09/23/2008
Hiatus
Marketing Roadmaps is going on a little break. Just a little one - I expect to be back with you on or before October 1st.
Here's the scoop.
First, we are shifting over to self-hosted WordPress sometime in the next week or so. I'd rather save the really great stuff I've got in the pending file for the new URL, not this hosted TypePad one.
Second, I'm pretty busy at the moment with client work and new business development, plus trying to find time to work on my blogger relations book and a new business I am putting together. I don't have the time to devote to the posts here that I require to keep the quality high.
Finally, I'm feeling just a bit burnt out on social media "stuff," in part due to last weekend's BlogWorld Expo. My post about that is on my personal blog, Snapshot Chronicles.
It's time to step back, just a bit.
I'm going to spend some time catching up with the bloggers I love to read and pursuing my other interests, on and offline. Friday the 26th I'll be going out to Denver for Sci Fi Channel's digital press tour, and the following weekend I'll be at the big terrier dog shows in Montgomery County Pennsylvania. Reports from both of those will also be on Snapshot.
But I'll be back in October, with a shiny easier to manage WordPress blog. Perhaps not tanned or rested, but certainly ready to talk about blogger relations, marketing and social media again. In fact, if you are in the Boston area, consider coming to BlogHer Boston on October 11th at the Burlington Marriott. It's shaping up to be an excellent conference.
Posted @ 10:09AM in Mathom Room | Comments (0)
09/07/2008
Some Blogger Relations Mathoms
As part of a fresh start to Fall, I'm cleaning out my email box today. In the process, I've run across a few blogger relations issues that really can't support a full post but deserve mention.
Email addresses
Don't use gmail, yahoo or other free service email addresses to send pitches. People like to know that they are dealing with a reputable person, a reputable organization. Your email address, traceable to a firm or organization through its website, helps convey that information. Related: don't send the email from someone else's account, ie the email FROM: field is one name and the signatory on the email is someone else. Nothing says "processed using an email database" better than an email sent by one person on behalf of another.
Media databases
Media databases like Cision and Vocus that include bloggers are an okay place to start building a list for blogger outreach in certain high-profile blog categories like tech, parents and marketing, but don't just spam releases without a cover note. Vocus offers an opt-out button, and I find I am using it when it is simply a release with no note. While I am sure there is a work-around if someone affirmatively requests materials, once someone has opted out from an entity, the system isn't supposed to let it send anything else. In other words, no second chances. Now, this might force agencies to actually begin contacting bloggers before emailing them, but I am not terribly hopeful.
Why did you send me this pitch?
If you get an email like this from me or any other blogger, don't take offense. When I do it, it means that the item might be of interest, but you didn't tell me why you thought I'd be interested. Now, if I'm just a name in a database, and you have no clue why you sent me the item, this does have the effect of calling you out, so to speak. The best course is to apologize. But don't simply offer to take me off the list -- ask me what I would be interested in.
Often as recently happened with a junior staffer at an agency I respect, the rep just gets so wrapped up in the pitch that she forgets to identify the WIIFM. That's why I always advise starting there -- tell the blogger, or journalist, why you thought he'd be interested before you get into the pitch for your thing, whatever it may be.
And finally, a pet peeve.
The true meaning of Unsubscribe. It's the action we take when we have subscribed to something, by choice, and then decide that we don't want to receive it anymore. It is NOT a synonym for opting-out of a mailing list to which you have been added without your permission. Increasingly, however, I've noticed that organizations are using unsubscribe in that context. Even the opt-out mechanism on Vocus has an <Unsubscribe> button instead of <Remove> or some other verb that would be more accurate, and I have seen it used on other PR pitches sent to bloggers.
This really bugs me. Since I did not subscribe to your list in the first place, how can I possibly unsubscribe? I suspect the use of the language is motivated by the CAN-SPAM Act. The thinking probably goes something like this:
Adding these people to our mailing list without their permission is probably in violation of CAN-SPAM, but people get so much email these days, if we imply they subscribed, maybe they'll forget that they didn't opt-in to ours and we won't get in trouble.
Sleazy.
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Related posts:
- The secret sauce for the perfect pitch
- Where's the beef: the content of a good blog pitch
- Blogger relations category on Marketing Roadmaps
Tags: blogger relations
Posted @ 3:09PM in Blogger relations, Mathom Room | Comments (0)
08/25/2008
Mathom Room: Compensation Architect, Media Bullseye, Intuit and relaunch of PBS Parents
The mathom room is that place where I put all the interesting stuff that I want to tell you about but just don't have time to devote a whole post. Here's this month's collection.
