Friday, August 14, 2009

Testing posterous

View from office window (Diamond Head behind tree).

Sent from my iPhone

Posted via email from Tom Kelleher's posterous

Internship Availability

Begin forwarded message:

Aloha!

I hope all is well!  We haven’t talked in a while about internship opportunities.  Please pass this along to your students.  We have a few new updates for McNeil Wilson Communications, and some great opportunities for students this Fall semester.  Please note the new details and contact below.  We are always looking for bright minds and new talent.

CONTACT:
Nathan Kam
Vice President, Travel & Tourism
McNeil Wilson Communications
1003 Bishop Street, 9th Floor
Honolulu, HI  96813-6429
Main:    808.531.0244
Direct:  808.539.3471
Email: Nathan.kam@mwc-anthology.com
Website: www.mcneilwilson.com

McNeil Wilson Communications Internship Duties: Interns will assist account executives and coordinators on the following: create press releases, fact sheets, mailings, etc.; assist with media scanning, media clippings and reports; participate in conferences and client meetings when possible.  McNeil Wilson Communications has two types of public relations internships – one focused on travel & tourism, and the other is focused on public affairs.

Application Instructions:  Send an email to nathan.kam@mwc-anthology.com with ”INTERNSHIP REQUEST” in the subject line.  We will send students a form to fill out, requesting a brief resume/qualifications.  

Please let me know if you have any questions!

Mahalo!
Melissa

Posted via email from Tom Kelleher's posterous

Thursday, July 09, 2009

Balancing Voice with Professionalism

In the Public Relations Tactics class today, we'll discuss online profiles. The tricky part for professional communicators at any stage of their careers is how to speak with a real voice and stay relaxed with social media while also the avoiding pitfalls of mucking up your online presence. A couple of links for discussion:

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Special Issue of JPRR on Social Media -- More details


Manuscripts for the special issue are due to the Journal of Public Relations Research manuscript central site at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/hprr by September 1, 2009. (See prior post for call for submissions.)

If you've been invited to serve as a reviewer, please enter "social media" as a keyword when you create/update your reviewer profile.

If you are submitting a manuscript, please note at the top of the abstract and in the appropriate space in the online submission form that the submission is a "candidate for the special issue on social media."

Also, if you know of anyone else doing research in this area who would be good to review or to submit work, please let me know or ask them to get in touch with me. I need all the help I can get to make this important issue of JPRR go over as well as it deserves to.

Mahalo!

Monday, April 13, 2009

Special Issue of Journal of Public Relations Research on Social Media

Stoked. Last week Kaye Sweetser mentioned that Karen Miller Russell may be interested in running a special issue of Journal of Public Relations Research on social media next year. A few tweets later (with @kaye and @KarenRussell), it appears I'm lined up as guest editor.

Any public relations researchers out there want to help? I'm already looking for reviewers and trying to get people thinking of ideas for good article submissions.

I'm working on the initial call for submissions. Let me know if you've got any suggestions. The call may sound a little stuffy at the moment, but I do want to get articles that go beyond the breathless buzz-hype type reports I get every morning in my e-mail. (If you're on the same PR trade mailing lists that I'm on, then you probably know what I'm talking about.)

The Journal of Public Relations Research seeks scholarly articles for a special issue on public relations and social media.

This issue will include research that conceptualizes social media clearly and offers empirical evidence to build public relations theory. While the technologies of social media change rapidly, the underlying implications of participatory, interactive, ‘de-massified’ media on public relations are more permanent. This issue will offer a venue for discussion of what social media mean for public relations.


The guest editor encourages articles serving the interests of professionals looking to make sense of how social media influence their day-to-day work, and how their work in public relations influences the development of social media. Critical approaches are welcome too. In any case, the long-term value of such contributions hinges on the journal’s primary mission to deliver scholarship that creates, tests, or expands public relations theory.


details on process, deadlines, etc. to follow…..

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Forrester Report on Blogging & Trust

Forrester today released a new report on corporate blogging and trust (registration required, but free). I'm glad to see they ask, "Is a corporate blog worth doing?" Rather than just assuming that everyone should be blogging, Josh Bernoff and his co-authors actually acknowledge that some blogs are not worth the effort. Of course, that's a hard point to ignore when they report that only 16% in the survey said they trusted company blogs.

