Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Overabundance of Disorganized and Unverified Information (search is broken) — Content Curation Official Guide

Overabundance of Disorganized and Unverified Information (search is broken) — Content Curation Official Guide | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Online search is increasingly the vehicle through which many people find out, inform themselves and learn about most things they are interested in.


Although its commercial interests, profit-driven business model, secretive approach, and some of its technology limitations would really not suggest to leave that much power to Google, many of our information decisions are influenced, if not altogether driven by what this search engine suggests back to anyone of our queries.


As a consequence search plays a very critical role in our present society, and it would only seem wise for all that we do not readily accept the idea of relying on an auto-generated list of popular web sites ranked by a set of secret algorithms.


But, the reality is that without really being much aware of it, we have slowly but vastly delegated to Google the task of deciding for us what is most relevant and what is not, over just about any topic we can think of....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Thoughtful post on information overload and curation by curator nonpareil Robin Good.

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If Marketing About Avoiding Death Can Be Funny, Why Is Your Content So Somber?

If Marketing About Avoiding Death Can Be Funny, Why Is Your Content So Somber? | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The Dumb Ways to Die ads in Australia, like the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, show that public service campaigns have a lot to teach about marketing.Dumb Ways to Die can be considered among the most innovative public service campaigns ever. The campaign launched in November 2012 in Australia, aimed at promoting train safety, an onerous topic, boring to deliver yet important for public safety.


Railroad departments the world over run such campaigns to get commuters to listen to them, and to reduce the number of accidents and fatalities.


None of them comes to mind however when you’re asked to recall train safety campaigns. None barring Dumb Ways to Die. Why is that?...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

If your choices are boring or breakthrough, which one do you choose?

Shoko Aikawa's curator insight, October 2, 2014 7:32 AM

I have this game application before knowing this is for public campaign. However, Dump Way to Die's song is easy to remember and the game remind me to be safe at the public area. This is a great public campaign I have not ever seen in my life!

Aisha Dixon OHS's curator insight, March 20, 2017 2:20 AM
I love this ad. I am creatively minded and in my five year plan,  I would love to add a song or a drawing to the body of knowledge of Health and Safety that people remember and learn from. I love the catchiness and even though it's been several years since I have seen it, I remember some of the words. I would like whatever I make to be funny and memorable and hopefully more useful than 1951's Duck and Cover video which recommends using a picnic blanket to shield against an atomic bomb explosion. 
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Charitable Giving Report: How Nonprofit Fundraising Performed in 2014

The Blackbaud Charitable Giving Report analyzes trends from over $16.2 billion in fundraising revenue from 2014. Here are some key findings:

1.  Overall giving grew approximately 2.1% in 2014.

2.  Online giving grew 8.9% in 2014 compared to 2013.

3.  Online donations were 6.7% of all fundraising in 2014.

4.  Small organizations had the greatest increase in overall fundraising in 2014.

5.  Higher Education institutions had the greatest increase in online giving during 2014.

Jeff Domansky's insight:

The 2014 Charitable Giving Report features key statistics on year-over-year charitable giving, broken down by nonprofit size and sector.

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