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Compensation Architect is a new blog that I developed for Santorini Consulting, an enterprise software implementation firm. The blog is a guide to designing, managing and implementing compensation systems; its principal author David Kelly is a recognized expert in the field. If you are, or someone you know is, involved in setting or managing sales compensation systems and policies, I urge you to check it out. Design by Leslie Doherty of Catapult Web Development.
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I keep forgetting to mention that I was a guest on the Media Bullseye Roundtable podcast on August 1st. Sarah Wurrey, Jen Zingsheim and I talked about BlogHer, whether the web is impacting reading standards and the impact of Randy Pausch's life and death on the interwebs.
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I'm going to have more to say on the JingleGenerator from Intuit as a blogger relations campaign, but for now, just enjoy messing around and creating jingles using this tool. I'm not sure anyone would actually use one of these jingles in a promo campaign but it's kinda fun to create one. And I absolutely love this footnote from the press release:
1Tommy Silk is a totally fictitious character, created solely for the promotion of theJingleGenerator.com because we didn’t have the budget to hire someone famous or use their name without getting our pants sued off. Any resemblance to real music moguls, living or dead, is purely coincidental. So there.
Silk? He's sort of a cross between Austin Powers, Tommy Mottola and Tommy Lee.With maybe a dash of Van Halen. And funny, though not nearly as funny as the footnote. Enjoy.
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PBS has relaunched pbsparents with the Supersisters blog written by sisters Jen Lemen, Kristen Hammond and Patience Salgado. I love the idea of hearing from siblings on a subject. One of the most compelling blogs I've ever "read" was 3191 a photo blog by two sisters who lived on opposite coasts, took a photo every morning and then posted the results. I think Supersisters has the potential to be just as compelling. Check it out.
That's it for the mathom room. I'll be back later in the week with more blogger relations, good and bad.
Tags: Intuit, PBS, Supersisters, Media Bullseye, Santorini Consulting
Posted @ 7:08PM in Blogger relations, Blogging, Mathom Room | Comments (2)
06/19/2008
My Social Media and Marketing Mathom Room
In the universe of JRR Tolkien's The Hobbit and LOTR: “Anything that Hobbits had no immediate use for, but were unwilling to throw away, they called a mathom. Their dwellings were apt to become rather crowded with mathoms, and many of the presents that passed from hand to hand were of that sort." (Tolkien, cited on World Wide Words)
Going forward, when I have a small collection of various bits that don't quite merit a full post of their own, but which I am not quite willing to throw away, I will be posting them to my social media and marketing mathom room.
Associated Press takes on the fair use standard - The blogosphere was abuzz earlier this week with the news of takedown notices sent by AP to parody web site The Drudge Retort citing copyright infringement. While it seemed to back down (and yet not) from the hard line stance, the AP party line seems to be that verbatim quotations from AP stories on blogs is not fair use, whereas paraphrasing and linking is. This is a complex issue, and won't be resolved in the court of blogger opinion. It will take the inevitable lawsuit. In the meantime, if you'd like to know more about fair use and implications for bloggers, check out EFF's legal guide for bloggers (hat tip Kami Huyse for the reminder).
In my opinion, AP is paying attention to the wrong problem. Instead of worrying about the potential lost licensing revenue from bloggers using AP content under fair use, it should be thinking about how to reinvent itself in a new media landscape. In the simplest terms, AP is a news aggregator. It has a lot more competition now than it did a few years ago, and establishing a perimeter defense just doesn't seem like the smart move.
Some will advance the quality argument -- a professional organization like AP adds value to the story that cannot be duplicated by Internet sources or citizen journalists. Buffalo chips. Sure, AP has some stellar reporters who write great stories. But the agency is less and less needed to serve this intermediary role when the media, whether social or mainstream, can more easily go to the source.
Which is why I agree with Michael Arrington, Jeff Jarvis and others who suggest bloggers stop using AP stories as source material. Go to the original source. If you must use the AP information, and really, you shouldn't need to, paraphrase and link, don't quote. Unless you want to be the test case in a lawsuit, this is the safer course. And perhaps AP will realize that it should have been more careful in what it wished for.