Among the tips offered:
"Honest and transparent blogs will get noticed. Those who write in a corporate voice will be ignored and ineffective. What types of blogs will consumers trust? Those that reveal tidbits about what’s going on inside the company, those that comment intelligently on customer problems and competitor products, and those that speak like people. Robert Scoble pioneered this technique at Microsoft years ago, but it’s still hard for companies to figure out."
Thanks to Steve Rubel <@steverubel> for tweeting this and Mihaela Vorvoreanu<@prprof_mv> for re-tweeting.

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

ZDNet series on how Fortune 500's use social media

Jennifer Leggio at ZDNet is doing a series on how Fortune 500s are using social media. Her latest entry on Newell Rubbermaid features an interview with Bert DuMars, VP of of e-business and interactive marketing.
Our strategy is to listen to our consumers first, understand how they would like to engage with us and/or how they would like us to engage with them... This has led us to start small, experiment and see what works. We then expand the particular tactic based on consumer feedback that they are receptive and that we have developed a level of trust with them in the conversation.
Applied theory: two-way conversation leads to trust as a relational outcome, which leads to more conversation. It's also analogue to social penetration theory.

Thursday, November 06, 2008

NYT on corporate blogging, bad news and PR

In an article from this morning's NYT:
"Unlike more traditional firms, many of today’s Web companies were built on the mission of creating transparency for users. Executives have lived that mission, blogging about company successes. Now that bad times are coming, some of them feel the need to make that public, too. A blog post also comes across as more heartfelt than a press release with canned quotations."
This reminds me to mention that my article in queue for Journal of Communication won't be out until next year's first edition. In the meantime, I believe I can send a copy of the 'in-press' manuscript if anyone's interested (this was the larger-scale follow-up to the JCMC study).

Here's the abstract:
Organizations face unique challenges in communicating interactively online with publics that comprise dauntingly large numbers of individuals. This online survey examined the perceptions of people who had experienced interactive communication with a large consumer-tech-industry company via organizational blogs. Those reporting the greatest exposure to the blogs in this study were more likely to perceive the organization as communicating with a conversational voice. Conversational human voice and communicated relational commitment (relational maintenance strategies) correlated positively with trust, satisfaction, commitment, and control mutuality (relational outcomes). Building on prior research, this survey supports a model of distributed public relations – one in which key outcomes of public relations are fostered by a wide range of people communicating interactively while representing an organization.

Sunday, August 03, 2008

UH PR Tactics Class Samples SMPRs, Yogurt


We've been working on our social media press releases (SMPRs) in COM 459, Public Relations Tactics. This is part of what has turned into a multi-week assignment. For the first part, we wrote traditional news releases for a local yogurt store that just opened across the street from campus. (News releases for class use only, not for real distribution.) Then we discussed the difference between social media releases and traditional releases. We decided we needed to take a field trip over to Yogurtland to collect some multimedia resources and sample the product. Being the conscientious teacher that I am, I made sure to pretest the product before proceeding (yum!).

We did run into some obstacles:
  1. the computers in the class lab only run Safari browsers, which did not work well with PRX Builder, and
  2. even with other browsers, students (and their professor) had trouble loading multimedia elements.

For those of you on PROpenMic, you might want to check the site for another SMPR builder in the works that might be worth a look.

Anyhow, I modified the assignment to allow students to hand in mock-ups of the SMPRs in MS Word that illustrated how the writing, feeds and multimedia components would work together.

This week, we'll continue to discuss:
  • technical issues, and lessons learned from these issues,
  • pros and cons of SMPRs vis-a-vis traditional press releases, and
  • the broader function of social media tactics in public relations strategy.
For more details on this, check out the SMPR I did on the SMPR assignment (a meta-SMPR?). See also Kaye Sweetser's SMPR assignment at UGA.

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Issue tracking via Twittter

Got a call and e-mail last week from a reporter at one of the local dailies who was working on a story about the very public debate over building a rail transit system in Honolulu. (Just Google "rail transit system Honolulu" if you're wondering.) She was particularly interested in how pro- and anti-rail groups are using online media.

This sets us up well for a discussion of our title topic for our summer class, COM 459, Special Topics: Public Relations Tactics. The idea is to learn about traditional public relations tactics as well as their online offshoots.

