May 18, 2012

Emily Cagle Communications is recruiting

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We’re looking for the brightest rising star in the region to come and join our vibrant agency as we continue to win clients nationwide.

If you want to be part of an exciting, growing company, this could be the job for you.

Emily Cagle Communications specialises in public relations and copywriting. We’ve been trading for 14 months and are now looking for an experienced full-time PR account manager to join our team in Lincoln.

You’ll work at our bright, spacious offices in central Lincoln, getting hands-on with a host of exciting clients, ranging from tiny start-ups to established national brands.

You will have:

  • experience at account manager level
  • experience working with clients in the service industries, especially HR, legal and financial services
  • excellent attention to detail
  • accomplished writing skills
  • confident telephone manner and experience working with journalists
  • a good book of media contacts
  • an ability to take ownership of projects and drive them forward
  • a love of, and commitment to, public relations

In return, we can offer:

  • a competitive salary, based on experience
  • in-house and external training
  • a fun, fast-paced work environment

To apply, please send a covering letter of no more than 350 words along with your CV to info[at]emilycagle[dot]co[dot]uk.

We look forward to hearing from you.

The first and the last word in charity adoption

Words

As is pretty obvious from the title of this blog, words are my business. I spend most of my waking hours choosing them carefully, writing them out, looking back through them, talking them through with colleagues, clients and friends, tweaking an adjective here and an imperative there to (hopefully) produce the perfect copy.

So, when I came across the Adopt a Word initiative that allows you to ‘adopt’ a word for charity, my first thought was, “What word shall I get?” and my second was, “What a great idea!”

I’ve written about fundraising and the importance of a theme/activity that inspires people before, and the Adopt a Word concept strikes me as a little bit of genius. Everyone I mentioned it to knew immediately which word or words they wanted most.

Head over to the Adopt a Word website and you’ll see that this project has plenty going for it: a concept you can get on board with, a worthy cause, celebrity endorsement (lots of), and even merchandise to show off your newly adopted word.

All funds raised go to I CAN, the creators of the project. I CAN is the children’s communication charity, which aims to ensure that no child is left behind because of a difficulty speaking or understanding.

Its mission:

“To make sure that everyone in contact with children knows how important communication is, what a communication problem looks like, and what they can do to help.”

So, the core concept – words – is very closely tied to the charity it supports. The Adopt a Word concept gets prospective donors thinking about words, and realising how much they value communication, which helps to highlight the importance of the I CAN cause – excellent stuff.

Clare Horwood
, Head of Individual Giving 
at I CAN,
 was kind enough to run me through the background to the project:

“Adopt a Word is one of our fundraising campaigns to raise money from individuals. Alternative gifts are a great way for charities to increase their donations, but it’s a fairly crowded market.

“Obviously, we can’t use goats or pandas so words, which are at the heart of our cause and the building blocks of communication were the natural choice.

“By putting words up for adoption we hope to make their importance understood in the context of children with communication difficulties. Also, because words have such a broad appeal it means we can extend our reach beyond the traditional donor and way out into the twitterverse!”

The initiative has been running since October 2008, but recently received a boost when Stephen Fry purchased ‘wordy’, sparking a flood of donations. I think with another push on social media and via more traditional marketing and PR channels, it could receive much wider exposure.

Adopt a Word’s Twitter persona (@adoptaword) is starting to make waves but as with any initiative, there will be areas for improvement and the guys at I CAN are (unsurprisingly) great to communicate with, so I’m betting all suggestions are welcome.

Personally, I have suggested adding PayPal as a payment option and adding a button so that people can push a message to Twitter about their adoption. What do you think?

(Thank you to @reedwords for making me aware of this. And in case you’re wondering, I bought ‘social’)

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Great expectations: getting real about sponsorship

Blank billboard

Today, MarketingDonut.co.uk have kindly published my guest post on maintaining realistic expectations when sponsoring a cause, event or initiative.

Here’s an excerpt:

At this point, you might start seeking coverage in your own industry’s ‘trade publications’, but here’s a warning:

In most cases, the media simply don’t view sponsorships themselves as newsworthy.

Visit “Expose yourself properly: No story means no PR” now to read the full post.

Diagnosing weak marketing: a good cause for heart failure

£1 Challenge for the British Heart Foundation

The £1 Challenge was a noble idea: get one million people to donate just £1 in the space of four months to raise £1m for the British Heart Foundation. In the end, however, the attempt was dubbed by its organiser, Steve Trister, as a “catastrophic failure”, raising just £2,329 and receiving very little media coverage.

Raising over £2k for charity is not to be sniffed at, but it is a long way from the £1m target, and in the video from Steve that draws a curtain over the challenge, he is visibly disappointed.

