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Marketing Roadmaps

PR

The Jet Blues and Social Media

February 22, 2007 by Susan Getgood

The media — new and old — have been all over the JetBlue story for the last week, so I won’t rehash it all here. Short story: bad snowstorm in Northeast, JetBlue stunningly fails to meet passenger expectations, but does a pretty decent job of actually apologizing afterwards (how refreshing is that), including a YouTube video by founder and CEO David Neeleman, a JetBlue Customer Bill of Rights, emails to customers and frequent fliers (I got one) and full page apologies in the newspapers.

Commentary: Shel Holtz, Todd Defren, BL Ochman, Mack Collier, Tom Biro, Chip Griffin, Peter Himler, JetBlue on Technorati.

I’ll join with my pr and marketing colleagues in giving props to the company for effectively using social media in its crisis communications.

Marketing diva Toby Bloomberg asks the follow-on question: if JetBlue had had a social media marketing strategy before the crisis, would it have made a difference? My opinion: it might have alleviated some of the frustration had there been additional channels of communication for stranded passengers, like an RSS feed with information on cancelled flights, but the flaws in the JetBlue infrastructure that caused the situation would not have been fixed with better communication about them.

What really makes a difference isn’t the media we use. It is the "social" part — caring about your customers, delivering on the promises you make, and when you fall down, for whatever reason, doing what it takes to make it right. 

Sure, social media — blogs, YouTube, email and so forth — help us respond and communicate faster. But one of the best examples of crisis communications of all time happened well before the Internet  – Johnson & Johnson and the Tylenol scare in 1982.

J&J sincerely cared about its customers. It stepped up and did all the right things.  Which is why confidence in the product, and market share, rebounded pretty quickly.

To its credit, JetBlue seems to understand this. Neeleman was clearly sincere in his promise to never let this happen again, and because the airline DOES have a pretty good reputation, by and large we believe him. He’s also putting his money where his mouth is; costs to reimburse affected passengers and prevent future problems will run the airline $20-30 million.

Of course, it is not what you say or how you say it.  It’s what you do.

Customers don’t want empty promises. They want to see the company live up to them. JetBlue has done a decent job in responding to this crisis, and gets full credit for using all the media tools available to it. Now, we’ll be watching to see if it follows through. My bet is that it will.

Tags: JetBlue, social media,  David Neeleman, crisis management

Filed Under: PR

What’s so wrong about “audience?” – another social media press release flap

January 21, 2007 by Susan Getgood

Big blog kerfuffle over the social media press release.

Short story: Panel to discuss in San Francisco last week, including Shel Holtz and Chris Heuer. Stowe Boyd attends, writes critical post. Robert Scoble chimes in against press release. Lots of people comment.

As readers here know, I don’t have any problem with press releases, old or new format, as long as the PR people do the real job of crafting well written and  newsworthy announcements without BS. The press release and other materials created for announcements are just the documentation of the story. They aren’t the story.

However, I do want to comment on one aspect of the linguistic nit-picking that has crept into this disagreement, and that is the word "audience." Just exactly what is so wrong about talking about the audience?

When we tell a story, whether to a friend, a colleague, a journalist or a neighbor, in person or on a blog, to one person or many, we should always think about them. What are they interested in, how will this story be more compelling to them, how can I make this a better story for the person/people who are listening, what parts of the story will make them want to participate, pass it on, and so on. 

And guess what! Not all people are interested in all stories. Everyone doesn’t participate in every conversation, online or off. It helps us tell a better story when we think about the people who are most interested in it, and tell it for them. Telling it for them is what makes them want to chime in.

So, I suppose we could advise people to frame their stories, their blogs, their outreach to best reach "the people who are most interested in it." Or we could just get over ourselves and understand that "the people who are most interested in a story" are the audience for the story.  Doesn’t mean they are passive.  Doesn’t mean they don’t participate. Doesn’t mean we are simply talking to or at them, not with them. Doesn’t mean we aren’t part of our own audience — we are.

Just means they are the ones who care.

Tags: social media press release, PR, public relations

Filed Under: Blogging, Media, PR

HP Snapshot Diaries Contest

January 15, 2007 by Susan Getgood

More client news.

As part of its Sundance activities, HP is holding a photo contest called Snapshot Diaries. Entrants submit 6-10 related photos with captions that tell a story. The winning entry will be turned into a short movie by film director Matt Pope like this one.

Grand prize is a trip for two to Sundance 2008 (airfare, hotel and event tickets), and there are three great runner up prizes of HP gear.

Contest begins today January 15, 2007 and ends January 28 2007. You can find all the details and rules at HP’s Sundance site, www.hp.com/go/sundance.  

From January 20 to February 20 on the Sundance Channel, you’ll also be able to see Snapshot Diaries from eight Sundance Film Festival attendees — actors, filmmakers, volunteers, agents, publicists — who will document a day in their life at the Festival using an HP digital camera to create "snapshots."

I’m doing blogger outreach for the contest, focusing on parents and film aficionados. Spread the word 🙂

Tags: HP, Sundance, Snapshot Diaries, Sundance Channel

Filed Under: PR Tagged With: Sundance

Client work keeping me busy: Spec.-Ops. Brand

January 15, 2007 by Susan Getgood

Radio silence here on the blog is mostly due to a heavy client work load, and trust me, I am not looking a gift horse in the mouth.

I spent the end of last week at the SHOT (Shooting Hunting and Outdoor Trade) Show. My client Spec.-Ops. Brand makes tactical nylon gear for the military and law enforcement, and I was there to staff media appointments. Just like last year, of our scheduled appointments (12 this year), we had only one no-show. We also picked up about six reporters who weren’t on the meeting schedule.

This is VERY different from the usual experience of a smaller company at a big trade show, where it is next to impossible to get meetings in the first place, and if you do, late- and  no-shows are common. At SHOT, the reporters apologize if they are a few minutes late.

Why is this so different than the norm? Part of the reason is how we approach the media in the first place. We focus our outreach on the publications and reporters who are truly  interested in the new gear. They have a gear guide or new products section and/or regularly do product evaluations. It also helps that the company makes great products and has an excellent reputation in the industry. I can’t tell you how many booth visitors made a point of showing us their Spec.-Ops. Brand wallets while telling us about some of the hardships the wallet had successfully survived!

But that just tells us why we get the appointments. Why does everyone show up? Most of the reporters are former military or law enforcement officers, and some of the freelancers are active-duty cops. I think punctuality and commitment are simply core values for them. You make a commitment, you show up.

Sure makes my job easier, and I am very grateful to be working with such a terrific group of reporters and editors.

Tags: Spec.-Ops. Brand

Filed Under: PR

How to get an “F” in blogger relations

December 18, 2006 by Susan Getgood

Want to get an "F" in blogger relations?

Just follow this model, as humourously described by mom blogger Lindsay Ferrier.

Update: Another way to get an F, reported by Eric Eggertson; try to scam the social media sites (Digg et. al.)

Filed Under: Blogging, PR

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