Category Archives: Digital PR

I stand before you naked

There is a common dream (nightmare?) that many people have. You find yourself in a public place and then you realise you are naked. You panic and try and cover yourself or run away. Freudians have a field day with it.
I’ve realised that this is how many brand managers feel when contemplating social media or [...]

Results from our ‘How digital is your marketing?’ survey

Our ‘How digital is your marketing?’ survey established a baseline of digital PR deployment.

News for Pandas

The vast majority of corporate websites, for example, have zero ‘personality’. Why should I engage with you rather than your equally knowledgeable competitor? Telling me about your passions would have more effect than changing the corporate typeface.

Web 2.0 and change

It made me think about change and how the changes occurring in business, accelerated by Web 2.0 and wireless/mobile technology, are now, in 2009, being recognised by a majority of CXO-level executives.

New digital public relations network on Ning.com

Juice Digital has created an online network of media, marketing and public relations professionals intent on staying up-to-date in Digital PR and creating best practice.

Digital PR (that’s Punk Rock)

I remember being miffed when all these new so-called experts appeared. Oi! I was here first. Who are these bloody Tony Parsons and Julie Birchill – what do they know? Where were they when Nick Kent and Charles Shaar Murray were changing the face of music journalism?

I see a similar reaction from some of the early-adopters in digital marketing. A mild resentment towards the new kids on the block (not the band, that is). And a snootiness to old ‘new media’. A fashionable sneer at Facebook here, a condescending shake of the head at the Skittles experiment there. Now that’s only natural human behaviour but, if unrecognised, it can lead to tunnel vision.

Good at social media but not ‘experts’

The term ‘expert’ in social media is anomalous. Unless you have founded something like Facebook, confine yourself to being a master. However, Digital PR professionals increasingly need to become digitally literate. Ideas and content are still king but you need digital skillsets to maximise their effectiveness.

Oranges, Greek yoghurt and Web 2.0 - Digital PR

There’s no point to your online presence if no-one can engage with you. And there’s no point getting customer feedback if you don’t respond, quickly. Don’t be afraid of negative comments – they’re an opportunity to react, respond and turn a negative into a positive.

61 Billion Web Searches a month, will they find you?

Someone recently asked the question “All these million searches for things….where did we used to go to get these answers?” When did you last pop into the library to do some research rather than Googling it? BG - before Google

Develop a Digital PR community inside or outside an existing social network?

Should companies and brands establish their own community networks or develop an area in an established social network like Facebook or LinkedIn?