use Blogsearch.google.com to see if they’re talking about your products. It’s not always there.
Chris cited an October 08, Social Media Optimization article said b-to-b marketers are still struggling. Less than 31% use blogs, podcasts, social networks to engage. Don’t be discouraged by those stats: All that’s saying is that they’re waiting for somebody else to pave the way.
Go where there is no road and leave a trial. It’s cheap and inexpensive. You can take first steps without selling the bank.
A lot of services professionals are also questioning the value of social media for their practice. What can come from lawyers on Twitter? They can share interesting thoughts. Answer commentary. People who put interesting thoughts about the industry on a regular basis tend to wind up being searched.
Here’s social media’s secret trick: putting our wishes and wants on the web every day.
You have to switch from thinking about ”where do I advertise?” to “where do I listen?”
To move at the speed of trust will generate revenue. If not today, than it will happen down the line. Pass along information we find fvaluable and can trust and we will give it to others. If we trust it enough, we’ll put it out there. We are participating in the action call to viral. You can’t create anything viral. But you can create something good!
Funny and timely don’t necessarily = viral. It has to be helpful to be viral.
Some of the best revenue generators start from doing something with no course of action. Giving information as a free gift will generate people coming to you and asking what else do you have?
Have to answer real questions from real customers. Because people, more and more will ask real people for help before going to Google. You need to create an army of loyalists for stellar client relations so they come to you first for help.
How can you use the human web to grow your business? By having your clients and customers grow your business.
Shankman cited this “brilliant” idea: Large and small companies are creating “So you found me on Twitter?” pages. Those companies are asking visitors to provide the names of folks who recommended the firm on Twitter. That gives you the chance to send a thank you to whomever gave the referral.
Build followers by providing valuable info that you know will be retweeted.
Audience question: Should you have one message across all platforms? No, they are different audiences and be human in treating them that way. I’d rather have the most famous Tweets vs. most followers. If you respond to people, you’ll get more loyal communicators.
100,000 followers doesn’t mean that much action. Compare that to the percentage of people who take an action when you ask them for help.
Audience questions:
Q: But what if people are creeped out by companies following them? If you’re posting information to the public, you’ll be surprised when a company answers; not creeped out. You want companies to pay attention to you.
Q: How often should a small business tweet or Facebook? All the time.
(Don’t remember if this was a question or a comment) Some of most interesting stuff we’ve seen comes on a corporate level. The most informative tweets come from people who have screwed up royally and are willing to teach people what you’ve learned from it. Saying sorry fast is also huge.
Tony from Zappos. He shares real personals thing. Shy is interesting. He has admitted that he doesn’t understand humor so well. Share your failures. They are people like us. We’re all at different parts of the race.
Final inspiriting quote from Peter: Only way to silence the voice of self doubt is to cross the starting line. It’s a lot of fun out there!
Share on Facebook29 Jul
I’m usually pretty good at including links in my blog posts (as I advise any of my clients to do) but surprisingly, I can’t find much about a topic that has been very near and dear to me recently – advising businesses on how to effectively leverage their media coverage and other news to their targeted audiences.

Myself included, I believe that PR professionals should take a hard look at how we are conducting business. Too often the end result of our efforts are in the form of a “clip report” listing out all of the media hits we’ve received for the month or targeted campaign. Although media coverage is an essential part of what we do, it is only the beginning to an end.
As a result I’ve come up with “5 Steps to Effectively Leverage Your Media Coverage”:
1 – Gain Organizational Buy-In - It is so important that the most influential departments of an organization (not just marketing and sales) understand the value of passing along successful media coverage to their targeted audiences. These departments don’t need to create new ways to communicate with their important audiences, they just need to understand the value in “merchandising” these stories to such audiences. By doing so your entire organization is hedging your PR spend bet by ensuring these audiences have seen the coverage…directly from you.
2 – Customize Your Distribution – Once you have buy-in from the most influential departments (i.e., sales, marketing, customer service, HR, IT, IR, etc.) you need to make sure the materials you are arming them with are customized for their specific needs. For example, HR might prefer to send something out to the employees via an email while sales might prefer some speaking points about the coverage since they typically meet face-to-face or over the phone. In order to support the entire organization, you must customize your correspondence accordingly.
3 – Designate a Department Contact - It is one thing to arm a department with the right tools to effectively communicate with their respective targeted audiences, it is another thing to assume they know what to do with these tools and/or will use them at all. As a result, you must have a point of contact within each department who takes ownership of this communications strategy. Someone who can train, advise and measure how effective such outreach was within each department.
4 – Measure Your Impact - Building on point #3…you must develop the appropriate mix of measurements that are consistent with you management team’s expectations. Typically this is a blend of quantitative and qualitative measurements. Quantitative might be tracking how many people each member of your department reached out to with these tools – via email, phone, in-person, etc. Qualitative might be some anecdotal feedback you received from your targeted audience about the coverage.
5 – Report to Key Management – Once you’ve discovered the right mix of measurements for this program, you have to ensure that the executive teams are able to see how such a program is being implemented across your entire organization. In addition, they have to see how effective such outreach is for the overall goals of the organization. Seeing that you’re creating a minimal amount of work and leveraging existing means of communications…they’ll likely see the value of such a program.
I’m sure I’ve left out some of the important steps or details but I believe we as communications professionals need to remember that the validation we create with media coverage is only as good as the number of targeted audiences that see it. What am I missing? As always, thanks for reading and/or joining the conversation!
Share on Facebook17 Jun
We’ve been talking to a lot of our clients about the value of a corporate blog. To extend those conversations, I thought I’d provide a link to this great interview in BtoB Magazine with Chris Baggott, CEO and co-founder of Compendium Blogware. He believes that blogs can be very effective search marketing tools.
He says the majority of first-time blog users find blogs not by their names, but by the topics being searched. So to ensure that your blog is read by your targeted audience, Baggott said you should take special care to make sure your blog’s title reflects the words your audience is most interested in.
Makes a lot of sense to be certain that your titles contain your keywords so customers in need of your information can find you. There’s a wealth of other information offered by Baggott, so be sure to check out the story at http://bit.ly/kMdJe
And while you’re at it, let me know how your blogging efforts are paying off?
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29 May
You’ve just wrapped up a successful PR campaign and generated numerous stories across national, regional and trade media. Your client is pumped up as you deliver the culmination of your program in the form of a massive clip report. Everyone is happy…right?
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I’ve constantly been agitated by the PR industry (for which I’m a part of) and our inability to tie into the most important aspect of our profession – validating the client’s that we serve. There are many different ways for us to measure the effectiveness of our programs. In fact, Katie Paine, founder of KDPaine & Partners is probably one of the very best at designing the measurement programs in our industry. However, I’m not talking about measurement; I’m talking about educating companies about how to effectively “merchandise” these media placements throughout their organization directly to their targeted audiences. Validating their business by hand-delivering such media coverage to these targeted audiences.
Here are just a few of the things you can do to make your PR program an internal success that will have the entire organization (and targeted audiences) singing your praises:
I could go on and on but would love to hear what you’re doing to “merchandise” your stories. This has become a standard practice for my firm and I hope others will catch on and not move on once the results come in but instead let the games (and outreach) begin!
Share on Facebook18 May

