tangled web


links for 2008-03-31
March 31, 2008, 5:34 am
Filed under: Uncategorized


links for 2008-03-30
March 30, 2008, 5:33 am
Filed under: Uncategorized


links for 2008-03-25
March 25, 2008, 5:23 am
Filed under: Uncategorized


links for 2008-03-20
March 20, 2008, 5:26 am
Filed under: Uncategorized


Keeping a clean online house

Oh boy, it’s getting organized in here. Just joined FriendFeed a new application that aims to condense and simplify your online life. It’s actually pretty amazing.

FF literally has everyone’s online doings, preferences, tweets, and favorites on everything from everywhere in one place.

Content overload?…yes. Organized and efficient?…yes. Should you join?…yes.

Lifehacker summed it up pretty well here.

A quick snippet:

Between Flickr, Digg, Twitter, your blog, Facebook, Del.icio.us, and every other web service under the sun you’re a member of, keeping track of all of your online activity—as well as the activity of your friends—is becoming increasingly difficult. But a recently launched, much-hyped webapp called FriendFeed aims to simplify your online life by pulling all of the content you create into one centralized service. Not only does FriendFeed make aggregating your online life a breeze, but it also makes it simple to keep track of what all your friends are up to, whether they use the site or not.

Friend me @ juliecook



links for 2008-03-19
March 19, 2008, 5:21 am
Filed under: Uncategorized


Resume 2.0: Make your career linkable
March 16, 2008, 8:41 pm
Filed under: business, career, social media resume, web 2.0 | Tags: , ,

My hard drive died a few weeks ago and I lost everything: iTunes music, photos, client documents, new business proposals, and the contents of my PR portfolio.

Luckily, Web 2.0 saved my butt big time because I had photos on Flickr, Myspace and Facebook. I could pull a majority of my client work from Google mail/docs and BaseCamp. Where I wasn’t covered was the innards of my PR portfolio – media placements, news releases, and letters of recommendation among other things.

I needed a channel that was going to bring my career to life for current clients and potential employers – a virtual space to toot my professional horn.

Bits and pieces of in several places: here at TW, BrainGain Website, LinkedIn etc. – but nowhere quite as thorough as my black leather binder with tab dividers and plastic sleeves filled with three years worth of blood, sweat and tears.

The New York Times career blog, Shifting Gears, gave me a step in the right direct with The Web 2.0 Resume. Not surprising at all to find that there’s a social media resume. Crafted much like Shift Communication’s social media news release (I love those guys, they’re always up to such cool stuff!), the SM resume is a next generation branding tool for anyone working in advertising, PR, marketing, and social media.

Here are two great examples from Christopher Penn and Bryan Person.

The Bryper Blog’s gripes (and mine) about how paper resumes fall short of selling YOU:

  • It doesn’t reflect the thought leadership of your blog or podcast.
  • It doesn’t list the online responses to the award-winning YouTube video you produced for a client or the comments you received to a post-mortem blog entry about your ground-breaking integrated social media campaign.
  • It doesn’t tell your potential employer where and how you’re commenting online.
  • It doesn’t show the depth and breadth of your professional network or online presence.

Looks like I found my project for the week! Stay tuned…



DIY PR
March 15, 2008, 3:23 pm
Filed under: Branding, PR, business, media | Tags: , ,

DIY is in the these days – home renovations, Christmas cards, and clothes. And PR is no exception. Especially when it comes to small businesses or start-ups who need press to build credibility and/or get the word out.

Here’s a tasty lesson from a citizen publicist: How to Get Killer PR.

It’s the story of Sarah Endline, founder and chief executive of Sweetriot, a small New York company that sells chocolate-covered cacao beans. She’s nabbed 20 + beefy media hits that would make most publicists’ mouth water.

Ms. Endline is clearly good at playing to her strengths and has concocted a media strategy that blends the help of Think PR with her own hard work to catapult Sweetroit into the media mix.

She dishes to WSJ’s Independent Street about key ingredients to her success:

1) Attend events. Many of her introductions with journalists are at trade shows and other events. Every January, for instance, Ms. Endline attends the Sundance Film Festival and hands out samples of her cacao beans and chats with celebrities, and often gets Sweetriot mentioned in celebrity-hounding zines.

