Thursday 9th September 2010
Mar 31

Today I went along to the West Midlands IT Showcase at Millenium Point in Brum.

Lots of dynamic companies and some interesting public sector initiatives were there to help Midlands SMEs make the most out of technology to improve their businesses.

The following were worth a visit…and the event is still on till 7pm tonight, so not too late to attend.

1. IT Futures – help and advice on e-business
2. NB2BC – organisation with a great website, linked in presence and some good quality training and assists to help with ebusiness
3. Accredit UK – generating a huge amount of interest for their IT Quality Standard
4. nFocus – doing some world class work in test automation for software development. Sam from their team recently spoke at the BCS on some work they’d done for the Government Gateway…he was on the stage with fellow speakers from Microsoft and Google.
5. UKita – just about to launch their new website to help small IT businesses gain more business.

I attended a seminar by Vik Bhatti from iCentrum on social media. He touched on lots of things including crowd sourcing where he puts out a request or a question via Twitter and gets lots of responses back quickly – interesting. He also showed us some great visual campaigns including Will it Blend and Million Dollar Home Page.

Here’s a great video from Scholz and Friends on the dramatic shift in marketing reality.

and a couple of tools that we haven’t used before: Movable Type and Pingfm

Mar 23

Our PR agency is currently working on promoting a competion for software developers to develop a Rich Internet Application using Magic Software’s uniPaaS. Here are the details:

Magic Software (www.magicsoftware.com) is launching a uniPaaS Development Competition, which is open to anyone in the UK or Republic of Ireland over 18 – individually or in groups – to develop a new application using uniPaaS RIA (Rich Internet Application).

A prize of £1,500 Thomson holiday vouchers will be given to the winner(s). The closing date for entry is 30 June 2009.

The competition rules, terms and conditions, a uniPaaS demo and registration are to be found here: http://www.magicsoftware.com/4340-en/Magic.aspx

There are four key steps to entering the competition:

1. Read competition rules: exclusive to the UK and Ireland development community
2. Terms and conditions apply
3. Download uniPaaS Discovery’s FREE Studio Edition
4. Register your entry

You can also take a look at the RIA demo.

Once you have registered for the competition, further details will be provided.

What is uniPaaS RIA

“UniPaaS RIA is a new wave of application platform designed to deliver advanced business applications simply and cost effectively. UniPaaS is the industry’s first platform to deliver Full Client, Rich Internet Applications (RIA) and Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) from just a single development paradigm. UniPaaS also gives users the power to choose deployment mode and the freedom to change it as a situation demands – from global/local, to full client/web, on-premise/on-demand, and software/SaaS.”

Mar 13

We’ve been really busy over the last week with new clients starting and dealing with existing clients, so we thought we’d share some more of Peter Bartram’s common sense on how to make your case in the media:

Question: what have the following got in common – lawyer Shami Chakrabarti, doctor Vivienne Nathanson, architect (Lord) Richard Rogers? Of course, they’re all eminent professionals in one discipline or another. But
there’s more than that – they are all supremely expert at putting the views of the organisations they represent in the media.

Chakrabarti is a familiar face on tv and in the press defending human rights as director of Liberty. Nathanson is a fluent exponent of complex medical issues as a head of ethics for the British Medical Association and Rogers has been an eloquent spokesperson in roles such as chairman of the Urban Task Force
and the Design for London Advisory Group.

Professionals have traditionally been valued for their expertise. But, in a world which values openness and transparency more and more, the best are becoming known for putting their views effectively in the media.

With the growth of more kinds of media in recent years, many different kinds of professionals could find themselves in a position in which they need to provide information to journalists. Perhaps they have to speak about their own firm – or perhaps they’re being called on to help put the case for a client.

But the sad fact is that, although more professionals are becoming adept at putting their views, many more still have much to learn. Some professionals welcome an opportunity to speak to the media – others are less enthusiastic and some are quite frank about thinking it’s a waste of time. Further, many professionals seem to be under the mistaken impression that they’ve done the job of dealing with the media once they’ve hired a PR consultant.

But that’s not the case and there are many reasons why you, as a professional, might need to speak directly to the media.

The first reason is because you know more about your organisation, or about your part of it (if it’s large), than anyone else. Briefing an intermediary takes time you can ill afford – and no matter how good the briefing, the intermediary still won’t understand the subject as well as you do. Besides, journalists prefer to interview senior people rather than PR professionals.

