Monday, November 23, 2009

Keep Learning. Keep Practicing. Keep Wrtiting.

I always look back and remember my Uncle telling me to get off the couch and do something that will benefit my future as I was growing up. When I wanted to be a ched he always said, "Chefs cook, you should be cooking, always cook." When I wanted to be a director/cinematographer I remember him telling me to go film something because that is what they do.

When writing and public relations fell into my lap in high school my Uncle was still there with another life lesson, "Writers write, do not stop writing." For some reason, that is the quote that always sticks with me. A contrary thought would be that those statements lose some bit of credibility coming out of the same person over and over again. But they don't. My Uncle was doing for me what most people do for someone they care about. Keeping my motivation and passion alive so I can take my skills and make something of them.

Every time I wrote something I think about what my Uncle said, always write. I do my best to not look at my school work as tedious because it allows me to continue practicing what I will be doing the rest of my life.

I have my journal and personal writings saved but I never really blogged ( I probably have no more than three posts in my blog if you ever find it). So, when it came to writing for Rowan PRSSA's blog I knew I had to do my research so I could make my posts great and coincide with the Chapter's outstanding reputation. I want to make sure that when I know post on Mondays I am giving people something that can use and that I follow guidelines of successful blogs so that a possible mistake of mine does not wind up ruining someone else's work.

Instead of going on with personal stories, for my first post I am going to share with you one of the most interesting pieces of work I found during my research that I will be doing my best to follow when I write each week.

It is called "15 Basics to Insanely Useful Blogwriting" and is it from blogtodone.com

1. Write for the reader. This is the most fundamental of fundamentals, and though this list isn't in order of importance I'd be remiss if I didn't start here. While a blog can be a personal journal, if you want an audience of more than your friends and family, write for an audience. Don't just write about your random thoughts and experiences, but think of what the reader wants to know, what the reader's concerns are, what the reader is interested in, and how you can help provide that.

2. Solve the reader's problems. What are the reader's problems? Solve them, one post at a time. To do this, I think about the problems I've been addressing in my own life, and as it turns out most people have the same problems. I'm not as unique as I thought. And then I write about how I've been solving them- what actually works for me. People seem to find that useful.

3. Put yourself in there. While the post should be for the reader, it is really a conversation between you and the reader. So don't be afraid to put yourself in the post. Share what you've learned, talk about your life, as it's relevant to the post, and let your personality show. Make it personal, and the reader will connect with you.

4. Find your voice. This is the personality I talked about above. It's about finsing a conversational tone, but it's more: you have a unique voice, and that voice speaks to the reader, in her head, as she reads your posts. You need to learn to find your voice, by experimenting, trial and error. The more you write the more that voice will emerge.

5. Be concise. This is an ironic statement given that this is a long-ish post, but concise doesn't mean short. It means there aren't a lot of uncessary words. Write all the blather you want, but go back and edit, so you're not wasting the reader's time. Read more.

6. Make it scannable. The reality of reading on the Internet is that people scan articles, get the main points, and only if those main points are worthy of their time and do they read the full text- despirte what long- winded rantig bloggers have to say about the issue. So write for that reality, if you want people to read your posts: make it easy to scan and find your main points, through lists, sub-titles, blockquotes, or the like.

7. Headlines matter. The most important few words of your posts are your headlines (or post titles). They need to catch the reader's attention and promise to solve a problem the reader had. If it doesn't do this you've wasted a headline.

8. Offer solutions. This is almost a repeat of an earlier point, but it's worth stressing. Often a blogger will bring up a problem but then end the post. You need to offer a solution, or the reader will be left feeling unsatisfied. If you don't have a solution, maybe toss out some idead and then ask for reader solutions. But in most cases, write a solution.

9. Post regularly. This doesn't have to be dailym but if you haven't posted for a week (except to apologize for the lack of posts), you're not likely to build a good-sized audience. People subscribe because they have a reasonable expectation, based on past performance, that you're going to come out with useful content on a regular basis. I'd say weekly posts are a minimum, and 2-5 times weekly is ideal. More than once a day isn't reccomended (unless you're a huge blog like Lifehacker) because people don't like too many posts in their inbox.

10. Mix up post lengths. I prefer long-ish posts full of useful information, but short posts that get to the point and have a big impact are good too. Don't be set on one post lenth. If a post gets so long that it takes 20 minutes to read, you might narrow the topic and split it into two posts.

