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This Week In PR

February 20th, 2017 by
A weekly roundup of trends, news and personnel moves in the PR industry. This week's stories include a strange time in Washington, D.C., an industry post for Mark Weiner and Ogilvy's reorg begins on this side of the Atlantic.
When social media channels started to emerge in the early 2000s, many of us thought these platforms would improve business understanding and help break down barriers between companies and their critics. More than a decade later, it hasn’t exactly turned out that way. These days the chatter in business sanctums is more about the weaponization of social media. Twitter, Facebook and others are being used to denigrate, belittle and demonize brands as well as the people who run them.
Speaker Presentations To view each speaker's presentation, click on their name. If the name is not hyperlinked, the speaker did not have a presentation. Influencer Marketing: Seek Out and Build Rapport with Brand Ambassadors Bill Karz,… Continued
It certainly takes a village to run a company, small, medium or large. Yet the landscape is filled with brands where one part of a company doesn't seem to know what the other parts are doing. Ditto the lack of communication between business units. In an era of social media, this lack of coordination between business units can be devastating. Communicators should be leading the charge for integration.
Professional communicators give, give, give on behalf of their brand and their brand's audience. Little time is left over for asking themselves the WIIFM question. How often do they focus their communications skills on building their own public profile and enhancing their own reputation? What are they doing to make influencers of themselves, and would they know where to start?
When Microsoft rolled out Windows 10, it didn’t expect the deluge of social media conversations that followed. That may seem surprising for a company its size, but the response across the globe was massive. And it displayed the power of social media to force organizations to rethink their social marketing, sales and customer-care strategies.
Although Twitter has been around for a decade, never in its history have 140 characters had the power and influence they’ve enjoyed since Nov. 9. Sure, when the Pope began tweeting, it made headlines but it didn’t move markets the way @realdonaldtrump has in the last few months. One outlet estimated that one 140-character screed about Lockheed Martin cost the company $28 million per character.