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PR 2.0 Progress

With PR2.0 comes the responsibility to listen, engage, learn more and understand the new media landscape. If and only if you do this, then you can teach others how to listen, engage, learn more and understand how to use New PR effectively for their brands.

PR 2.0 Applied to the Agency

As a marketing and PR agency professional, I definitely discuss with my clients the importance of transparency and showing their human side. I know that I write a lot about brands and how they must develop a voice and talk directly to customers and social media is a great way to do that. So, I asked myself, “What has my agency done lately? How have we been transparent, shared meaningful information and how have I, personally, furthered this quest to have conversations to build better relationships.

New PR 2.0 Measurement – Part II

My first post on New PR 2.0 Measurement was well received. Measurement is one of the hottest topics right now. I’m noticing that most of my professional associations and well known publications are having monthly seminars/webinars on this topic. There are so many tools and techniques that it can almost be overwhelming for the PR professional. How do you measure the conversations that take the form of tweets, comments and blog posts? What about negative comments in social networks? Are free measurement tools such as Google Analytics and TweetBeep enough?

New PR 2.0 Measurement – Part I

One of my Twitter buddies, @weldfeldpr, inspired me to write this blog post. However, before I can dig into the specifics tools to measure the tweets and conversations (which will be part II of this post) I want to set up some guidelines and introduce the new metrics for PR 2.0. Overall, how do we measure the effectiveness of PR today to include our social media activity?

PR 2.0 Reputation Mending

I can’t remember a time in my PR career when a brand (B2B or B2C) wasn’t in some kind of trouble. From product recalls and e coli poisoning to airline flights cancellations and accounting scandals. Enron, WorldCom and Arthur Anderson resulted in Sarbanes Oxley and more financial transparency and stricter reporting procedures. I’m not sure if social media would have helped those companies. But, today is different. On any given day, a brand that is on top of the world (i.e., athletes and MLB) can fall from grace. Did anyone say Alex Rodriguez? There is a way to restore the trust.

PR 2.0 Tools & Resources

There are so many new, great PR 2.0 tools and resources that deserve recognition. Today’s blog post focuses on MyPRgenie (www.myprgenie.com), which touts itself as a public relations delivery platform for the 21st century. Whenever I come across a service that I find interesting for PR professionals, I always ask my PR team to evaluate the offering. Here are a couple of uncensored reviews of the MyPRgenie delivery platform:

The PR 2.0 Change

I’m basing my blog post on the reaction to my last post on “PR of the Past vs. PR 2.0 Today.” I wrote that post to pinpoint the amazing technological differences between today and year’s past and how a PR person’s role has altered (for the better). But, the real discussion (the comments on my blog) focused on how PR people need to evolve as a result of social media communications and how there’s still resistance. As a matter of fact one comment stated, “A lot of PR people don’t even know that PR has evolve[d]…or they don’t want that!”

PR of the Past vs. PR 2.0 Today

Even though PR is over 100 years old, I can only comment from experience on the last 20 years. As I walk down memory lane, from my first job at Padilla Spear Burdick & Beardsley (now Padilla Spear) until today, I think PR has grown in a number of ways.