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« February 2006 | Main | April 2006 »

Last books on blogging

Debbie published a post following NewComm Forum where she met authors of five other books on corporate blogging. The list is below, I'm certainly going to buy them all...:

Publish & Prosper by D.L. Byron et al
The Corporate Blogging Book by Debbie Weil
Naked Conversations by Robert Scoble and Shel Israel
The Weblog Handbook by Rebecca Blood
Blog Marketing by Jeremy Wright
Blogging for Business by Shel Holtz and Ted Demopolous

Congrats for yours, Debbie ! You'll be welcome at PR Thoughts if you plan to make a blog tour to launch it ! ;o)

Update: Constantin Basturea remind me the link on the NewPR Wiki page dedicated to books on blogging, have a look there, another great resource.

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Supporting PR students

Mark Phillimore sent me a list of questions he prepared with his students from the London Metropolitan University and asked me whether I could answer them through a podcast, what we did together thursday evening, and also blog the list here to give a chance to his students to get other point of views...
I won't share the podcast here as unfortunately it was one of my worth (on the technical point of view, I also lost 3 minutes of it, it has been a real mess....) so I decided to moderate this blog...;o)
Regarding the list of questions, I copy paste them below, if you could give few minutes of your time to grab some of them and leave your thoughts in the comments or on your blog and trackback here to let us know, this will be great for Mark's students.

Questions:

1. What do you think of Google’s use of its corporate blog to announce the recent
court case settlement. This caused a great deal of fuss from the investing
community. Was this due to Google perhaps misunderstanding role of blogging
and failing to consider more formal communication routes for certain
announcements (such as online press office) or do you think it was deliberate to
highlight growing role of blogging ?
2. How important is new digital media technology for the PR industry?
3. Have you come across the Vocus system which was demonstrated to us. The
CEO said PR companies have been slow to invest in IT infrastructure, what do
you think?
4. How long did it take you to develop the “right” style for your blog?
5. Losing control in the social computing model seems a concern to business, what
is your view? How are you able to reassure company’s or organizations on this
issue?
6. Today we have been looking at company web sites and many have used very
traditional communication models. Which sites would you suggest highlight or
are starting to explore more advanced social computing models?
7. Do you think podcasting may become more influential than text blogs?
8. We noticed that many blogs actually have very few comments from readers.
Does this highlight the limits of blogging as an interactive medium or that
“information grazing” is a key participation process in blogging as opposed to
actual interaction?
9. Do you distinguish between forums/chat rooms and blogging? Do you know of
companies using forums in an active dialogue?
10. How much time do you spend blogging each day?
11. Tell us about some of the projects you are working on and the communication
issues this is tackling?
12. Which new media technology, do you consider, is one to watch and is going to
become influential and powerful over the next few years for the PR community ?

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Cyril Fievet leaves Pointblog

You might have heard about our french blogzine dedicated to the blogosphere, Pointblog, without doubt the most popular french one.
Launched in 2003 as a personal initiative, PointBlog became a company recently.

Today, the original founder announced he is leaving (title of his post : "Without me") and pointing out the bad administrative management and the lack of consideration for the team by the head of the company.

I don't have any information allowing me to take any position here, I hope Pointblog will survive to this crisis, it would be really sad to loose it.

On a corporate blogging point of view, this is an interesting point to see that the founder (co-founder in this case) of a company is announcing his departure on the blog itself, making by this way a strict application of "transparency" so precious to the blogosphere.
But I am wondering....
He didn't just announced he left the company, he gave the reason of his departure and directly pointed out one men's responsibility. Did he go one step too far ? Should he have tell the whole story on the company's blogzine... Well, it's not so easy to answer I am afraid... In my deep thoughts, I would rather not have gone so far, but on the other  hand, as he is the founder of this blogzine, everyone would have asked for the exact reason of his leaving...
I'd leave the question open.

Update: One more thing: the founder, Cyril, is selling is shares on his blog...

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Welcome PRojetZ


A new french PR blog entered the blogosphere yesterday, PRojetZ, authored by Philippe Cherel.
If you can read french, I fully recomend it to you as he is a very smart writer and I am sure you'll find his blog a great daily RDV while drinking your first coffee in the morning...;o)

Welcome Philippe !

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Social computing: new report from Forrester

Forrester published it's report on Social Computing, "How Networks Erode Institutional Power, And What to Do About It", issued by Chris Charron, Jaap Favier and Charlene Li, available through online order for 299$.
Charlene Li gives some input on her blog about it, the executive summary is below:

"Easy connections brought about by cheap devices, modular content, and shared computing resources are having a profound impact on our global economy and social structure. Individuals increasingly take cues from one another rather than from institutional sources like corporations, media outlets, religions, and political bodies. To thrive in an era of Social Computing, companies must abandon top-down management and communication tactics, weave communities into their products and services, use employees and partners as marketers, and become part of a living fabric of brand loyalists."