2) Find compelling themes. Ms. Endline has identified two angles that reporters find intriguing about Sweetriot: its a fast-growth start-up with many entrepreneurial traits and marketing tactics and its unique product. She promotes those aspects when talking about the company and telling its story.

3) Take advantage of opportunities for publicity. Sweetriot applied for Fortune Small Business’s 2007 business-plan competition and ended up with a nice write up and big pic of herself.

4) Be accessible and open. Journalists often work on tight deadlines. So when one calls asking for an interview, call them back quickly. (I’ve never waited more than 30 minutes for Ms. Endline to return my call.) She happily talks about nearly any aspect of her business from fund-raising strategies to annual revenues and marketing tactics. Journalists love that.

5) Devote time. If you think PR will help your company, make time for it. It can’t be just something you try to squeeze into your free time between sales meetings. It takes time, persistence and strategy.

Her media magic is almost as sweet as the beans she’s known for!



When your client does bad things
March 15, 2008, 2:58 pm
Filed under: PR, business, crisis communications, media | Tags: , , , , ,

Ok. I admit it. The whole Spitzer thing is fascinating and also has me considering a career change. $5,000 an hour isn’t bad and Eliot isn’t ugly. Just kidding, mom.

The interest is from a crisis communication standpoint. How to handle this blow to Spitzer’s image and career? He certainly isn’t the only politician or high-profile guy to have a morale hiccup in the arms of a very hot twentysomthing prostitute.

Then there’s the additional issue that he made career by going after the bad guys aka hookers and pimps amongst others.

If Mr. Clean called you at 3am asking for your counsel: what would it be?

Gawker asked one top crisis communicator:

Expert #1 is Michael Robinson, an SVP at DC-based crisis specialist Levick Strategic Communications. He’s an ex-NYT reporter who used to run communications for Nasdaq and the SEC, and has worked in the White House. “With regard to your question…about potential paths for Gov. Spitzer to follow, the only realistic outcome is for him to resign,” he writes. Shucks!

I say this primarily because his “brand” was that of a squeaky clean politician and now it’s just squeaky. It as if another famous Elliott – Elliott Ness – was in Al Capone’s pocket all along. For somebody who built their entire image and reputation fight crime, his continued tenure in office just can’t be sustained. As it turns out, the entire foundation of who he was (at least as far as the public is concerned) was built on sand.

Agreed. Not a lot of wiggle room in terms of shifting public opinion immediately. A B2B Marketing post describes how these types of situations look to PR for a quick fix when the real strategy should focus long term instead of immediate gratification.

Here’s a round up of PR related (news, advice, media) coverage.

Gawker: PR Experts to Spitzer: Uh, You’re Toast

Gawker: Riding the Spitzer News Cycle

The New York Observer: Eliot Spitzer, Public Relations Ace

PR Insider.com: Political/PR Guru Ned Barnett Identifies Spitzer’s Real Victim – Hillary Clinton

PRNews: PR pros discuss Spitzer’s actions

PRNews: Spitzer needs the right communication plan

PRNews Blog: Spitzer’s Accidental Beneficiary

PRNews Blog: Another One Bites the Dust

B2B Marketing Blog: Eliot Spitzer – PR Style

PRobecast #55: Watch your mouth

Common Sense PR: Best Angle on Media Spitzerfest



unconference/sxsw/conference 2.0

“Oh – traditional business conference, it’s time to pack up and go home. Even retire for that matter.”

You can’t compete.

Web 2.0 has you pinned to the mat and you’re yelping “Uncle!” Ok. Maybe a slight exaggeration. But still, the days of static, one way anything – advertising, media, PR, video, music distribution, business, etc. – are OVER.

Take a read of this article from CNNMoney.com.

One of my current projects is planning an unconference for the Creative Cities Summit 2.0 coming to Detroit during Oct. 13-15. Some seriously fresh a** ideas are coming to mind with Second Life, Facebook, Twitter, cell phones, video, and cameras.

Stay tuned for the brillance that will be CCS2’s unconference.

If you have any ideas for us about a cool venue/event you went to that incorporated such interactive elements, give me a shout! I’d love to hear about it.