I continue to be amazed at all of the interactions being had on Twitter with traditional/social media professionals and others. In fact, today’s announcement by Cision introducing their new service called JournalistTweets followed by another amazing conversation tonight on #journchat made me think about something…
Is Twitter becoming a new media platform itself?
I say this for many reasons…not just because of the Twitter hype we’re experiencing today. Let me try and explain with these 3 points:
1 – The News Push – I’ve been able to replace all of my RSS news feeds because most of the major news outlets I traditionally follow are broadcasting their news via Twitter (i.e., here is an amazing list compiled by Sarah Evans – MediaOnTwitter).
2 – The Micro Blog – Most media (journalists and bloggers) are using Twitter to market their stories or blogs to others. Granted, they are only using Twitter to supplement their “story marketing” but there is no doubt that the traffic being created by these tactics are growing rapidly.
3 – The “Conversation” – This is the biggest reason (and most powerful weapon of Twitter) I am so bold to make a statement that this is becoming it’s own media platform – like TV, radio, print, etc. On Twitter journalists are conversing with mass audiences (not just PR/Communications professionals), tapping into general interest and niche expertise alike. In the same right, these casual conversations are becoming news themselves.
Am I going on a limb here? Perhaps drinking too much Twitter Kool-Aid? Or do you too believe that Twitter has morphed into so much more than just another social media or networking platform. Talk with me!
Share on Facebook27 Apr

We meet many business people who are intrigued by social media, but wonder how to plan and execute a social media initiative tailored to their specific goals and needs. One of their most common questions is “How could I use Twitter or Facebook for my business?” Here are a few great examples of businesses succeeding in social media. They’re profiled in today’s Minding Your Business by Chicago Tribune columnist Ann Meyer.
I love Ann’s story, because so much of it resonates with what we at Pipeline Media Relations are telling clients in our Social Media Bootcamps and Twitter Workshops.
1. When it comes to creativity, the sky is the limit.
2. When done correctly, your social media initiative will broaden your reach and generate new business.
3. Business decision-makers have a growing presence on social media networks. The fastest growing demographic is the 35 to 49 year old crowd.
4. The integrated use of blogs, Twitter and Facebook make a powerful arsenal of business tools.
5. Don’t use social media to pump a hard sell. Have a conversation. Offer to help. Learn about your friends and followers.
6. Before taking the plunge, answer this question, “Am I really ready to this?” You’ll need to commit a few blocks of time every day or every other day to engage with your followers or those following you.
7. Social media is an investment, mostly of your time. But the pay-off can be great, if you have a plan and executive it properly.
Am I missing anything? Please let me know if you have some additional tips. Also, if you want more information, just give me a shout. I’d be happy to help. Also look for me @MichelleDamico on Twitter.
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16 Apr
Whenever Matt or I speak before business people or college students, we’re frequently asked how we manage to get so many national and major market TV reporters interested in our clients’ stories. To answer that question, I offer these 10 tips. Feel free to share, or to email me at michelle@pipelinemediarelations.com if you have others.
Top Ten PR Tips for Securing TV Coverage for Your Clients
Matt

Twitter: StoryAssistant
Facebook: Matt Batt
Linked In: StoryAssistant
Amy

Twitter: AmyHesser
Facebook: Amy Hesser
Linked In: Amy Hesser
Michelle

Twitter: MichelleDamico
Facebook: Michelle Damico
Linked In: Michelle Damico
Sheri

Twitter: svalskis
Facebook: Sheri Valskis
Linked In: Sheri Valskis