What the top people have to say has the ring of authority. What helps to give them that authority is their position in the organisation, the relevance of their experience and their expert knowledge.

As a professional, you may also be a key decision-maker in your firm. And those who take decisions can explain the reasons for them better than those who were not involved directly. Besides that, it’s the professionals who are actually doing the job, facing the competition and meeting the people with whom their organisation habitually deals. You’re more likely to have first-hand knowledge of all the circumstances, within your organisation and outside it, that influence its decisions and policies than an hired PR gun. And, finally, in
many cases, it’s the front-line professionals who are the only acceptable spokesperson to the media. They don’t want to interview PR consultants or junior staff.

There are professionals around who have horror stories to tell about being misquoted, misrepresented or worse. So it’s not surprising that some are apprehensive about the idea of being interviewed by a journalist. They would be less worried if they understood four key forces which drive journalists – and how to turn those forces to their own advantage.

The first force is a passionate desire by journalists to serve their readers (or viewers or listeners) well. Only one thing makes a commercially successful newspaper, magazine or internet site – readers. Or, in the case of radio and TV, listeners and viewers. We could call readers, listeners or viewers the “audience”. Without an audience there will be no sales revenue (if the publication is sold) and certainly little advertising revenue.

Successful publications – and successful journalists – know instinctively what their audience wants. The journalist’s primary task is meeting the audience’s needs, rather than helping you to put your message across.

This means that when you’re planning to meet a journalist, you need to make sure you understand the content, treatment and style of the publication.

Then you need to shape your message to match those three main criteria.

Content is about what’s in the publication or on the radio or TV programme.
In other words, the subject matter. For example, are there regular “departments” or columns in the publication dealing with specific topics?

Treatment is about how that subject matter is dealt with. What level is it pitched at? For example, is it general or specialist? Purely factual or opinionated? Is it overlaid with the publication’s or programme’s point of view? Does it have lots of examples and quotes? Style is about how the material is presented. For example, are there lots of pictures, and if so what of? Does the publication use cartoons, graphs, technical drawings? Has the publication or programme been styled to appeal to a particular audience?

The second journalist driver is the urgent need to get a good story. Journalists don’t actually shout “hold the front page”, but a strong story, especially an exclusive, still makes the adrenaline pump faster. It’s always difficult to interest journalists in a tired old piece of information. But its never hard to interest them in a genuinely “good” story – one which is timely and relevant to their readers’ interests.

So if you have what you consider to be a “good” story – one that you’re certain they will go for, and which serves your objectives – consider carefully how to make the most of it. You need to market your story effectively. For example, there might be one main publication that covers the audience you want to reach. You might gain most coverage by giving the story to that one publication – the fact that the story is exclusive increases its value.

Alternatively, there may be several publications – each with a different focus -that reach your audience. Tailor your story to each. And parcel the story up. Try to make sure that each publication gets a bit of exclusivity. But a word of caution. In the long run, you must be seen by journalists to be fair and even-handed. Journalists can resent favouritism – especially when they’re on the wrong end of it. In a market served by several rival publications, they all ought to receive fair treatment from you.

The third journalist driving force is a desire to beat rivals. Newspapers and magazines – and most radio and television stations – are commercial organisations like any other business and are in competition with one another.

Journalists generally relish the competitive cut and thrust involved in beating rival publications to a story.

There are times when you can turn this to your advantage. For instance, if you’re known as a reliable and interesting source of comment about your industry, there could be times when you can help a newspaper scrambling to catch up with a rival that has got a story it missed by providing new facts, background information or informed comment.

That paper will be looking for a new angle or fresh material in order to take the story further – for example, by putting it in a broader context or perspective. Or it may be seeking to “rubbish” the rival’s story. Being available and having something useful to say can put you into the news in a way that can be helpful to your organisation. It doesn’t matter that the original story was not your own. The door may even have been opened by a competitor.

But if you have information that can take the story further, or provide a better example, you can secure valuable coverage.

The final driver for journalists is the absolute imperative to hit deadlines.

Time is a tyrant for most of us. But in no industry is this more the case than in radio or television or in newspaper and (to a lesser extent) magazine publishing. When a story is breaking, a journalist needs information and comment fast – it could be in a matter of minutes. If you become known as a
spokesperson who provides reliable information quickly, journalists will turn to you. And you could receive positive and helpful coverage for your firm.