From my perspective as a marketer, here are the main five reasons I think the campaign failed to launch:

1. Uninspiring challenge

The idea of raising £1m is interesting but, frankly, a bike ride is not. The tie in between healthy exercise and healthy hearts is a no brainer, but there was no stunt to inspire the hearts and minds of the national press and social media trend setters. A campaign like this needs to be visual and exciting from the outset – the £1m target was not an exciting enough concept by itself.

2. Local cause

Steve suggests that perhaps a cancer charity would have fared better, but I think it was the locality that was the problem. An international charity would have encouraged international donations, and thus broadened the reach of the campaign. That said, if the UK media and online community had got behind it, I believe it could still have succeeded with a UK cause.

3. Lack of celebrity

Steve Trister seems like a great guy with some great ideas, but he’s not a known face. Journalists are looking for a hook that will interest the masses, and a famous face early on could have helped the cause. Some celebrity endorsement was secured, but it was low key, and too late.

4. Over-reliance on social media

There were lots of earnest social media users helping to promote the cause in the beginning, but without the PR to support it, this ran out of steam. Some press coverage would have ignited and reignited public interest and helped drive the campaign on.

5. Lack of planning

Steve acknowledges himself that the campaign could have been a success with more planning. The problem is, when everyone is donating their services for free, there is only so many hours they can realistically offer. Strong media relations was needed in the months before campaign went public to get nationals to back the cause and help launch it with a bang.

Steve has promised to come back with another challenge in six months, and I wish him luck – I just hope he spends the next six months taking his own advice and planning carefully to make the next challenge a full-blooded success.

UK-based marketing and PR resources on Twitter

Library of resources

For the last couple of weeks, I’ve been looking at Twitter accounts associated with UK business resources. Today, I’m looking at UK-based marketing and PR publications on Twitter.

Many small business owners are managing their own marketing activity, so following these Twitter accounts can offer a great source of information and inspiration.

  • @prweekuknews – This is the (seemingly unofficial) feed for the UK edition of PRWeek, the source for news and analysis surrounding public relations. Follow this account for updates and links to stories as they are published. This is an automated feed though, so there’s no chatting to be had.
  • @BrandRepublic – Brand Republic covers online advertising, marketing, media and PR. This is mostly an automated feed, but there’s some conversation in between the headlines. (Update: On 29th July, @BrandRepublic announced that they’re replacing the auto-feed with links to just “the best news and blog posts.” Good news, I say!)
  • @TheDrum -  An online resource covering advertising, design, media, marketing and PR. Again, the account chiefly posts links to headlines on the site but is slightly more interactive than most, with opportunities to ask questions and suggest content.
  • @utalkmarketing – The UTalkmarketing website is a merry mix of marketing news, case studies, opinion pieces and how-to guides. Follow this account for a heads up when new articles are posted.
  • @MarketingWeekEd – This is a pure news feed for Marketing Week, one of the UK’s leading marketing publications. Again, it’s hard to tell if this one is official, but it’s an effective way as any to keep abreast of the latest stories in the world of marketing.

And finally…I’ve mentioned these guys before in a previous Twitter post, but I can’t let a Twitter post on marketing go by without a mention for:

  • @MarketingDonut – Marketing Donut is a marketing resource website that publishes quality marketing advice and is completely accessible to non-marketers in style and content. They’ll also answer your burning marketing questions – just tweet.

That’s it for now.

Update: Twitter now offers its own marketing and customer service ‘how-to’ guide for businesses. It takes you through the basics, including key Twitter lingo, and offers tips on best practice. There are also case studies so you can learn how some big brands have leveraged the power of Twitter. Check out the Twitter101 guide for more information.

The Wienermobile crash: bad driving, good PR

Wiener

Sometimes, the old saying ‘no publicity is bad publicity’ is stretched to the point of lunacy, but in the case of the Wienermobile that crashed into a family home in Racine, an unpleasant mishap seems to have only meant good things for the Oscar Mayer empire.

In case you don’t know the details, the Wienermobile is (literally) a promotional vehicle for the food brand Oscar Mayer – it’s basically a 27 foot long van that looks like a giant hot dog.

It was designed in the 1930s by the original Oscar Mayer’s son and has been successful in generating publicity ever since. But after over 70 years, you might be forgiven for thinking the novelty had worn off.

Then this week, a woman driving just such a vehicle went to make a manoeuvre in a friend’s driveway, accidentally hit the accelerator and drove straight into the front of the house. According to reports, there was some structural damage to the property, but no one was hurt.

Here’s the official line from the Wienermobile blog:

“We were turning the Wienermobile around in a driveway, which is at the end of a dead-end street, and got into a bit of a pickle. We are so relieved that no one was home and nobody was injured. We promptly alerted police. We are working with the local authorities and the appropriate insurance companies to fix the damage and sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may cause the homeowner. We are back on the hot dog highways spreading miles of smiles today. Franks everyone for your concern.”

