Tag Archive for 'brian_oberkirch'

Brian smacks some sense into us

Brian Oberkirch is the smartest, hardest working man in the business of thinking where we are all going with all of this. So when he gives us a glimpse into the future of PR, it’s up to all of us to sit up and pay attention.

Great PR (or developer relations, HR, whatever) involves translation. Spanning the boundaries between disparate parts of the company and the communities it serves. Helping people understand. This is not the cliched flackery that ends up painting most PR. Edgework demands that you stop thinking about PR in cliched terms. And start practicing it like a mofo.

Brian is talking about the PodTech / TechCrunch / Valleywag dust-up from last week. But he could be talking about any of a myriad of situations where companies – both small and large – mistake transparancy for letting it all hang out and small things become huge dust-ups.

Full story here.

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Training

If you’ve been keeping up every detail of my life, you might have noticed last month that Brian Oberkirch and I did some social media training at Warren Kremer Paino, an ad agency in NY. For the better part of an afternoon, Brian and I gave the staff an overview of social media, some real examples of how it can work in the real world of marketing as well as a quick workshop in blogging and adding video content to a blog.

So now that we’ve more or less developed a syllabus, we’re now going to take this thing public and start offering it to the world at large.
In thinking about all of this, Brian and I have come to the following conclusions:

  • We’re the best qualified to do this;
  • No one else offering this sort of training has the mix of experiences that we do;
  • We can make our clients smarter;
  • We’re the best qualified to do this.

The third point is really the key one. The smarter we can make everyone else in our industry, the better off we all are.

So here’s what we are offering. . . A full or half day with several sessions, including:

  • An introduction to social media;
  • Practical examples and case studies with lessons that can be applied to current client work;
  • Workshops on setting up and publicizing blogs, podcasts and video blogs;
  • Whiteboard sessions on current client work and how social media can be applied.

As an extra added bonus, Shel Israel will be joining us for several engagements. You know Shel… he needs no introduction.

All three of us – Shel, Brian and myself – bring a strong background in public relations with a wealth of experience in actually doing social media. No one else can offer that.

If you are at an agency or in-house and interested in discussing this further, drop me a line.

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Jamming econo

When I try to define social media and what it means for those of us who use it, the phrase “jamming econo” comes to mind. The quote comes from Mike Watt of the influential 80s band The Minutemen – jamming econo meant they could play their music, record albums and make enough of a living to keep doing what they were doing. Becoming superstars was irrelevant – just being able to build a community around their music and make enough money to support themselves doing it was enough.

Jamming econo was a point of view. It mean the mainstream didn’t matter. It wasn’t us vs. them – it was us. Them was irrelevant.

If you want to know more, read Michael Azerrad’s “Our Band Could Be Your Life,” a chronicle of the 80s alternative music scene. Just click the link over there.

This brings me to Steve Rubel’s statement a few days ago that since the mainstream has adopted social media tools, there is in fact, no more such thing as social media vs. mainstream media. It’s all media now.

Sorry but wrong, wrong, wrong.

Social media is more than just tools. Social media is a point of view and a way to get that point of view out to the world while bypassing the corporate-dominated mainstream media. Social media is the ultimate form of jamming econo – you can do all this for practically nothing. In fact you can blog for free.

If one or more of the handful of companies that dominate our media are using a few tools from the social media toolbox, that’s not social media winning the battle – it’s social media being co-opted. The mainstream media is not trying to bypass itself or become more democratic – it’s trying to do what it always does – grab eyeballs and sell crap. If it can do that with trackbacks and phony podcasts, it will.

The mainstream media will always be different from social media no matter how many tools they might share because it’s about intent and not tools.

I’ll also second what Brian Oberkirch thinks:

Maybe it’s also a data point about why Edelman’s social media programs (Walmarting, the Vista outreach hullaballo, the shiny object Second Life and social media release stuff) feel so off the mark as well.

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Our day at Warren Kremer Paino

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Brian Oberkirch and I have started doing some formal social media training and information sessions for agency folk. Here’s Brian starting things off today at Warren Kremer Paino Advertising in New York.

Smart group of people. We’re having a blast.

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Storm front

Here we are one month into the hurricane season and the Slidell Hurricane Blog is gone.

Brian has the story.

Regardless of the business case for leaving it up or not, I’d say not a day goes by that I don’t see a search on my referal logs coming from someone looking for information on Slidell. So clearly, it’s useful to someone.

Update: Even in this heat, cooler heads have prevailed and the blog is back up.

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