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Marketing Roadmaps

Susan Getgood

Sundance, HP and me

January 19, 2006 by Susan Getgood

As some of you know, last fall, I helped HP promote a charity auction of celebrity signed photos and printers from the Toronto Film Festival.

Well, we’re back 🙂

HP is a presenting sponsor at the Sundance Film Festival, which opened today, and is doing the auction again, this time to benefit Habitat for Humanity.

As a sponsor, HP has a lot of activity at the festival – from providing the technology backbone to the entire festival, as well as all the festival “printables” (posters, signs, and so forth) to a pretty neat consumer promotion where attendees can win HP digital photography gear. Plus of course, the HP Portrait Studio produced by WireImage, where all the celebrities come to get their portraits done.

As part of the overall Sundance effort, HP decided to do a blog. With all the staff and volunteers on the ground in Park City, we had all the makings of a cool blog: stuff going on and people there to write about it.

So, Backstage at Sundance was born:

The Backstage at Sundance blog is your backstage pass to what’s happening at Sundance. HP is a presenting sponsor at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival, and a group of HP employees have agreed to blog all about it. So those of us who can’t be there will feel like we are! Everything from what’s happening on the streets of Park City to interviews with the stars coming into the WireImage Portrait Studio, to film reviews, to a backstage look at the HP technology that’s powering the festival. It will all be here! Plus, the blog will have the first look at the celebrity photos that will be available in our charity auction on eBay in February.

I helped HP with the blog’s editorial development including helping them clarify the overall objectives of the blog, training the bloggers (most of them new to the medium) on general blogging principles, giving them some general guidance on what “blog what you experience” means, identifying  “beats” such as film reviews and Portrait Studio reports, and generally supporting the writer-volunteers. I also am blogging for them (from a distance unfortunately) during the festival and auction, mostly about things I find on the ‘net about Sundance.

Our hope was that the bloggers’ excitement at being at Sundance would permeate their writing, and from initial reports, I know it will. I spoke to one of the bloggers this morning and she was jazzed! She had arrived in Park City last night, and already had about four blog posts in her head from people she had met everywhere from the airport to the shuttle to the restaurant at dinner!! She just needed to get online and write the posts!!

And that’s the key – real people will be blogging from Sundance all about their experiences. HP products may be mentioned, but the bloggers have been told that there is absolutely no requirement to ever mention a product. It fits what you want to write, go for it. It doesn’t, that’s fine too. A fun, entertaining blog will enhance the HP brand far more than a bunch of posts about products. 

Some of the things we blog you may be able to read elsewhere. And some you won’t. For example, the PortraitStudio is not open to the public; Backstage at Sundance is the only place you’ll be able to get behind the scenes. As well as get a first look at which celebrity portraits will be in the auction.

And for me, that is one of the key parts of the blog. I will again be doing the fan outreach for the charity auction once we know which celebrities have agreed to participate. Having an active blog really helps set the stage.

So: if you are interested in the Sundance Film Festival or think you might want to bid in a charity auction to benefit Habitat for Humanity, please check out Backstage at Sundance !!!

Tags: Blogs, Blogging, Charity, Sundance

Filed Under: Blogging, Charity Tagged With: Hurricane Katrina, Sundance

Humourous Web 2.0 link

January 18, 2006 by Susan Getgood

A new friend sent me a very very funny Web 2.0 link… but before you click, please read the warning:

I think this is funny. BUT: It also has strong language and descriptive imagery. Some may find it offensive. It is probably not work-safe and my former employer’s software likely would have blocked it. If you take this Web 2.0 stuff really seriously, you definitely won’t like it.

You have been warned.

Web 2.0 link

Filed Under: Web Marketing

On a clear day

January 17, 2006 by Susan Getgood

Forget about A-lists, Web 2.0 and all of that jazz. Here’s what we did today:

Wachusett1 View from mid-trail, Mt.Wachusett

Wachusett2_2 My son Douglas learning to ski

Take a break… it makes all the difference in the world.

Filed Under: Douglas/Dogs, Mathom Room

Listening ears on, Rant off

January 17, 2006 by Susan Getgood

Thanks for all the comments on my A-list bloggers post. I’m going to wrap up my comments here in this new entry. Then I’m moving on.

First, as I have said before, I don’t actually care about the A-list too terribly much. I think it is a bit silly, and have mostly been trying to ignore the whole thing. 

However, I have a personal, deeply held belief that if you make it to the top (the top of whatever, mind you, not just blogs) you have a responsibility to your constituents/audience — the ones that helped you get (and keep you) there. Like it or not (and most do), you stand for something and you have to make it count. Perhaps that makes me an idealist. Oh well.

In the case of blogging, I think it means keeping your listening ears on, and the lines of communication open. Especially if you are a communications professional. Yes, it’s a lot of work responding to tons of email, which is why it is always smart to be careful what you wish for.

And I wholeheartedly agree that asking for links is bad practice. The person sending the email has an equal responsibility to provide good information that will be of interest to the recipient.

But don’t shut people down. And regardless of the intent, that is how Steve’s post came across.

It is because Micro Persuasion has such a huge audience — it is often a "first stop" for new bloggers — that I posted.  And I’m glad that Steve posted today that he is open to receiving emails. Shows he is listening, and that is a very good thing.

And on a far more humourous note, Hugh over at gapingvoid has neatly summarized this whole conversation in a new cartoon. Just my .02, but I think that should be one of the next t-shirts. I’ll put my order in today if you’ll do it!

Filed Under: Blogging

Football avoidance

January 16, 2006 by Susan Getgood

For a change of pace (no A-list or Web 2.0 here) I thought I’d share what I did this weekend to avoid the NFL Playoffs.

Understand a couple of things: my husband is a HUGE football fan. All football. He was raised in Pittsburgh and we now live outside Boston. I on the other hand, just don’t get it. I much prefer hockey and basketball. I will watch the Super Bowl, for the ads as much as anything, but all the games leading up to it? YAWN!

So, Saturday night I took my mom out to dinner at Number 9 Park and then to see Little Women at the Boston Opera House. The play was very good, although I agree with the Boston Globe reviewer who said that none of the songs was a break-out hit (I’d  link to the review online but the Globe.com site is so hard to navigate, I can’t find it). And you needed to know the story; without the knowledge from the Louisa May Alcott book or at minimum one of the movies, it would be hard to follow. Good news of course is that most girls in the US read Little Women as a matter of course, and this was definitely a "chick play."

Sunday: Brokeback Mountain finally made it to the local theatre, and away I went. If you haven’t seen it yet, GO!!!! It was one of the best films I have seen in years.

One thing that occurred to me after seeing both of these: the folks that adapted Little Women took a pretty fat book and condensed it to about 2-1/2 hours. And the folks that adapted the short story by Annie Proulx took a slim story and made it into a film just about as long. Luckily, neither seemed too long 🙂

Next week, I’ll be taking my son to see Chronicles of Narnia.

Filed Under: Mathom Room

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