So what is it about this potentially damaging story that has worked out so well for the brand?

Well on the simplest level, it has generated a lot of coverage. The image of a hot dog shaped car wedged into a house is a sight to behold and as a consequence the vehicle has once again become a familiar sight to people in the US and indeed all over the world. This story has been reported on heavily in the media, popped up on several social media platforms and generally created an internet buzz. So has it generated publicity for the brand? Check.

So what criticisms might the accident attract for Oscar Mayer. Well, any danger of the safety of the vehicle being called into question were quickly knocked on the head as the woman admitted to making a mistake, and the company have already agreed to pay for the damage to the property, so the brand is looking pretty blame-free.

However, we can assume this woman was quite young because the drivers of the seven Wienermobiles in existence are generally selected from senior college students who are about to graduate, and the hallowed position is only ever held for a year. (addition: she is 22)

So could it be that she got a little rambunctious behind the wheel? Could it be that the Oscar Mayer selection criteria just isn’t tight enough? Well I’ve seen no criticism so far, but even if it did come to light, I think it would only serve to raise the profile of the selection process and see applications for the position rocket next summer. A neat win from any accusations of a fail? Check.

So, a 27 foot long hot dog crashes into a family home creating the perfect photo opportunity. Publicity stunt? I very much doubt it. Good PR? Check.

Twitter and ‘FollowFriday’

Follow footprints

Following in the footsteps of Twitter users such as @dannybrown, @nikkipilkington and the like, I’m moving my #followfriday recommendations over to my blog.

This week, I’m recommending @prsarahevans and @MarketingDonut.

Sarah’s blog is a very useful resource for those interested in communications and social media, with lots of advice and commentary to get you thinking and acting. Sarah is also involved in a number of projects that are a must see for anyone trying to establish their brand through social media (see namechk.com and MediaOnTwitter).

@MarketingDonut is the Twitter persona of marketing resource website, The Marketing Donut. It’s packed full of marketing advice, aimed specifically at small businesses and broken down into bite-sized chunks of under 300 words. Undeniably useful stuff.

That’s it. More next week.

Update: Twitter now offers its own marketing and customer service ‘how-to’ guide for businesses. It takes you through the basics, including key Twitter lingo, and offers tips on best practice. There are also case studies so you can learn how some big brands have leveraged the power of Twitter. Check out the Twitter101 guide for more information.

Win recognition for top quality PR

IMAGE - Press photographers

The PR Week Awards 2009 are a major highlight in the public relations calendar.

The awards celebrate excellence in UK consultancy and in-house PR work, so if you think your business is among the cream of the crop, read on.

There are 30 awards split into 5 main categories:

Specialist & Technique Categories

  • Research
  • Issues and Crisis Management
  • Public Affairs
  • Broadcast innovation
  • Digital Innovation
  • Live Brand Experience
  • Best Green Campaign

Product & Promotion Categories

  • Global Public Relations campaign
  • Healthcare: Ethical & OTC Consumer
  • Marketing Communications: Consumer (annual fees < £100k)
  • Marketing Communications: Consumer (annual fees > £100k)
  • Marketing Communications: Business
  • Technology

Corporate & Public Categories

  • Financial
  • City
  • Public Sector
  • Not-for-profit
  • Internal Communications
  • Corporate Communications and Corporate Publications

People & Agencies

  • Communicator of the Year
  • New Consultancy of the Year
  • Specialist Consultancy of the Year
  • Young PR Professional of the Year

Gold Awards

  • PR Professional of the Year
  • Public Sector Department of the Year
  • Private Sector Department of the Year
  • NGO Sector Department of the Year
  • Consultancy of the Year
  • International Consultancy of the Year
  • Campaign of the Year

A single entry costs £230 (including VAT) and should refer to work that took place between 22nd May 2008 and 21st May 2009.

The deadline for entry at the above price is 29th May 2009. Entries may be submitted after this date until 5th June 2009, but they will incur an additional late entry fee of £65 + VAT.

For more information, visit the PR Week Awards 2009.

Four things to consider when preparing a marketing brief

Tick boxes

Over the years, I’ve worked on a range of marketing and communications projects and have often found that the campaigns that deliver exceptional results are those that start out on the solid foundations of a clear brief.

It is not unusual for a client to be uncertain about exactly what it is they require but, in my opinion, it is part of the marcom (marketing communications) provider’s role to help develop a clear brief on which both client and provider agree, ensuring that both sides are in agreement about why the project is being undertaken, what the desired outcomes are and how these will be measured in terms of clear deliverables.

