Tech Crunch article about the increasing importance of online news sources.

Pulitzer Prize Makes Nice With The Web As Print Media Stumbles

by Jason Kincaid on December 8, 2008

The Pulitzer Prize Board, the governing body behind American journalism’s highest honor, has announced that online-only newspapers will now be eligible for the Prize. The announcement comes as many traditional media outlets are struggling – the Tribune Company filed for bankruptcy today and The New York Times is borrowing against its Manhattan headquarters – and affirms the increasingly important role that online news outlets are playing in today’s news cycle.

The new requirements stipulate that entries come from:

“a text-based United States newspaper or news organization that publishes—in print or online—at least weekly during the calendar year; that is primarily dedicated to original news reporting and coverage of ongoing stories; and that adheres to the highest journalistic principles. Printed magazines and broadcast media, and their respective Web sites, are not eligible.”

But what exactly is an “Online-Only Publication Primarily Devoted to Original News Reporting”? The release and relevant FAQ section shed little light on the matter, offering the following:

Q: Can you give examples of online-only newspapers that would qualify?
A. A growing number of sites, such as MinnPost, Voice of San Diego, St. Louis Beacon and Washington Independent, do original reporting. But it is premature to discuss eligibility before an entry has actually been submitted.

These broad guidelines give the Pulitzer’s governing Board some flexibility for judging entries as it tests the muddy waters of online content. But it leaves the doors open to seemingly absurd possibilities. Among the first to come to mind: what if someone won a prize for a Tweet?

Given the growing importance of Twitter during breaking news events, it is becoming increasingly possible that we will one day have a “Tweet heard round the world” – a 140 character message that breaks a news story of global significance. One that will be repeated ad nauseam across cable news networks and major newspapers – perhaps emerging as a candidate for the Pulitzer under the new rules. Far fetched? Sure. But not impossible. How about a series of Tweets?

Read full article here

By | December 16th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

New York Times article on a Twitter feed about the news in the media industry..

An interesting article in the New York Times about the challenges of following comings and goings in the media industry…

News About News, in 140 Characters
By JENNA WORTHAM

With staff changes and reductions across the media industry, even a blog post can be too time-consuming a way to announce who is in and out of a job. That is why a public relations employee turned to the instant-blogging platform Twitter to create The Media Is Dying, a Twitter feed that documents media hirings and firings in one-sentence bursts of text.

“These sorts of layoffs are unheard-of,” said the stream’s founder, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to preserve his sources in the industry. “It’s gotten insane to keep up with who was moving around and changing beats.”

Initially, The Media Is Dying was accessible only to select Twitter members, as the feed was intended to help those in the P.R. industry stay on top of the revolving entries in their address books. But requests to be included flooded the founder, who decided to go public three weeks ago. Since then, the stream, maintained at twitter.com/themediaisdying by its founder and seven volunteers from the industry, has garnered more than 3,000 subscribers.

Read the full article here!

By | December 15th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

Create a buzz (word)

Liven up your festive meetings by creating and using your very own communication buzz words. Just take one word from each of the columns below and wow your management team and colleagues with an impressive sounding communication term. 

The following words were all taken from an actual communication conference by Rodney Gray of Employee Communication & Surveys Pty Ltd. 

Melitta

exploratory
asymmetrical
strategy
critical
symmetrical
innovation
eclectic
macro
process
generic
micro
dialogue
strategic
reactive
analysis
counter
parasocial
value
objective
post-positive
dimension
subjective
measurable
construct
technocratic
rationality
context
ideological
reconstructionist
discipline
empirical
technological
map
symbolic
double-loop
dilemma
interactive
dimensional
data
marginal
interdisciplinary
rhetoric
philosophical
post-modernist
narrative
affective
evolutionary
reconception
incremental
relational
model
expressed
normative
polarisation
innovative
dysfunctional
perspective
cognitive
anthropological
psychodrama
explicit
codependent
assessment
enhanced
abstract
assumption
By | December 13th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

GCN on Swisster.ch

For those who are interested, here is a copy of the article about the new GCN, which appeared on the Swisster platform this week.

Swisster article 8 December 2008

By | December 11th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

Senior Managers are losing trust

During times of crisis or change the desire to bury your head in the sand and try and ignore the changing environment can be overwhelming.

If you are a senior manager, however, failing to face-up to facts and continue to communicate openly, honestly, and regularly with your team can have a significant impact on your business, adversely affecting morale and productivity, for example, as fears for the future are escalated by the communication ‘Black Hole’

In addition, a lack of structured internal communication, particularly during hard times, can lead to distrust, as a failure to communicate with employees will lead them to feel that they are no longer valued by the leaders and companies that they work for, and will push them towards the ‘Rumour Mill’ for answers and information.

This is just the situation that is occurring across the UK, as a recent survey commissioned by executive recruitment and development consultancy Endaba, has shown that UK CEOs and senior managers are losing the battle for trust from employees.

The 5,114 employees who responded to the survey, listed the the top three reasons for this as:

  • CEOs and senior managers don’t care about employees (chosen by almost 50%).
  • CEOs and senior managers don’t mean what they say (chosen by around 40%).
  • CEOs and senior managers don’t value the contribution employees make (chosen by around 40%)

If these facts alone aren’t enough to prompt leaders into action, then maybe this one will: 90% of respondents in the survey said that they believe that trust is impossible, or at best difficult, to rebuild once it’s lost!