Link exchange requests: PR's Amateur Hour - Last week, I advised to never ever ask for a link exchange from a blogger. If you didn't believe me then, believe my friend and mom blogger Julie Marsh. She writes this week that link exchange requests are worse than PR spam.
Ranking systems- As regular readers know, I think ranking systems are inherently flawed in that they are created by human beings with biases. As long as we know and acknowledge the limitations, they are not that harmful. If we forget that these structures were created by people with a point of view and are generally anything BUT objective, we end up attaching far more importance to them than they deserve. Robert French has a nice analysis of the Ad Age Power 150 that touches on some of these points.
That's it for this edition of my mathom room.
Tags: link requests, ranking systems, fair use, AP
Posted @ 10:06PM in Blogger relations, Mathom Room, Media | Comments (2)
06/16/2007
Sing, sing a song
Pal Mary Schmidt tagged me in the "songs that lift your spirits" meme. The goal of meme originator, life coach Hilda Carroll, is a collective playlist.
Mary comments that it is hard to pick just one song because she has different soundtracks for different parts and times of her life.
Yup. How do I pick?
Bob Marley. Aretha. Nina Simone. Eric Clapton. Jimmy Cliff. Warren Zevon. Norah Jones. David Sanborn. Bonnie Raitt. Cream. Blood Sweat & Tears. Chicago. Monk. Billie. And yes even The Who, Beatles and Stones.
I can get it down to three.
Pretty much everything by Crosby Stills & Nash, but most particularly Southern Cross.
For What It's Worth, Buffalo Springfield
And for the sheer joy of it, Ella Fitzgerald's Berlin version of Mack the Knife.
{spoken} thank you. we'd like to do something for you now.
We haven't heard a girl sing it. and since it's so popular,
We'd like to try and do it for you.
We hope we remember all the words.{}
Oh, the shark has pearly teeth, dear
And he shows them, pearly white
Just a jack knife has macheath, dear
And he keeps it out of sight
Oh, the shark bites with his teeth, dear
Scarlet billows start to spread
Fancy gloves though, wears macheath dear
So there's not, not a trace of red
On a sunday, sunday morning
Lies a body, oozin life
Someones sneaking round the corner
Tell me could it be, could it be, could it be
Mack the knife?
Oh, what's the next chorus?
To this song, now
This is the one, now
I don't know
But it was a swinging tune
And it's a hit tune
So we tried to do mack the knife
Ah, louis miller
Oh, something about cash
Yeah, miller, he was spending that trash
And macheath dear, he spends like a sailor
Tell me, tell me, tell me
Could that boy do, something rash
Oh bobby darin, and louis armstrong
They made a record, oh but they did
And now ella, ella, and her fellas
Were making a wreck, what a wreck
Of mack the knife
{louis armstrong imitation}
Oh snookie taudry, bah bah bah nop do bo de do
Bah bah bah nop do bo de do
Just a jack knife has macheath, dear
And do bo bo bah bah bah nop do bo de do {}
So, you've heard it
Yes, we've swung it
And we tried to
Yes, we sung it
You won't recognize it
It's a surprise hit
This tune, called mack the knife
And so we leave you, in berlin town
Yes, we've swung old mack
We've swung old mack in town
For the darin fans,
And for the louis armstrong fans, too
We told you look out, look out, look out
Old macheaths back in town.( lyrics found on LyricsFreak)
Before you ask, yes, I am aware that my three songs are all from the 60s. I like contemporary music and just about every genre, except country music, but the songs I grew up with lift my spirits the most.
I'm tagging Mom 101, Jeneane Sessum and Kent Newsome. Because I know they'll tell us about interesting music with great posts.
Posted @ 4:06PM in Mathom Room | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
03/12/2007
Twitter?
At New Comm Forum, about half the folks I know were already Twitter addicts, and the other half could be summed up as "yeah, we've heard of it but WHY?"
Well, peer pressure still works, so most of us that were not using it already have been messing around with it today, myself included.
Here are my thoughts so far: Yes, this could be a gigantic time sink, but I can already see one application -- if you are trying to find a bit of information or perhaps a reference to someone who can help you out with a specific issue, Twitter lets you put the question immediately to a large group of people.
