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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15 Things We Learned About Nonprofit Content Marketers

15 Things We Learned About Nonprofit Content Marketers | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

CMI's Nonprofit Content Marketing 2015 research is out. Nonprofit marketers are doing more with content marketing – and feeling more confident about their effectiveness. They’re trying more tactics, using more social media platforms, growing in their internal knowledge and skills, and focusing on becoming better storytellers. Here’s a quick list of our favorite insights from this year’s report, including what a best-in-class nonprofit marketer looks like.

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Useful benchmarking for best practices for nonprofit PR pros.

Jeff Domansky's curator insight, November 6, 2014 2:21 AM

Useful benchmarking for best practices for nonprofit PR pros.

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Restaurant hires PR firm after bacon brouhaha

Restaurant hires PR firm after bacon brouhaha | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

BURLINGTON, Vt. — The Winooski restaurant that was overwhelmed with online comments after it took down a bacon advertisement is moving forward, with the help of a public relations firm.


Sneakers Bistro and Cafe took down a sign that said "Yield For Sneakers Bacon" that had been in the Winooski Rotary last week in response to a complaint from a "vegan and a member of a Muslim household" who said the sign was insensitive to the city's diverse population.


Many people balked at the decision, criticizing Sneakers for what they said was an unnecessary move....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Oh puhleez! Somebody please explain this bacon backlash?

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PR: Moving the Profession from Talkers to Makers by @martinwaxman

PR: Moving the Profession from Talkers to Makers by @martinwaxman | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Here's an interesting take on PR: We’re mainly talkers, when companies are looking for makers. Read on for five ways to go from talker to maker.


... I thought about the term after I talked to Jay Baer on Inside PR 3.49.I was interviewing him about his new book Youtility: Why Smart Marketing is About Help, Not Hype and forthcoming keynote at Meshmarketing in Toronto.


I asked him about the state of the PR industry and he said the challenge for PR is this: We’re mainly talkers, in a world where companies are looking for makers.


Makers are creators of content – videos, websites, infographics, white papers, or other sharable social objects. Talkers on the other hand…well, they talk about it, maybe even offer advice or a strategy, but when push comes to shove they have to outsource the work....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Less blah blah blah and more get 'er done says Martin Waxman.

Jared Hill's curator insight, October 24, 2013 2:29 PM

Showing the importance of speaking for PR reps

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Public Relations Values Perfect Fit For Social Media Age

Corporations—and other institutions—are now facing a level of radical transparency that would have been unthinkable even a decade ago.

 

At many companies, it was still possible five or 10 years ago, to believe that the brand was everything the company said about its products and services, the sum total of its logo, its advertising, its press releases, its sponsorships. Today, the brand is no longer determined by what the company says about itself; it’s determined by all the things that are said about the company by others, in the real world (over garden fences, in hair salons, the supermarket check-out line, over drinks and dinners) and in digital and social media....

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50 Top PR Pros to Follow on Twitter | Vocus

50 Top PR Pros to Follow on Twitter | Vocus | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Regular Twitter users know self-proclaimed social media experts gurus and ninjas are a dime a dozen. How can you sort through all the fluff?

You could scan through millions of tweets and vet the Twitterverse, or you could let Vocus do the work for you.


By leveraging Vocus product technology, our algorithim determined the top social media professionals to follow on Twitter through contextual analysis, engagement levels, reach and relevancy. Unlike other methodologies, Vocus’ technology populates its pool of candidates based on more than keyword searches alone.


Here’s our top 50, listed alphabetically....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Nice list of PR and social savvy pros to follow, including yours truly LOL.

Raimundo Nonato's comment, October 5, 2014 9:59 AM
news forc the thanks you http://www.flickr.com/photos/rraimundinho/
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PR is the MVP of Super Bowl Advertising - Journalistics

PR is the MVP of Super Bowl Advertising - Journalistics | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Brands and advertising agencies get all the credit for Super Bowl ads, but it's the PR teams behind the ads that should get the MVP trophy.


...It really is the Super Bowl of advertising (and PR, and social media, and search engine marketing, and insert other marketing disciplines). So while the ad agencies get all the credit for coming up with the actual ideas (though many of the ideas for this year once again revolve around getting ideas from creative consumers like you and me – Doritos and Coca-Cola both tapped the wisdom of crowds for their spots), the PR teams deserve equal praise for making those 30-seconds last for a couple of weeks....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Why PR is the locker room marketing MVP.

Victoria Aupont's curator insight, February 4, 2014 4:44 PM

This blog article was about the PR side of Super bowl advertising and how PR teams are not recognized and praised for the marketing of the commercials like the ads agencies. PR teams participates in creating buzz for a commercial before and during air time. They create the anticipation and excitement for the ads since big brand commercials play a huge role in the Super Bowl experience. This is also a new trend because a few years ago viewers had to wait during commercial breaks the day of the Super Bowl to see the ads.


PR teams deals with early conflicts of controversial advertising of an ad not ad agencies. For example, Soda Stream commercial got rejected by CBS to air on Super Bowl day. This is because Soda stream was taking cheap shots at two of the Super Bowls biggest advertisers which are Coca- Cola & Pepsi. Their advertisements exemplify the benefits of making pop at home instead of buying the pop from the stores which can cause huge issues with competitors.


According to Adventures in Public Relations, there are four ways of measuring success in public relation practices: inputs, outputs, outcomes and relationships (pg 16). The ad agencies produce the inputs (commercials) while PR teams handle the outputs and negatively affected outcomes from the ads. When handling a negative outcome PR team may ask themselves do the outcomes suggest a future course of action? Depending on the type of negativity received from an ad, PR teams would have to conduct crisis management so a brand won’t lose their credibility or loyal consumers.  


The PR team also handles the social media aspect of the super bowl ads. Social media is a way for viewers to express their feelings and thoughts about the commercials. Crowdtap is a website where brands can learn, form ideas and market with their consumer’s on-demand. They polled 1,000 men and women to understand the relation of social media and the super bowl advertising before, during, and after the game. According to their findings, 67.4% of viewers will likely post about superbowl ads on social media during the game. 62.2 % of viewers will re watch ads after the super bowl and 73% people said after the Super Bowl they are more likely to like or follow brands than teams.


I think that PR teams should get the recognition that they deserve because they play a big role just as the ad agencies do. Without the PR team ad agencies would have to pick up multiple tasks that do not fall under their specialty. PR teams help brands win the competition of the best Super Bowl commercial with heavy promotion of ads.

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Definition of PR? Don't Fence Me In | The PR Coach

Definition of PR? Don't Fence Me In | The PR Coach | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
What is PR today? Depending on who you talk to, it's either stuck in the prehistoric era of the dinosaurs or trapped in the social media Twilight Zone.


Smart PR pros recognize a foundation of traditional PR integrated with a new social media toolbox, content marketing and new digital channels is the recipe for success.


Will “Old PR” go extinct?

Brian Kilgore doesn’t think so though, if you read his recent The Huffington Post article Don’t Insult PR People by Calling Them Marketers...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Can the "old" definitions of public relations keep up in the social media era? I'm not so sure. I'd enjoy hearing your comments.

ELISA TANGKEARUNG's curator insight, October 23, 2013 1:57 AM

...

Janine Lloyd's curator insight, October 24, 2013 3:24 AM

PR professionals must include traditional PR, marketing and social media into their campaigns , otherwise you may be of limited value to many companies. "The true PR pro is open to new ideas and adopts and adapts to new disciplines and technology fluidly."

Jared Hill's curator insight, October 24, 2013 2:28 PM

Great info to maintain