Last Forrester's related research document:

Social Computing Takes A Step Forward
December 14, 2005, Trends

How Firms Should Work With The Open Source Ecosystem
October 4, 2005 Market Overview

Social Networking Redefines Self-Service Options
August 16, 2005, Best Practices

Podcasting For Marketers
July 5, 2005, Trends

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French "Stratégies" launches a new web

Stratégies, our french Advertising Age or PR Week, a mix of both as we don't have exactly the same here, launched it's new website few weeks ago.
I've been one out of several french bloggers to be invited to a pre-launch, we attend a short presentation of this new web and the main improvement have been underlined to us.

The far most interesting new feature is the opened archives search engines: you can get all articles having been published since the grounding of the magazine which can provide some interesting inputs on a brand marcom campaigns history. I had a look on a search based on Edelman and got 124 results/articles.

Except that good idea to open the archives (as soon as they are older than one month...) I have to say that the new site is quite disappointing... No RSS feed, nothing really new in the way to structure and share information, and perhaps the worth: a "daily blog" section without any daily update... This section has been announced to us at the magazine's welcome to the blogosphere, dedicated to announce each day a new blog about marcoms and media. Ok, since 3 weeks, 5 blogs are announced, one of thouse 5 is handled by a french PR pro...
An email contact is available but it seems like no one is taking care of it, we've been several to use it to propose our blogs, none of us got any answer...

What surprises me the most is that I know who is behind this refresh of Stratégies ' web, they are definitely up to date with the blogosphere, but it seems like their client doesn't listen or doesn't understand what is is all about, as I can't imagine them willing to be associated to such old mistakes...
So come on guys, let's make it happen...;o)
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Blogging4Business: a new conf on blogging

Blog4busines

Blogging4Business is the next conference on blogging that is worth attending. It will happen in London on the 4th april and is organised by Matthew from Custom Communication.

Topics that will be addressed are below and the full list of the agenda as it's stage of today is available there.

  • Why Blog ?
  • Blogs: Smart Marketing and internal communications, but what about the ROI ?
  • An Introduction to Podcasting and Video Podcasting
  • What Blogs Are Saying About Your Business
  • PR, Marketing and Advertising – Are Blogs Hastening the Consolidation of the Communication Industries ?
  • The Dos and Don’ts of Corporate Blogging
  • Blogs and the Media

List of the speakers is available (heyyy, I am in....;o), it will be great to meet again there Mark, Neville, Gabe, Fredrick and Suw !

You can pre-register there.

On the road through Europe

I am actually on a road show through Europe with David Weinberger who is doing some talks for us in various countries. We began with France on monday, yesterday we were in Germany and today we are flying in Italy where I'll stay two days.

It is amazing to see that whatever the country is, the same questions or should I rather say "fears" remains: people are scared to loose "control" on information.... ( I am back now to continue this post and just saw that David blogged a summary of our two days, so have a look there, he is a much better writer than I am as everyone knows...;o))

So now I am really back on this post (3 hours later...), and you know what, I am out for my first night in Milan and I just forgot my luggage at the office...;o) Yes I know, it's silly, but we went out for diner following a meeting, and I didn't even think I wasn't in my city, it's only while I was reaching the hotel that I realised I might have forgotten something useful... Well... I've also been lucky in another way because as the men at the reception desk learned that I had nothing with me (except by chance my laptop, thanks God, I can blog !), so he gave me a 60 m2 appartement...;o) Hey, italian guys are really cool, are they ? By the way, if you go in Milan and need a hotel, should go in this one, Una Tock hotel !

So, back to this three days tour in France, Germany and Italy. Loose of control, getting bad comments, legacy issue, are the three main fears that people have been showing. But this is it: as soon as you decide to engage conversation with an audience, you're exposing yourself, you're taking the risk to not been appreciate by everyone, to get critics, perhaps even injuries if you're handling strong position on a sensitive topic. But it is all what real life is about and here the question is also to get back to some human voice. Perfection is so boring, no one will ever read you because there is nothing to ad to perfection.

More over, every company or brand should not obviously launch a blog. But at least, every company should listen to the online world. Then, depending of brand culture, your market, your actual situation, you might want to choose another channel that might be more appropriate and less "risky": begin by adding RSS feeds to your website to let people decide themselves if they want to get information about you, have a look on blogs related to your market, and engage the conversation through the comments. When you feel comfortable with this new way of communicating, you can consider blogging yourself first of all perhaps internally, then invite some partners, customers you trust to participate, go step by step, no one requires from you to launch an employee blogging portal just now...

Another question that came out was related to opening comments and the risk to get insults or racism messages who would be then hosted by the brand... Ok, as you have to define blogging policy, you also have to announce which kind of comments won't be allowed and accepted, as soon as you're transparent since the very beginning, no one will complain, it' s just about  giving the rules of the game... Opening comments doesn't mean you have to tolerate any kind of comments, but it means that it belongs to you to explain what you will not tolerate, since the very first beginning of your blog.

So these were three great days and to meet some more bloggers, I am looking forward to the next tour, and now, back to my 60 m2 "room"...;o)

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