Tags: Twitter
Posted @ 8:03PM in Blogging, Mathom Room | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
12/27/2006
New Year's Resolutions
To help my clients meet their communications and marketing goals
To spend more time with my husband and son, with friends and family
To find at least five new clients
To post at least twice a week on this blog even when I am busy
To stick to my current exercise regime
To finally get the Marketing Roadshow podcast off the ground
To enjoy my connections with marketing & PR colleagues around the world, in both our virtual and real manifestations
And as I sign off for 2006, I would like to leave you with the lyrics of an old song that really resonated for me this year -- May Every Day Be Christmas by Louis Jordan:
"May every day be Christmas
And every day be blessed
Let the end of every day be filled with happiness
And may the Lord be good to you with every rising sun
All through the day have a smile for everyone
[repeats] At night time comes a longing to be with ones you love
To sit around the fireside and dream of stars above
So may God bless you and keep you, come what may
Then every day will be a happy day [end repeat]
May good times come to you every day"
That is my wish for you, dear readers: May good times come to you every day!
Posted @ 8:12PM in Holiday, Mathom Room | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
12/12/2006
Five Things You Don't Know
I was tagged today by dear blog friend Mary Schmidt in what is apparently the latest blog meme going around. You are supposed to blog five things that folks don't know about you and then tag five more people. Here goes.
1. This is the first time I've ever been tagged in one of these memes. Thanks Mary. Really. As Sally Field once said, "you like me, you really like me."
2. I am a closet romantic. No surprise to anyone who reads the blog that I am a huge science fiction/fantasy fan. What you don't know is my shippy little heart. Aragorn and Arwen, Lessa and F'lar, Buffy and Spike, Mal and Inara, John and Aeryn (major swoon) and lately Starbuck and Apollo with a side dish of Adama and Roslin. (For the non-believers, Lord of the Rings, Dragonriders of Pern, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Firefly, Farscape and Battlestar Galactica.) All started with LotR and Luke, Laura and General Hospital in the 70s and 80s.
3. I have a 6-foot cardboard Spike in my exercise room that my mom gave me for Christmas a few years ago. My husband keeps moving him to the basement and I keep bringing him back upstairs. At least I don't put him in the bedroom :-)
4. Bond, James Bond. When I was 12 years old, I loved Roger Moore. He was a great successor to Sean Connery as James Bond. I also thought he was great in The Persuaders with Tony Curtis, a mostly forgettable series other than the buddy chemistry between the two leads. Back to Bond: Pierce Brosnan was great.. Less said about George Lazenby and Timothy Dalton the better. Looking forward to seeing what Daniel Craig has to offer.
5. My most vivid political memories from childhood. There are two. The first is a distinct memory of watching TV in my grandparents' house and seeing the reports that Martin Luther King was dead. I don't recall the rest, but my family tells me that I came downstairs and told them that the King was dead. Since the monarch of Britain was Queen Elizabeth, they were confused. I was only six years old. The second memory is a compound - the Watergate hearings and Nixon's resignation. I was riveted. Probably part of the reason I am a lifelong Democrat.
Okay Andrea, Kami, Todd, Elisa and John, you're up.
Tags: Five things you don't know
Posted @ 9:12PM in Mathom Room | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
11/13/2006
A little more on the election
Watch this citizen-generated election advertisement.
Explains last week's election results better than anything I've seen or heard to-date.
Seen on Elisa Camahort's blog
Tags: politics, 06 election
Posted @ 11:11AM in Mathom Room, Politics/Policy | Comments (0) | TrackBack (1)
11/08/2006
Mood: Optimistic
While I make no secret of my personal political leanings, I also don't write about them that often. This is a marketing & communications blog, not a personal political pulpit.
But today, I just gotta say: YAY!!
As of 7 pm this evening, the NY Times election results show a gain of 5 seats in the Senate for the Democrats (including affiliated folks like Bernie Sanders and Joe Lieberman), with one contest (Virginia) still undecided. Last I looked, that race was led by the Democrat, but there's bound to be an official recount. Either way, next year, the Senate is either split 50/50 or the Dems have a 1-seat majority.
And the news is even better in the House and nationwide governor's races. If you are a Democrat that is :-)
House: solid Democratic majority, with Nancy Pelosi likely to be Speaker.
Governors: Six states, including Massachusetts, my state, switched from a GOP to a Democratic governor. 28 states to be led by Dems, 22 by GOP (a complete flip from the previous numbers).
And the day ended with Donald Rumsfeld's resignation.
It is going to be a different world come January, and it's about time.
Tomorrow back to our regularly scheduled marketing topics.
Posted @ 6:11PM in Mathom Room | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)