If you are starting out in a relationship with a new marcom provider, here are four tips to help you create an effective brief:

1. Why?

At the outset of any marcom project, before any specific objectives are agreed upon, both parties should be absolutely clear on the answer to one simple question, “Why are we doing this?” An answer to this might be, “To make more people who use disposable razors aware of our eco-friendly, self-sharpening razors in order to sell more units.” If either side isn’t able to give a definite answer, or if those two answers don’t tally, you are not yet in a position to start planning your project.

2. Who?

Sometimes, a company will have an instinctive sense of who they want to target, sometimes they will be able to extract detailed customer data from their records in order to provide a profile of a typical buyer, but often, companies will have very little idea about who they wish to target, instead simply hoping to cast the net vaguely in the direction of a particular gender, social band or age group.

Targeting a campaign towards a defined audiences is important for a number of reasons. It allows publications to be targeted more intelligently, messages to be phrased according to specific tastes and understandings, and budgets to be used productively to reach out only to those likely to respond in a way that is beneficial to your end goals.

For example, The News of the World is the widest read UK newspaper, but its readership is unlikely to respond in high proportions to a new product for the trawler fishing industry. Instead, a trade journal or trawler fishing magazine, with its narrower target audience would be far more likely to provide a successful focus for the firm’s marketing efforts.

3. How and when?

Now you have a handle on your project’s overall aim, and know who you want to reach, you can start planning your objectives and agreeing upon deliverables. This is when the old ‘SMART’ chestnut comes in handy to help you shape your objectives.

To be useful to your project, every objective agreed upon must be Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic and Time-based. This means phrases like “increase orders per customer” are out. Instead, each objective must be qualified with specifics such as the number of sales you wish to secure per customer, and include a time-scale in which this will be achieved. Being realistic means assessing the company’s starting point and budgeting sensibly to ensure that both side’s resources and capabilities are sufficient to reach the goals set. Setting time-scales with interim deliverables is particularly important as it will help structure the project and ensure that you remain on track.

Of course, some objectives are harder to quantify than others, such as where the intention is to improve public and/or media perception of a brand. In such cases, it’s important that both parties agree on how this will be measured. For example, a public relations agency may need to demonstrate a way of assessing whether a news report about a company is positive, negative, or neutral and then show how this will be quantified to calculate the overall media image of the brand.

4. What?

What is it about your brand that you want your target audiences to know? Do you want to your company director to be seen as an expert in his field? Do you want your brand to be known as the strongest/cheapest/most eco-friendly of its kind? Do you want to emphasise your company’s commitment to sustainability? Do you want to be known as cool? Original? Ground-breaking?

If you’re struggling to answer these questions, start out by imagining you are at a networking event speaking to a potential customer: what are the three things you would want them to know about your product or service before they walk away? It’s not necessary to have a professional understanding of key messages and how they are communicated via the media or other marketing channels – your marcom provider can help you with that – but it is well worth thinking about these issues is simple terms so that you can go to your provider with a clear sense of what you want your audience to know about.

These four simple steps certainly won’t guarantee you marketing success, but they should provide you with a strong framework to take to your marketing, communications or PR agency to ensure they come back with a workable proposal that fulfils your expectations.

If you are planning to place an online advertisement for a marketing communications provider, you may also wish to read this post on writing effective project listings.

Ten books to help you get acquainted with PR and marketing

Stack of resources

If you’re interested in understanding the principles behind PR and marketing, here are ten books that will provide you with a solid introduction to those industries.

Public relations

Public Relations: An Introduction by Shirley Harrison – A simple introduction to the key concepts of PR, with a particularly useful section on crisis management.

Exploring Public Relations by Ralph Tench and Liz Yeomans – A comprehensive and clearly written account of major PR tools, theories and concepts.

PR 2.0: New Media, New Tools, New Audiences by Deirdre Breakenridge – A great introduction to the concept of PR2.0 with extensive case studies.

Putting the Public Back in Public Relations: How Social Media is Reinventing the Aging Business of PR by Brian Solis and Deirdre Breakenridge – A bang up-to-date analysis of the integration of social media into modern PR practices.

Marketing

Principles and Practice of Marketing by David Jobber – An effective look through key marketing concepts with plenty of examples and case studies.

Principles of Direct and Database Marketing by Alan Tapp – An enlightening explanation of the sometimes baffling theory of database marketing.

Marketing Management and Strategy by Doyle and Stern – A great resource for understanding marketing strategy on an international level.

Marketing Myopia (Harvard Business Review Classics) by Theodore Levitt – A look at marketing and customer orientated markets from the former editor of the Harvard Business Review.

Branding

Lovemarks by Kevin Roberts – Interesting argument in favour of ‘loving a brand’ from the CEO of Saatchi and Saatchi.

Strategic Brand Management: Building, Measuring, and Managing Brand Equity by Kevin Lane Keller – A higher level text book on branding and strategic management.

You could also take a look at this guide to UK-based PR and marketing publications.

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