PageOnePR
'; } ?> 
  • \"Services\""; } elseif (($page == "capabilities") || ($page == "best_practices")) { echo "\"Services\""; } else { echo "\"Services\""; } ?>
  • \"Clients\""; } elseif (($page == "current") || ($page == "past") || ($page == "testimonials") || ($page == "results") || ($page == "makingnews")) { echo "\"Clients\""; } else { echo "\"Clients\""; } ?>
  • \"Careers\""; } elseif (($page == "culture") || ($page == "benefits") || ($page == "watercooler")) { echo "\"Careers\""; } else { echo "\"Careers\""; } ?>
  • \"Contact\""; } else { echo "\"Contact\""; } ?>
  • \"Blog\""; } else { echo "\"Blog\""; } ?>
  • \"Japan\""; } else { echo "\"Japan\""; } ?>
  • Subscribe to this feed

    The Page Wonders

    Social media is changing PR in new and exciting ways. More than ever before, companies want help from a PR partner who can put smart, creative, independent-thinking professionals on tough problems using these new tools to seize opportunities and solve problems. Read here about some of the exploits of our Page Wonders and tell us what you think!

    Other Staff Blogs:Craig Oda | Shelly Milam


    Social Media PR: the Big Idea
    posted by lonn johnston at


    Page One PR has used social media tools in our client campaigns since we started the agency in late 2002.

    We developed our expertise at companies in the early days of open source and Linux. In open source, the winners are projects and companies that can foster communities of developers the fastest. The more developers you attract to your code, the more valuable your code becomes and that in turn attracts more users to projects. If you're a company, the more of those users who convert into customers, the more successful your business.

    That experience informs how we look at "social media" PR at Page One.

    It's very challenging to attract a lot of different people around an idea. The idea by definition has to be big. And authentic. For us, it was originally open source and the promise to participate in something that would change forever how software was made.

    Google came to us in mid-2008 for help on a project. Their big idea was that software would be created in the cloud and run on clients in the browser. No one owns the cloud but Google has great tools for making software in the cloud. They wanted developers to know more about those great tools. Their business interest was to attract more Web developers to their Google I/O conference in San Francisco. I think by all measures it was a huge success. Registrations were so high that Google had to shut down the lines at Moscone to start the keynote address on time. We had onsite blogging from TechCruch, podcasts by Mashable, and twitter feeds from all of the main events. Pre-event coverage was up almost 600 percent from the year before and first day coverage jumped more than 300 percent. CNET alone ran 10 stories.

    Many of our agency peers in the PR industry run around all bug-eyed like old Roman statues obsessed with Twitter, Facebook, Blogger, Seesmic, Plurk, LinkedIn or whatever might be the latest tool. But successful social media is not about the tools. It's about the big idea, and then it's about how you use all of the tools you can to foster participation in the big idea and, if you're a company, to advance a business interest that you can measure.

    Labels: , ,

    0 Comments:

    Post a Comment

    Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

    << Home