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Posts Tagged ‘Video’

Everyday Adventures – New videos for UK parents

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Over the last 6 months, we’ve been working on a video project which aims to tell parents from a range of backgrounds about some of the real life stories and circumstances that people in their positions find themselves in.

“Everyday Adventures” tells the stories of ordinary families from around the UK as they face these and other challenges. There’s a mix of real life and animation films, packed with useful information on: registering your child’s birth; parental rights; benefits you may be eligible for; and the availability of extended services in schools. Also included are links to organisations that can provide further help and support to mums and dads in all areas of family life.

To reflect the multicultural nature of UK families, the videos are available in English, Polish, Somali, Bengali and Guajurati. We’ve created MySpace and YouTube pages for the videos so you can check them out and let us know what you think. Our favourite is Wayne’s story

How the Guardian’s Ian Tomlinson G20 video changes the media landscape

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

An astonishing piece of amateur video obtained by the Guardian shows just how much the world has changed for big media players. The footage shows Ian Tomlinson, the man who died at last week’s G20 protests in London, being struck by a police officer and falling to the ground minutes before suffering a fatal heart attack.

You can view the film and make up your own mind about the incident, now the subject of an investigation by the Independent Police Complaints Commission. My focus here is to discuss how the footage and surrounding story has played out across old and new media in an exceptionally powerful and converged way.

The Guardian has scored a major coup, not just in getting hold of what is an extraordinary news exclusive, but for how it has successfully delivered the story via its traditional print product, its own web site, and across social media too. (I have to declare an interest as my husband David Taylor works on the Guardian’s home news desk and has been pivotal in developing this story over the last few days.)

Consider this: The Guardian had an exclusive, yet it chose to share its content before it appeared in print, running the video and a first break on the story on its web site yesterday evening. In the ‘old’ days of print journalism this would have been inconceivable, to the point that the red top tabloids would regularly run weak front page stories in their early editions, revealing their big exclusives only in final 3am print run.

As soon as the video appeared other newspapers’ sites were linking to it and capturing the footage or still images to use themselves, and crediting the Guardian. Meanwhile broadcasters including the BBC, Sky and Channel 4 featured it extensively on their news bulletins, again promoting the Guardian name.

At the same time, social media was fuelling the story, with Guardian journalists using Twitter to share the video URL. Mass retweets followed and within hours, “Ian Tomlinson” was trending on Twitter as one of the 10 most written about topics.

Today the Guardian’s print edition has extensive and detailed analysis of the film by reporter Paul Lewis to augment his online story, while the web site is offering bloggers the footage to embed. And rival media from the agenda-setting Today programme to competitor broadsheets are still crediting the Guardian as the source.

So what does this tell us? Firstly that high-quality content is crucial - without an exceptional story none of this would have happened. Second, strategic use of the right media channels – print, social media, web site – can have a multiplying audience effect not a minimising one. Third, that media businesses now are not “papers” or “web sites” but brands, regardless of how we consume their content. The Guardian’s liberal stance helped it secure the story, and its brand has been strengthened by the extensive cross-promotion it has since received.

Twitter and PR Week: the debate goes on video

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

After last week’s Twitter agency audit in PR Week which missed out Red and Shiny Red, the team there were kind enough to ask me to take part in a panel discussion on how PRs are using the tool.

On Monday I had the pleasure of spending some time with Edelman’s Marshall Manson and Weber Shandwick’s Simon Collister to debate the subject on camera. As you’ll see from the resulting webcast we were in broad agreement on Twitter’s ability to connect us to people in new ways whether its clients, bloggers, journalists or communities.

We also talked about the fact that despite all the hype, Twitter is still a minority pursuit. Globally it’s the third largest social network after Facebook and MySpace, but according to Wikipedia it still has only 6m users worldwide.

As I say in the clip, it’s important to think about Twitter as part of the mix within a social media strategy that could also include blogger outreach, forums, and content creation: it is not the only answer. Can it help us as PR professionals build relationships share information, connect in new ways? Absolutely, if you want to put the effort in. But not everyone does. I recently read through 50 comments responding to an article on Twitter on one of the big portals, and four our of five were negative, along the lines of: “what a waste of time…saddos who should get a life…go out and meet people instead”.

It comes down to a simple PR truth: if you want to connect with your audience, you have to use the right route. Twitter works well when it’s used smartly, and it’s an exciting new part of the comms toolkit, but for all the noise around it right now it’s not a panacea.

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