PRWeek’s new column continues / Opening the door a little bit
January 27th, 2006Author: DialogueMedia
Back on the 19th, I wrote about Keith O’Brien’s new column at PRWeek, “What goes online,” and suggested it would be semi-required reading for PR folk, and I definitely agree after article two. This week, Keith (I’m going first name this week, sue me) tackles how public relations pros can’t (and shouldn’t) try to put out every single fire (read: blog posting) when it comes to people trashing a product or service. Of course, the example he provides, one that I’ve discussed here, in Kryptonite locks, is one that shows when it is (obviously) necessary to make an attempt to staunch the flow – though you’re never going to make it all disappear. The only thing you can do in a case like that is mitigate, not dissipate. It’s still going to be ringing true in the ears of those customers and persons who were around for it. And Keith is right – “all the blogging in the world would not have prevented it happening” – and yes, the product was the issue. But that doesn’t mean that we can’t disagree with the way the situation was handled. I mean, the fact that pretty much everyone was convinced (some still are) that the company was sitting on its hands for a few days means either every single blogger (A-list or not) is super gullible, or there is a public relations miscue at hand.
[cue Michael Hutchence cue cards / "Mediate" here]
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My open question for the day here is whether or not PRWeek should do a little bit of open-door relationship building, sorta like what the Wall Street Journal started a bit back (I think it was just a year ago) when they began mailing out “free features” every night to bloggers and other influencers. Obviously it didn’t cure the ail they had – no links from blogs (some might say that was a blessing) – but it did get people talking about the Journal’s articles a bit more, since they were now linkable and not hidden behind a paid wall or sitting in your physical inbox. Ultimately, the WSJ set up an RSS feed (found here) for its free features that anyone could now snag.
Many of us who are in this sort of business would suggest that there is a whole generation of people who are going to have a serious lack of actual newspaper / print reading experience (of course, these are the lucky ones who wouldn’t get ink on their hands all along) – especially with papers that aren’t online for free. A way to attract those people to you, perhaps making them realize the value of a subscription (gasp!), is to show them what you’ve got. So let’s say once a week we get to see Keith’s column, and one or two other things, that are linkable and there for the reading – would that get PRWeek a bit more buzz and maybe a subscription or two?
That’s my open question for you this week.
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Tags: New PR, Public Relations