The converse is true. The biggest story since World War II that arrives after the presses have started to roll will not make it to the paper. (Although it might make it to the next edition, if it is a morning or evening paper with several editions.) But, in the case of the majority of trade newspapers or magazines
that only have one edition, if it isn’t a big story, it may be too stale to use by
the next issue.

Taking all four points together, the key is that understanding what drives journalists, and being genuinely helpful – even when there doesn’t seem to be any immediate publicity pay-off for you – will build a fund of goodwill that could eventually translate into more extensive and more positive coverage for your
organisation.

And it could help to convince you that there really is much to gain by spending time meeting the media.

• Peter Bartram is the author (with Colin Coulson-Thomas) of How to Make Your Case in the Media: the complete guide to getting your message across in the press and radio and TV, published by New Venture
Publishing. You can read the first chapter free online at www.makeyourcase.co.uk

Mar 3

As a UK PR agency, part of the work we do for clients is to send out press releases. Here is a great article from Peter Bartram on how to make it into print.

E-mailing out press releases to newspapers and magazines may sound like a great way to get “free” publicity.

The trouble is that thousands of other companies have had the same idea.

I recently asked 89 editors and other journalists what happens to the releases which swamp their e-mail inboxes. The answer was simple: the
delete key goes into over-drive.

First, the numbers. The 89 receive around 19,100 releases a week. That’s nearly a million a year, a weekly average of 215 for each editor.
Leading business magazines are heavily targeted. Many get more than 500 a week. I spoke to one editor who employs an assistant just to wade through the 1,500 he gets each week.

The editors told me there are six main reasons why most releases get binned, often without being read.

1 Irrelevant to their interests
Every day, editors receive releases which have no conceivable relevance to the subjects they cover. It’s clear the PR people sending them have made no attempt to target.

They probably haven’t even looked at the publications. They adopt a scatter-gun approach of sending releases to every e-mail address they can
find.

In the good old days when releases arrived by snail mail, at least PRs had to pay for the postage and take the trouble of stuffing the releases into
envelopes. Now those cost and work constraints have disappeared.

Because those PRs who do take care to target carefully are rare, editors tend to look much more closely at what they send.

2 No story or weak story
A release ought to contain some intrinsically interesting information that an editor would want to pass on to readers. PRs who do understand the kind of material a publication uses score because they look for relevant ideas, then tailor their release in a way which makes an editor sit up and take notice.

Editors apply the so-what? test to press releases – so what would happen if we didn’t run this story? If the answer is “not much”, the release goes in the bin. If a PR believes a release wouldn’t pass the test, it shouldn’t be send – or the story should be strengthened so that it will pass muster.

3 Self-promotion of puffery
Too many people who send out press releases don’t seem to understand the difference between news and advertising. Editors hate having to wade through pages of boastful hype extolling an organisation and all its works. Even releases which do contain the germ of a story sometimes get killed off because they’re wrapped up in exuberant puffery.

I wasn’t surprised that some editors told me they pass press releases straight to their advertising departments as sales leads.

4 Poor English
A significant proportion of releases contain spelling, grammar or punctuation errors. Most editors told me errors are a certain turn-off but a few forgiving souls said they didn’t mind correcting the English.

Even so, howlers such as wrong use (or non-use) of the possessive apostrophe and failure to make the verb agree with the subject – two of the
most common mistakes – undermine a release’s (correct use of possessive apostrophe) credibility.

5 Confusing jargon
Some press releases seem to have been written by computer. They start with the latest management-speak (“pushing the envelope” is a current favourite), add a layer of baffling jargon (“coppock curve”, but it varies by subject matter) and sprinkle in plenty of impenetrable acronyms (“CDMA 2000 1x EV-DO”).

The finished result reads like a secret code. The most skilled PRs know that stories are best told in simple English which can be read and understood quickly. Editors haven’t got time to decode jargon or play guessing games with unknown acronyms.

6 Too long
Many press releases combine the twin faults of being too long – but not providing enough information. That’s because the information they do provide tends to be irrelevant background about the company, while key facts about the story – the value of the contract, the date of the product launch, the job title of the newly appointed individual – are left out. Skilled PRs judge the “weight” of a story

Most stories can be told in a page. Some may need two. A story has to be pretty close in importance to the Second Coming to warrant three.
A final word of good news. Of the 89 editors and journalists, 38 told me they had got a “really good” story from a press release at some time.

• How to Write the Perfect Press Release by Peter Bartram is published by New Venture Publishing. You can read the first chapter online at
www.writeapressrelease.co.uk