11. Make it worth talking about. Don't just write what everyone else writes. Write about something that's a bit (or a lot) different, or in a way that's different. Write about something that people will want to respond to, pass on,, talk about with others. Be bold and be different.

12. Link often. Don't be self contrained. Don't be afraid to send your readers to other good posts or blogs, because they'll appreciate it and so will the other bloggers. Be a part of a wider conversation. For example, my favorite blogs about blogging: Problogger, Copyblogger, Daily Blog Tips, Chris Brogan and Chris Garrett

13. Feel free to tell stories. Not every post should be a "story" postm but a well told story captures the reader and conveys information in a time-tested form. A good methos to try out is starting a post with a relevant story.

14. Establish why a post is important. The intro of your post- the first 3-7 paragraphs (roughly)- should not only grab the reader's attention but establish why the reader should even care about the post. Show why the problem is a problem, and why the reader needs to read the rest of the post.

Read the best, and mimic them. The best bloggers break all of these rules but do it so well. For example, Dooce, Textism and Idle Words rarely make things scannablem but they're oh so readable. Read widely, not just within your niche: check out Daring fireball, Merlin Mann, Paul Graham, Justin Blanton, Shawn Blanc, Patrick Rhone, just to get started.

So with the information I found I will be able to continue to write for you guys, and myself, on a weekly basis and make sure tht everyone gets something of substance for their own use as well.

Remember, you are in public relations. You are a writer. Writers write.

Keep practicingm do research, and become an expert on what should be your expertise.

Posted by: Jeff Miele

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

14 ways to get ahead in your internship

Before you get there:

1. Know the dress code: There's nothing more embarrassing than showing up in tights when the company's policy is no tights. And showing up business casual when the dress is really more corporate business attire? Not fun. So do your homework--send your supervisor a quick email asking for a copy of the dress code.

2. Be prepared for research: A lot of interns are required to do research. If you work for an agency, your first day will probably be ALL research so you can familiarize yourself with company clients.

3. Realize that what you give, is what you’ll get: If you work hard, arrive on time (or early) and work diligently, your hard work will be rewarded.

While you're there:

4. Ask for feedback: Why? Because it shows you care about your job performance. Also, your ability to handle constructive criticism will be noticed and could get you better projects or opportunities in the future.

5. Be proactive: Instead of tweeting all day when you have nothing to do, ask for something to do. Don't be afraid to ask for projects you’d like to work on. Most of the time your boss will be willing to give you the experience you ask for.

6. Get to the point: When asked to do research for your boss, highlight main points, email articles--anything to make their job easier. Brief them on the most important things they wanted first, then accompany the research with additional info if requested, or in an email so they can refer back to it.

7. Keep a record: Of what you do, the number of hours you intern, etc. It will help when you notice on your Field Experience syllabus that you were supposed to have a log of what you've done! It will also give you something to refer back to when updating your resume.

8. Make a contact list: Take note of the people you work around, even if you only meet them once or twice. Get their emails, phone numbers, their twitter name...anything. Stay in contact. You never know when their expertise could come in handy.

9. Keep track of the computer programs you use: Companies find it valuable when interns and potential employees don't have to be trained in certain areas. Almost everyone is proficient in Word, Excel and PowerPoint by now. So skip it on your resume. Instead, incorporate the unique programs you’ve learned along the way.

10. Use tools to your advantage: The tools you use on a daily basis at your internship could make your life a lot easier in the long run. Create media lists. Utilize the PR Newswire, etc.

11. Ask questions: It shows your paying attention and that you care about doing the task at hand correctly.

12. Take notes: So you don't ask the same questions twice!

When you leave:

13. Know your limits: If you’re a blogger, are you allowed to blog about the internship? What are your limitations? What’s confidential information? You wouldn't want to leak something or put something out on the World Wide Web for everyone to see if it's not supposed to leave the office.

14. Take advantage of outside opportunities: Trade shows, samplings, corporate events. All these things will help you to become well rounded and experienced. And, it will give you a chance to get out of the office setting for a bit!

