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Micro PR - messages that aren't compensating for something

Thursday, May 29, 2008



There is a general internet and public relations trend emerging...Micro PR.

Micro PR, as its name suggests, is the packaging of press releases and distributed information into small, easy-to-read packages. The old media approach was to send out frequent press releases (before, during, and after a major news story or product launch) that ranged from one page to multiple. As you can imagine, this resulted in media outlets receiving hundreds of pages of press releases a week - and if you where working in the media field you just excepted this as part of the job.

So now you have to ask yourself a question...with every major media outlet receiving hundreds of press releases a week, how can you get your press release heard? How can your message stand out. It turns out the answer is simple (literally). Micro PR.

News editors (and people in general) have been inundated with content for so long that a short concise message is refreshing. Micro PR is about think from the perspective of the news editor. If you send multiple page press releases, you aren't doing them any favors - in fact you are giving them MORE work. Users and editors will read your micro press release that is between 0-200 words because it takes them 60 seconds - which is easy for them to find in their hectic schedules. Another advantage of Micro PR is that it enables you to send out more frequent press releases and updates...after all it only takes 30-60 seconds to get through your Micro PR.

Websites in the "Web 2.0" era have already discovered this, with sites like Twitter.com, and even Facebook to some extend (the status section). With Twitter, users answer a simple question "What are you doing now?", but the catch is you only have 140 characters to answer. Twitter users have the ability to follow other users and to be followed. Any answer to the "What are you doing now?" question is instantly sent out to all of your "followers". At first the idea might seem a bit silly, but if you think about it - it is nothing more than the next step in media communication. You now see major companies creating twitter pages to keep twitter users up-to-date on the latest information from their industries - they can blast out their message to hundreds or thousands of users that ACTUALLY want to hear about updates.

Another application is in political races. The popular and tech savvy Obama campaign has utilized twitter amazingly. Up until recently, Obama had more twitter followers than anyone else. At the time of this article, Obama has 33,944 followers.

This article was not meant to promote twitter, but rather to convey a new and emerging school of though regarding PR. Micro PR is a great way of getting your message heard in a sea of messages; allowing more frequent updates and editors that don't mind reading your content. In modern media, bigger is not always better.


Follow me on twitter at: http://twitter.com/senator32

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Author: Larry Stendebach » Comments:

How to use Google

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

The more I talk with people, the more and more I find that users to not fully utilize Google. They simply do not understand how Google works or how to properly ask Google a question to get a desired result. About.com has a very good "cheat sheet" of Google shortcuts that will help you find what you are looking for.






































Google Shortcut Finds Pages That Have...
nokia phone the words nokia and phone
sailing OR boating either the word sailing or the word boating
"love me tender" the exact phrase love me tender
printer -cartridge the word printer but NOT the word cartridge
Toy Story +2 movie title including the number 2
~auto looks up the word auto and synonyms
define:serendipity definitions of the word serendipity
how now * cow the words how now cow separated by one or more words
+ addition; 978+456
- subtraction; 978-456
* multiplication; 978*456
/ division; 978/456
% of percentage; 50% of 100
^ raise to a power; 4^18 (4 to the eighteenth power)
old in new (conversion) 45 celsius in Fahrenheit
site:(search only one website) site:websearch.about.com “invisible web”
link:(find linked pages) link:www.lifehacker.com
#...#(search within a number range) nokia phone $200...$300
daterange:(search within specific date range) bosnia daterange:200508-200510
safesearch: (exclude adult content) safesearch:breast cancer
info: (find info about a page) info:www.websearch.about.com
related: (related pages) related:www.websearch.about.com
cache: (view cached page) cache:google.com
filetype:(restrict search to specific filetype) zoology filetype:ppt
allintitle: (search for keywords in page title) allintitle:"nike" running
inurl:(restrict search to page URLs) inurl:chewbacca
site:.edu (specific domain search) site:.edu, site:.gov, site:.org, etc.
site:country code (restrict search to country) site:.br “rio de Janeiro”
intext:(search for keyword in body text) intext:parlor
allintext: (return pages with all words specified in body text) allintext:north pole
book(search book text) book The Lord of the Rings
phonebook:(find a phone number) phonebook:Google CA
bphonebook: (find business phone numbers) bphonebook:Intel OR
rphonebook:(find residential phone numbers) rphonebook:Joe Smith Seattle WA
movie:(search for showtimes) movie:wallace and gromit 97110
stocks:(get a stock quote) stocks:ncesa
weather:(get local weather) weather:97132

SOURCE About.com

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Author: Larry Stendebach » Comments:

Evolution of public relations - The TOSS Approach

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Successful PR strategies today are directly correlated to PR strategies of yesterday – they have simply been translated to best use the online medium. The following is what I call the TOSS Strategy to modern PR.



In following posts I will outline the importance of using each of the TOSS strategies. one by one.


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Author: Larry Stendebach » Comments:

Additional Discussions

Friday, May 9, 2008

From now on, I will also be posting and discussing information regarding technology, online tools, and industry insights (in Tech, Public Relations, and Politics). This will make the content on this site a bit more versatile and varied; however, the main goal of the site will remain: to keep you up to date with PR in todays world.

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Author: Larry Stendebach » Comments:

SEO...the key to online marketing

These days everyone has a website. How can your website get traffic? Well there are two ways:

1. SEM- (search engine marketing)
2. SEO - (search engine optimization)

SEM - Search engine marketing encompasses online marketing efforts both organic and sponsored - this means that SEM includes your paid ads (through a service like Google Adsense) and your organic placement in search engine result pages (SERPs).

SEO - Search engine optimization is the process of marketing and coding your website in a way that your organic traffic (traffic that comes from search engines rather than advertisements) increases.

SEO might be slightly slower than advertisements that are utilized in SEM, but with enough patience and work SEO can be much more effective and drive significantly more traffic.

We have seen over a 3000% increase in traffic in a one month period by applying SEO strategies to StateSurge.com, and that number continues to rise.

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Author: Larry Stendebach » Comments: