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I recently read this article about Social Media Press Releases from Brian Solis and it got me thinking. . . What would a social medial news wire look like? | ||
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October 2007 As much as I respect and understand where Brian is coming from, I cant help but think that Social Media Release is a non-term. The whole point of social media is that it doesn't conform with traditional rules, and media releases are one of these things; social in this case representing of and from the people. There's still a strong place for media releases (and people should always send them to me, particularly first
) but you can't use media releases in a medium that has no center, and is decentralized as part of its very nature. The key is getting in the back door: you wouldn't send a press release to Digg, but you can get on Digg by using more traditional PR methods by contacting the right person at the right blog. Reply
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October 2007 Duncan, first thank you for the kind intro. Your views accurately capture the challenges associated with this new format. Well said. I apologize for the long-winded response. In short, I think we’re in agreement. Most of the content to follow is really aimed at clarifying the value, differences, and opportunities associated with SMRs for PR people, while also taking a moment to call out what they’re “not.” I agree that the SMR is not so much a non-term, but definitely a misunderstood tool, which I’m sure, took off well beyond the original intentions of SMR creator Todd Defren. Perhaps it’s propelled by the fact that people want so desperately to save or leapfrog the press release, that they are pinning their hopes on this new format. I can’t agree with you more…Social Media doesn’t conform to traditional rules and is driven by and for the people. This is such an important point because there are many people who believe that the SMR is the only way to engage in conversations, when we all know, that only direct participation is the only way to engage. Perhaps I need to do a better job in contributing to the value of SMRs. In the past, I’ve written SMRs to complement media/blogger relations, traditional press releases, as well as corporate blog posts. I’ve placed them online using a social platform, such as Wordpress, and placed them inside of a socially-enabled press room – also built on Wordpress, as an extension to a company Web site. In these cases, they’ve had some pretty interesting and encouraging results. I haven’t yet though, used Social Media Releases to distribute news to bloggers and journalists. I don’t see the need to replace relationships with “new” tools, and I hope that others don’t forget the importance of one-on-one conversations to share news. Fortunately or unfortunately, the momentum for the Social Media Release is picking up inertia and I am spending quite a bit of free time (whatever I have these days) adding to the collective voices out there to help clarify what they are, what they aren’t, and also how they may help. The SMR started as a way of putting together the information that writers need, in one place, collecting the building blocks of any good news story, including news facts, images, video, RSS feeds, links to supporting market information, links to social networks and bookmarks, and also suggested tags, all without the usual BS or spin. Somewhere along the way, perhaps just over a year ago, some of us discussed the possibility of renaming the Social Media Release as the New Media Release as to not confuse people between the tools to reach people versus the networks where conversations take place with or without PR. But since the Social Media Release brand has legs that only seem to be gaining momentum, I’m committed to helping guide their use and benefits on a path of relevance. You’re exactly right, “You can't use media releases in a medium that has no center, and is decentralized as part of its very nature.” I couldn’t have said it any better. SMRs or New Media Releases were never intended to become the hub, but they were designed to provide information and hopefully, also spark conversations by placing information in places where the content could be discovered – directly and indirectly. Most importantly, they were not intended to cure the ills of many traditional press releases nor are they designed to replace them. They do however, represent an opportunity to distribute information in a usable way, while also presenting the information within social networks to enable people to disseminate, discuss, share, and also provide perspective. The landscape for good press releases is broadening and is forcing PR to think about new ways to write and distribute them thanks to search engines and meme tracking services ala Techmeme. 51% of IT professionals for example, claim to get their news directly from the press releases that show up in Yahoo Business or Google News over traditional industry rags. And, depending on the day, PRNewswire and Businesswire are now ranked within the top 50 sources in Techmeme’s Leaderboard. It’s all very interesting to say the least. It is also very revealing. What I’ve learned is that it’s now more important than ever to package news in a useful and meaningful format using the channels where the people you want to reach go for their information. However, none of this alleviates the need to share news with the people who can help carry information to the people you want to ultimately reach. In the realm of blogger and media relations, relationships are the foundation for distributing information. And in this case, press releases are merely an option – as long as the news and appropriate information is shared in a way that meets the needs of each blogger/reporter. Social Media is about people. A Social Media Release simply can’t be the only solution for bridging conversations between people and companies though. It can however, present information through social channels which “can” empower people to do more with the information that they discover. But at the very least, SMRs are forcing PR people how to do things better, differently, and hopefully, more effectively. Reply
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October 2007 This is a fantastic comment and should most likely be a post of its own. Thanks for bringing the boom-wow.
I still have a couple of questions though. Maybe you are the one to help? Isn't the whole idea of a press release to inform others that are looking for new information on your your topic in a new and more conversational way? Aren't most of the people you would be looking to reach are people who don't know you yet? Relationship building and blog PR are great for finding people having similar conversations and joining them but isn't the SMPR for helping others find you? Reply
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October 2007 That's an interesting question. The "only" true social wire that exists right now is something built on a blog or wiki platform. Stowe Boyd said that in his opinion, the best place for an SMR would be a company blog.
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October 2007 I feel like it would have to be at least wiki flexible and most definitely open source.
How would it be used? What features would we want? How 2.0 would it need to be? Would it just be a collection of releases or would it need voting and bookmarking integration? Is a centralized wire service against the whole point? Reply
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October 2007 for me trying to understand this, I would want as a blogger to receive not just salesy info, but the heart and soul of the business model as well as social media things like buttons, icons, invites, my ability to get a one one one email interview coming from my angle, a release about what the product is trying to achieve, but without the steak knives speel. A templated 2.0ish wire would be great, upload your blog buttons, add your invite info, etc etc sure why not you just need to add the variables that make sense for 2.0 bloggers....right?
I love linking to new innovative stuff but I am the one more often than not that has to dig for the info, even after a lengthy email. Bloggers have a shorter time span than a traditional journo in my opinion, sometimes you even need your release to be a blog post created in the flavor of the blogger you are targeting. PS> my blog is very small, as I don't have much time yet, but down the track maybe....but the thing with bloggers they can rise up from obscurity and down back into obscurity, like my blog, one day on news.com the next deep away....and thats the way I like it so less work....but I still want lots of Social Media info emails sent to me in a meaningful way :0) In case anyone cares, my blog is Talking Tech on Family 2.0 Reply
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