Anyhow here's class activity #1:
Issue Tracking via Twitter

Primary Objectives
  • Practice using social media technology (in this case, twitter)
  • Identify traditional public relations tactics used in a locally contested issue
  • Identify online public relations tactics in a locally contested issue
  • Use social media to track issues in real time from disperse locations
  • Discuss ethics and effects of tactics identified
  • Discuss use of social media for issue tracking
Procedure
  1. Discuss social media in class (perhaps with trade publication reading for intro; i.e., To Tweet or not to tweet)
  2. Demonstrate twitter online with on-screen example
  3. Students sign up for twitter accounts as necessary
  4. Students find and follow each other's tweets online (see Karen Russell's 48 hours of Twitter assignment for one method of doing this)
  5. Students tweet at least once every 12 hours before next class when they find an example of a public relations tactic related to the issue.
  6. Follow up with in-class discussion of:
    1. Public relations tactics related to issue
      • range of tactics
      • efficacy of tactics
      • ethics of tactics
    2. Class social media use
      • reactions to twitter in general
      • assessment of technology for issue tracking
      • benefits/downsides of working as a dispersed group
    3. Implications for public relations practice
Assessment
  • Success in setting up accounts/following others?
  • Met "tweeting" criteria?
  • Identified appropriate examples?
  • Quality of follow-up discussion
Mahalo to Kaye Sweetser and Karen Miller Russell for sharing their ideas on how to use twitter in PR classes. See Kaye's teaching tweets and Karen's Teaching PR: "48 Hours of Twitter" class assignment for more.

Friday, June 27, 2008

"More journalists moving to PR"

It's sad to hear my hometown paper (The Palm Beach Post) is cutting back, but I'm not surprised at the other angle mentioned by Sarah Schewe of Editors Weblog - more journalists switching over to public relations.

With Web 2.0, the skill sets of journalism and public relations may overlap even more than they used to. The values, however, are still different (i.e., public relations people do value advocacy). And there's no shortage of advocacy online. Fairness and balance may be the first casualties of shrinking newsrooms.

For what it's worth to those outside academe, we're still trying to teach those values and an understanding of the differences between reporting and advocacy.

Friday, May 16, 2008

ICA paper presentation on Slideshare


Kelleher ICA 2008


From: tkell, 1 minute ago





Tom Kelleher's ICA presentation on experiment with organizational blogs and public relations contingencies (for ICA on May 25, 2008) Key finding: Not all PR people are hyped on social media.


SlideShare Link

Thursday, May 15, 2008

School's out

Just posted my out-of-office reply. Kenny Chesney lyrics ringing in my ear:


School's out and the night's roll in

Man, just like a long lost friend

You ain't seen in a while

You can't help but smile

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Speaking of the diffusion of social media....

...Kaye Sweetser invited me to join PROpenMic on Friday. I signed up on Monday. Robert French welcomed me to the group about 11 minutes later, telling me that I was #209 to join the group in 7 days.

Diffusion of Social Media


Working in small groups, students in my Building COM Theory class last week went out and surveyed 10 people each. Although the sampling is unscientific and the data was only collected to set up a class discussion, we found something worth mentioning. The gap between awareness and adoption appears to be much narrower with social media adopters than it is with adopters of other innovations.

Below are two of the students' graphs. One is for HDTV. The other is for YouTube.

In general, the gap between awareness and adoption of HDTV looks to be about 3 or 4 years. You get HDTV in 2008, you probably heard about it in 2004 or so (if not much earlier). But for YouTube, the awareness and adoption curves are almost identical -- you hear about YouTube and you might very well be watching a YouTube video, or even uploading your own clip, that same hour.

The "innovation-decision process" as Rogers called it, moves very fast.

In our follow-up, I suggested that this is because of the nature of the innovation. Accepting an invitation to join a social media group (even one as large as YouTube), often means becoming aware and adopting almost simultaneously. "Trialability" is high. Students came up with some other good explanations:

1. Cost -- YouTube is pretty much free if you have computer access. HDTV is a different story! (Rogers' trialability)

2. Ease -- The investment of time and energy is also minimal. If someone sends you a link on e-mail, all you have to do is click. (compatibility, observability?)





Rogers also said that the innovation-decision process is faster with early adopters. This could well be the case with a sample that consisted mostly of friends of COM majors at UH.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

UH PRSSA Blog



The UH PRSSA students have a blog now, which is pretty cool considering their faculty advisor hasn't posted to his in about two years!

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Guardian Unlimited article on Conversational Approach

From an article in the September 18, 2006 Guardian. [Registration required, but free.]

Know anything about wikis or dark blogs? How about web 2.0 or SEO PRs? Thought not. But anyone considering a career in marketing and PR is going to have to acquaint themselves with these terms and learn all about the brave new world they apply to - or perish...


..."Online marketing is about engaging the consumers in a dialogue and giving them something useful rather than just talking to them. It's all about interactivity," says Ryan...

Although Leo Ryan of Ryan Morrison & MacMillan sees public relations as a mere "subset" of marketing, it's interesting to see the conversational approach here, and the push for including it in curricula.

The article also includes a broader perspecitve on the role of online public relations:

"At that point the internet became of interest to the PR industry because conversations could be had, and that is what PR is all about," explains Katy Howell, managing director of immediate future, a two-year-old firm specialising in online PR.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Back to the islands

I've moved back to Hawaii after two years at UNC. Though I'll miss Chapel Hill and that great school tremendously, it does feel good to be here at UH-Manoa again and back in the ocean and island culture.

As for a research update, I plan to get back to the second organizational blogging study once I get more settled in. It also looks like SAGE will have Public Relations Online: Lasting Concepts for Changing Media out late this year (they're projecting a December publication date).

Friday, March 03, 2006

Sampling and response data for MSDN blogs-and-public-relations study

First off, a big thank-you to anyone and everyone who took the time to respond to the survey on blogs and relational outcomes. This study is a follow-up to the one just published in JCMC.

Here's how Drew (a grad student I work with here at UNC) and I got the sample of 500 names for the current study: 1) A few months ago, we started looking at the reverse-chronological list of entries on blogs.msdn.com. 2) Then we looked for any comments on those blogs. 3) The next step was to see if commenters made their contact information available. 4) We did this until we found 500 leads -- 179 were e-mail addresses and 321 were Web contact forms.

The idea behind choosing the sample in this way was to survey a group that had at least a minimum level of interaction with an organization (in this case Microsoft, chosen solely for the magnitude of its online presence) and some minimum level of exposure to their organizational blogs. I wanted to get enough responses to run some statistical models.

Since there are so many ways to calculate response rates (and since these methods don't always translate well from mail and phone surveys to online surveys), I'm just going to include a table here with the approximate figures I have after just a quick look at the data set:





























Outcome
#
Undeliverable e-mails and inoperative Web forms (approximate)
48
Direct refusals via e-mail
4
Partially completed surveys
48*
Completed surveys128
Nonrespondents/unknown (approximate)
272
Total
500

So even by conservative estimates, the survey had about a 26% completion rate
(128/500). I'm guessing that for many of the analyses, I'll be working with
about 140 cases out of about 450 that I assume received invitations. So depending
on how you look at it, the "response rate" is somewhere between 26%
and 31%. (I'll be in a better position to give details after I start "cleaning"
and analyzing the data set.)

Most respondents who did e-mail me were very gracious and supportive, even
in cases where they were questioning the nature of the research and the deisgn
of the study. On the whole, MSDN bloggers and those they interact with are an
amiable group.** I've got to admit that surveying this group - a bunch of people
with a lot more computer expertise than me - made me a bit nervous.

It's one thing when someone sends out SPAM behind a cloak of anonymity. It's another
when you attach your name to a real request for help. Only two people responded
with irate, mean-spirited e-mail. I'd love to report their names and include
their e-mails here, just to reveal their nasty side. (One bills himself as a
consultant on e-mail ettiquette among other things - I hope that's not his day
job.) The irony is that I've got a responsibility to protect their identities,
while they freely attack me for disclosing mine.

*Many of these 48 responses were almost complete and provide usable data for the
analyses I'll run; others are people who just glanced at the first page, and
perhaps came back later to complete the survey.

**Lots expressed interest in hearing about the study's progress - hence this post - and one respondent did ask me to link directly to his blog: Michael Teper.