The New Media Evolution: From Content to Consumer to Context

The shaping of today’s media landscape by social media first led to “content is king,” as everyone rushed to get information online, and then “consumer is king,” as everyday people gained a larger voice in mass media. And now the shaping has reached a new phase.  In a video interview I recently recorded for Ketchum’s online magazine, Perspectives, I describe how “context is king” is now the new catch phrase for today’s media landscape, how brands can capitalize on context, and what might be the next phase of media’s continuing evolution.

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Digital Tweets from Ketchum Peeps – Oct. 21

How much has the number of Twitter users logging in each day changed since January? Will teens give up Facebook for Google+? And how game-changing is Instagram’s photo-enhancing app? Find out in this week’s “Tweets from Peeps” and let us know your thoughts.

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FedEx Panda Express Takes Flight

FedEx Panda Express Takes Flight

FedEx carefully shipped pandas from China to zoos in Edinburgh and Paris on the FedEx Panda Express. Generating an estimated audience of 2.9 billion viewers and over 2,850 media clips, Ketchum and FedEx leveraged the shipments to expand brand identity in a highly visible, consumer-friendly way.

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What a Difference a Photo Can Make

What a Difference a Photo Can Make

By now, it’s highly likely that you’ve experienced the vast changes that have taken place on Facebook.

 

From the ticker to the Timeline (user profile), the changes were elaborate and have (surprisingly) not been as heavily balked as previous occasions. One additional change, and this one is a biggie, has to do with photos.

 

Facebook has updated the thumbnail size of photos in the News Feed, to a point where they are eye catching and engaging. The change now makes posts that contain photos stand out much more than updates with no photo.

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A Tribute to Arlyne Soodik

A Tribute to Arlyne Soodik

Today at Ketchum, we’re honoring a legend, a friend and a mom to us all. Arlyne Soodik, the New York office’s retired longtime receptionist, has passed away. For nearly 20 years, she was a fixture at Ketchum, and even now, nearly four years after she left the agency, her impact on the people who worked with her remains as strong and fresh as ever. 

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When Should Brands Stay Out of the Social Conversation?

One of the panels that I moderated at our recent “Respect the Internet II” event was titled “Brands as Creators.” The panelists included Jeff Simmermon, Director of Digital Communication, Time Warner Cable, and Erik Martin, General Manager, Reddit.We discussed types of content brands are creating, how content is created and a ton of other great information.

When we opened the panel up for discussion, someone asked a very interesting question pertaining to “when should a brand stay out of the conversation.”

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Moving from Desire to Intimacy

(Disclosure: IBM is a client of my employer, Ketchum Public Relations Canada. The views expressed here are my own and may not reflect the views of either IBM or Ketchum.)We are moving now through the pounding-heart space between desire and intimacy.That is the core of the message that IBM got when it interviewed 1,734 chief marketing officers around the world. It’s no longer enough for the world’s brands to entice us into desiring their products. Now they have to make us want to go all the way. It’s called “customer intimacy.”

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New Organ-Sharing Guidelines May Prompt National Conversation

(This article was originally published on CNBC.com.) The United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) recently released organ procurement guidelines for public comment that are sure to prompt ethical debate. In the first overhaul of the system in 25 years, UNOS announced younger, healthier people will be given priority preference for kidneys over older, sicker people.

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Preparing for the Eurobest Awards

Preparing for the Eurobest Awards

In just the past decade, the awards program for public relations has grown and matured in exciting ways, with many new awards having been created and with existing awards continuing to broaden and deepen the ways they recognize achievement across the media landscape, especially in regard to digital and social media.Recently, I was invited to serve as one of eight jury presidents for the Eurobest Awards, which are organized by the same team behind the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity and which will be presented in late November in Portugal, and I was interviewed by the Spanish magazine El Periódico de la Publicidad about the meaning of the awards in Europe and for the public relations field overall. Below are the thoughts I shared.

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Tech Check: How to Best Write Today’s New Technology Terms

Today’s fast-moving world of online technology is creating new words as quickly as it is new innovations to change the ways we publish content. Yet, PR pros lack one comprehensive resource to turn to and check the spelling and capitalization of these words. Stylebooks and dictionaries cannot be updated nearly as quickly as these new words arise and evolve.

In my role as editor, I frequently come across confusion related these terms, and here I’ve pulled together the latest insights of some of the leading grammar and style blogs and online publications to shed light on the best ways to write these newer tech terms.

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Pros and Cons of 'Citizen Broadcasting' and How Companies Can Use Social Media to Protect Reputation

Several recent headlines have been apt reminders that social networks are designed to scoop the media in the initial stages of an emerging crisis. An interesting example is the September 2010 shooting at the Discovery Channel offices in Maryland. An article in The Washington Post highlighted the fact that Twitter broke the story and included this callout:”Before camera crews and reporters could race to the scene, a shot of alleged hostage-taker James Lee was flashing around the world via Twitpic, Twitter’s photo-sharing service that lets people see whatever a cell phone camera captures seconds after the shutter snaps. The shot — full of menace and dread — was apparently taken by an office worker peering from a window several floors above the Discovery courtyard. The photo was apparently passed from an unidentified Discovery employee to another, who posted it on Twitpic.”Social networks “scooping” traditional news will continue and grow more common. Some have tagged this trend “citizen journalism.” I don’t like that tag. “Journalism” typically provides context and has an embedded editorial process. Instead, I prefer the term “citizen broadcasting” for these types of real-time alerts. To extend the example cited above, The Post and public later learned that the photo was actually a law enforcement agent responding to the call, not James Lee himself. A newsroom editor would have caught that before releasing the information. A citizen broadcaster did not. Depending on the type of crisis, “citizen broadcasting” can be a good or bad thing for the public.Some potential public benefits that exist with social networks:– They alert the public to potential or emerging danger– They provide in-the-moment information that can help emergency responders, investigators or the justice system– They provide transparency that exposes bad practices.Some potential public detriments that exist with social networks:– They spread rumors, misinformation or information that lack appropriate context– They enflame public panic unnecessarily (I predict that the next War of the Worlds, like rumor-panic, will likely spread through social media.)– They are manipulated by special interests to distort facts through volume, since there is no editorial process to provide balance. (Consider the excerpted video that surfaced in July 2010 wrongly painting Shirley Sherrod of the U.S. Department of Agriculture as discriminating against a white farmer. The distorting of facts initially led to her forced resignation before the full video and the truth were revealed.) What implications does this have for corporations facing reputation crises?  For all its potential benefits, the speed delivered by citizen broadcasting often beats out any preference for getting a story factually right. (It can always be updated later, after all.) And it spills over into and feeds a similar trend in actual newsrooms.  Two other articles published last fall — “Traffic Problems” in the American Journalism Review and “Making Money in the Reputation Economy” in Forbes — taken together suggest that speed and populist sensationalism may currently trump accurate and thoughtful media reporting . . . precisely at the same time that corporate reputations are more scrutinized and more important than ever before. This is certainly a troubling combo for crisis managers, akin to “red sky in morning, sailor’s warning.” How to address this dichotomy? One idea: Companies must keep nurturing relationships and providing meaningful dialogue during good times. Up until recently, this was typically done through key third parties and influencers. Today, companies enjoy direct dialogue with the public. (Thank you, social networks.) When bad things happen and media decide to run fast and loose with a story (in the name of almighty clicks), these relationships can come in handy.At best, the public may come to a company’s defense. If not, at least the organization has a pre-existing dialogue from which it can build additional context.  Note: this article originally appeared in Perspectives, Ketchum’s online magazine. Click here to view additional articles from the latest publication.

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