For more advice, visit PRSSA President, Kim Ciesla's blog at http://prperfection.blogspot.com/

Monday, May 4, 2009

Swine Flu Headlines

As most of you have probably noticed, the swine flu “epidemic” has been sweeping the world with headlines have ranged from certain and impending doom to mild and dismisable reports within a few days. According to CNN.com, “the outbreak is only about 10 days old,” yet headlines have bounced back and forth between the concept that this outbreak is taking over the world and the outbreak is slowing down daily.
If headlines are the first blurbs people tend to read then readers on all fronts are probably feeling a little bi-polar. Last night, CNN’s main headline stated, “Confirmed cases of H1N1 virus approach 900,” while Fox confirmed, “Flu Virus 'Fairly Widespread',” and once clicked, “U.S. Flu Tally Jumps to 245 Cases in 34 States as Labs Catch Up.” In the meantime, MSNBC’s headline seemed the most ominous of all, “Mexico City Recovers from flu- and fear,” with a second headline further down the page, “Flu spreading elsewhere.”
Last night TIME magazine’s website did not have the Swine Flu as one of their main headlines on the main page, but did have a link connecting to CNN for new updates on the flu. The BBC’s main page displayed the headline cautioned, “WHO warns against flu complacency.”
Interestingly enough, the poll results for CNN’s Quick Vote revealed that 94% of those who have taken the poll stated that they would not “wear a mask in public due to H1N1 virus,” while only 4% said they would. While it’s important to note that the results do not indicate how many people have taken the poll, nor do they offer any demographic information on voters, many people seem to be generally unconcerned about the flu, at least from what I’ve seen on campus.
For those of you who believe that the epidemic will iminently kill millions be sure to stay off campus, out of movie theaters, malls, airports, and every where else that might contain 2 or more people. For the rest of us who already have plans, break out your antibacterial lotion and hope for the best.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Done Vida

Join AJF PRSSA for their 17th annual Organ Donor Day TODAY on the Student Center Patio from 10:30 a.m. - 4 p.m.

Organ Donor Day promotes organ donation awareness throughout the Rowan University campus and Glassboro community. This year’s event will include live music from Lady Radiator, Ocean the Legend, Genna Kline, LP Stiles and Dan Wythoff.

Speakers from the South Jersey Coalition for the Gift of Life Donor Program will recount their personal life-saving stories.

It's a beautiful day so come rock out with us and learn how you can save lives.

Ashton Kutcher vs. CNN

The news today has reported that actor Ashton Kutcher has challenged news station CNN to a popularity contest via Twitter. Both are racing to gain one million followers on their respective Twitter sites. Kutcher explained, "I found it astonishing that one person can actually have as big of a voice online as what an entire media company can on Twitter. So I just thought that was just kind of an amazing comment on the state of our media, and I said that, if I beat CNN to 1 million viewers, then I would ding-dong ditch Ted Turner -- because I don't think it's gonna happen."

Is Kutcher making a valid point through his “contest” or is this just another ridiculous use of an online form of communication? Does this “contest” validate Twitter as a useful site or prove, to the opinion of many, that Twitter is an infantile waste of time?

Many readers might breath a sigh a relief- According to the article, “As of Wednesday afternoon, Kutcher's Twitter account had 896,947 followers, putting him in third place in the number of followers. Britney Spears was in second with about 905,640 followers, and CNN's breaking news account was watched by 937,787 people on the site.”
So maybe some of us don’t want to see Britney Spears’ Twitter as the second most popular, but at least CNN reigns number one. Let’s make sure it stays that way- Start clicking.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Introducing the Wisdom-of-the-crowd Publishing

Publisher of Wikipedia speaks about using a Wiki Successfully: Jimmy Wales

View his interview on not only succesfull Wikis, but the future of Wikia.com

-Reach out to the community
-Find avid users
- Authentic: Don't go at it as a "PR Puff Piece"
-Engage in dialog.
-Let go of the control "Bare to be Hands off"
- You can't delete bad reviews or else fans view the site as illegitimate and will leave.
-Except that the community is not always going to go your way.
-If they are fans don't like it, you probably did something wrong.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Car Advertising gets a Makeover


With our current economic state it is no surprise that car sales are down. In efforts to appeal to young drivers, the new Nissan Cube has partnered with TBWA\Chiat\Day ad agency to position the Cube as the latest "Mobile Device."

TBWA\Chiat\Day is responsible for creative work behind the iPhone as well. Read this New York Times article to learn about the new campaign targeted at young drivers.

What do you think of this approach to advertising cars? Is it strong enough to battle the economy?