Posts Tagged ‘Social Networking’

Blogs and Social Media: Moving From Monitoring to Networking



In recent years, blogs and social media monitoring have become a fundamental part of the press office operation and many PR agencies’ bread and butter services.

As social networking has matured, companies need to engage proactively to ensure their brands are effectively supported.

Traditional media such as magazines, newspapers and TV channels have increasing numbers of journalist-written blogs as part of their online presence, meaning a top tier of blogs are seen as being just as influential in the media landscape as their e-zines and print media counterparts. There has also been an increase in the number of business-led social networks, business users of blogs and micro-blogging tools such as Twitter and Google-owned Jaiku, and multimedia social sites like Flickr.

However, a huge portion of the blogosphere and social media landscape is not professionally produced and individually these sites do not have huge audiences. Collectively though, these smaller outlets comprise as much as 99 per cent of the social media landscape and together form a powerful force that the PR industry is looking to harness. As the majority of blogs and social media sites contain personal content written in the first person, viral issues and stories can spread quickly. The sites connect people and when issues spread virally across social networks, they become big news for organisations that they affect. This is why tracking blog buzz across the whole of the web is critical for reporting on brand image, online coverage, and building a picture of customer perceptions.

An example of how effective a viral campaign can be, was when an online grass-roots campaign was formed on the social network Facebook. Protesting against an overdraft charge that the bank HSBC was imposing on recent graduate accounts, thousands of students joined forces online through a viral Facebook group which generated massive media attention, and forced a u-turn at HSBC. Within just a few weeks of the group launching, the bank scrapped the overdraft charges.

Over the last year, the fact that blogs impact a company’s brand image online has become more established. Marketing, PR and communications departments are increasingly exposed to the impact blogs have on a brand’s reputation, whether that’s negative coverage of a product or an online petition or a campaign across social networks. As this issue has gathered momentum, companies have realised that blogs and social media need to be actively managed not just monitored.

Some progressive brands are already doing this successfully. US retail bank Wells Fargo for example has a team dedicated to responding online to bloggers’ issues and complaints in order to increase positive sentiment around the brand online and reduce the amount of negativity that might emerge.

What caused the need to move from monitoring to engagement?  Early adopters have led the charge. And the masses have followed. We are seeing social media’s evolution in the business ecosystem move from early adopter to mass market status and web tactics are rapidly becoming better understood tactically and strategically as part of the PR mix. The challenge is to turn the opportunity into action.

Full Color Printing Your Business Cards

There are plenty of marketing materials today that are aimed into increasing your business connections. Because of the ease of use and the increased range, many of these materials come in the form of electronic messages sent through the internet.  However, there is no denying that while the internet and online marketing materials have helped and revolutionized the way the marketing industry works, it is still a close second to actual full color printing materials.

For reference, let us take a look at business cards. Electronic business cards are very easy to make, easier to distribute and cheaper than actual business cards that are made with full color printing. However, let us also look at the fact that the actual business cards are generally more preferred to their electronic counterparts. Here are the reasons why:

Do not underestimate the importance of touching the actual marketing materials

Digital business cards are grossly impersonal and defeat the purpose of social networking. On the other hand, actual full color printing made business cards can be touched, stored and kept by your audience. they can open their wallet and retrieve them anytime that they want. They can even store it in their pockets – something you cannot do digitally.

Some may argue that digital business cards are safely stored and tucked away in a computer’s hard drive and that it is a far safer place to keep contact information than merely keeping it in your pocket or in your wallet. However, this argument can be dismissed easily since the fact that the information can not be accessed without the use of computers. When you are in a restaurant and you meet with a potential client, will you send him an electronic business card? No, you give him your business card personally.

Remember: No man is an island

This brings me to my second point which is the importance of interaction with people. Part of the success of business cards is that it allows people to interact in a natural way without appearing fake and forced. Also, when you send a business card through electronic means, you are effectively at the mercy of the recipient and you have no control over what he does. He can keep your business card or he can delete it right away.

On the other hand, with printed business cards you can have some sort of a say on the whole situation. When you extend a business card to a person, common courtesy states that he should accept it. And while there is no assurance that he will keep your business card, at least you already know that he accepted the card and that if designed properly, your card has a stronger chance of being kept.

Connecting personally with people is more effective

Also, being there personally give out your cards means that you have established a connection already with your potential client. The fact that many of the electronic business cards can be sent out by electronic bots do not sit well with many people.