For more information, read the full Endaba report: Why Trust Matters

Melitta

By | December 7th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

Communicating effectively across cultures

Communicating effectively across different cultures and demographics is always a hot topic for communicators in international business, as it represents a very real challenge and part of our daily lives. So I was interested to see that this was the subject of the latest event by ASPIC (The Association for Strategy and Planning in Internal Communications).

During the event, speakers outlined that there’s no such thing as ‘common meaning’. People derive their own meaning, in their own context, from the messages you send – so the potential for misunderstanding is huge.

Culture, which also includes all forms of diversity, matters for every business as it can exaggerate misunderstanding, though speakers warned that we mustn’t assume that a person’s culture completely determines their communication choices and responses.

So how can we tackle cultural diversity? Well there was plenty of food for thought as speakers shared the various ways they have overcome the issues relating to culture:

•    At telecoms company O2 they adopted a ‘Talk don’t tell’ culture where employees where given several ways to communicate back to management, who in turn listened, learned and reacted to staff, right across the business.
•    At TFL, they have instilled a socially inclusive environment that ensures that all policies are appropriate to all staff and that there is no ‘tokenism’.
•    They have also adopted Plain English in all communications, excluding all jargon and unnecessarily complex language to help comprehension.

Reassuringly, the conference highlighted that two of the most prominent tools for communicating effectively across cultures are: knowing your audience and how they see the world; and measuring and evaluating your communications and learning from the results – something that most competent communicators are already doing.

Melitta

By | November 26th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

News – the Geneva Communicators Blog is now the Geneva Communicators Network!

gcn_button No don’t change the channel…the Geneva Communicators Blog has tranformed into the Geneva Communicators Network! Due to popular demand we have enlarged our team, partners, the events we will offer – and our look with a smashing logo designed by Yona Lee

.. stay tuned for more news on our offical launch on 8 December in Geneva.

By | November 22nd, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

‘Not a Site, but a Concept’: Tapping the Power of Social Networking

Interesting article about social networks: ‘Not a Site, but a Concept’: Tapping the Power of Social Networking from http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm

Li was a speaker at the recent Supernova conference, an annual technology event in San Francisco organized by Wharton legal studies and business ethics professor Kevin Werbach in collaboration with Wharton. Li and Forrester colleague Josh Bernoff have co-authored a book on the subject, Groundswell: Winning in a World Transformed by Social Technologies.

“The more you know and understand the individuals who make up the groundswell around your brand and your company, the more you can use the new social networking phenomenon to your advantage,” she said.

Such understanding comes from going well beyond traditional user surveys, however. According to Li and other speakers at the conference, too few companies study how people actually interact with the web and utilize online collaborative tools, yet much of today’s Internet revolves around individual users, the content they create, the communities they form and the transactions they choose.

“People’s lives are rich and complex, so you need to get data both in the large and in the small,” said Elizabeth Churchill, principal research scientist at Yahoo! Research whose work focuses on user Internet experiences. “That means quantitative data from large groups to answer the ‘who, what, where and how’ questions, and qualitative data to answer the ‘why’ questions. For example, we know from research done by [photo sharing website] Flickr that while Americans are big sharers of photos, Scandinavians are not. Why? What is the cultural impact on photo sharing?”

By | November 19th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

top 12 European Communication blogs

The Communication Director, a magazine for European corporate communications and public relations has published a list of what it considers to be the top 12 blogs on communications and PR in Europe – and the Geneva Communicators Blog made the list! Here are the blogs selected (in no particular order):

By | October 21st, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

A Guide to Corporate Blogging

An interesting post on Corporate Blogging from Pro Blogger, including 13 Steps Fortune 500 companies take to Create a Blog.

In order to maintain a competitive edge, corporations are increasingly looking for opportunities to make them stand out. Although traditional media serves as a solid medium that disperses company messaging to the world, the trends of information consumption are evolving. After some initial hesitancy, corporations are slowly starting to realize that it is important to jump on the virtual bandwagon of blogging. This medium represents the missing ingredient that traditional media lacks: the ability to directly connect a company to its customers.

Why is Blogging Crucial to Corporations?

What is the first image your mind conjures up when a brand is mentioned? Is it the logo, the jingle on the advertisement or the experience you previously had with the brand? Blogging allows current and potential consumers to associate the brand with a face and a personality. It bridges the distant gap that has existed between the “inaccessible” company and the “average” consumer. Brito said, “It’s a way for us to appear less corporate and put a human face when we interact online. We believe people relate more effectively to other people instead of a logo or corporate brand.”

Additionally, the blog is a representation of the company’s values, beliefs, philosophy and direction. If they are involved in a medium that encourages a two-way conversation, it shows their consumers that they care about their opinions. Brill noted, “Blogging lets us communicate with our customers in a more personal and direct way. But more importantly, blogging gives us a much needed way for customers to communicate with us. Customers are able to interact with comments and potentially provide valuable feedback or insight that can be brought back into the business.”

Although direct interaction with customers is an incredible incentive, there are many other benefits to blogging. It has the power to position employees as thought-leaders in their industry, to assist in reputation management during crises; to build brand awareness and loyalty; and to increase brand visibility, traffic and links.

Read full article here

By | October 20th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments