Posts Tagged ‘websites’

Turning the corner: The legitimacy of online media

Friday, March 11th, 2011

IncludedNetworkLogos_May08

For public relations practitioners, both professionals and those who simply want to get the word out about their product, online media has traditionally been something to approach with skepticism and trepidation.

After all, can’t anyone make their own website? Back in the infancy of the consumer Internet, free web hosting services like GeoCities made it easy for just about anyone to do anything from post pictures of their kitty cat to masquerade as a legitimate online news or information source. Like any other burgeoning industry, the dot-com boom saw personal and for-profit sites skyrocket in both numbers and traffic. With the advent of search engine optimizing-technology, the plethora of useful sites has become more focused and refined.

Now, consumers turn more to online media than any other source. We are spending more time in front of screens, but the advent of tablet devices has made it easier and more casual to surf the web than ever before.

As a result, online media has been brought into the mainstream, quickly replacing print as the default medium of choice.

This should hardly be news, but to many it is still difficult to see the legitimacy of a digital-only publication. As a result, thousands of titles with devoted followers and, perhaps most importantly, a wide range of newcomers, are being ignored.

The rise of the tablet
NPD Group, a New York-based market research firm, recently reported that it expects more than 240 million tablets will be sold by 2015. Paramount to their success is their ability to seamlessly connect to the internet just about anywhere, whether they use home or commercial wifi networks, cell tower-based connectivity or even wifi in the sky 35,000 feet above the earth aboard a Boeing 737.

These tablets are rapidly displacing both books and newspapers as the default go-to source for entertainment and information. Need proof? Witness book store giant Borders’ recent Chapter 11 filing. How the mighty have fallen.

Tablet-based applications bring magazines to readers’ attentions like never before, offering them the ability to virtually sort through newsstands ten times the size they might encounter in real life. These online magazines aren’t fly-by-night publications like early GeoCities web pages. They take serious effort and hefty start-up costs to get running; investment is not for the faint of heart. Not surprisingly, readership is growing at an alarming rate.

Online magazines are packed with functionality beneficial to any advertiser – embedded videos, product tutorials and direct links to product websites mean the days of hoping your audience would remember to call your 1-800 number or log onto your site are long gone. Now, all they have to do is follow a link and they’re in your territory.

Of course, we can’t discount the power of traditional websites, which offer the easy-to-update functionality essential to news gathering.

Traditional print outlets have found their home online, but so have a vast array of startups, many of which have been around since the early days of the web. Their page views are often exponentially higher than print circulation and their cutting edge reporting is rapidly shared through other mediums like Digg, Facebook and Twitter.

Benefiting you
Like any print publication, an online site requires some acclimation to ensure that it suits your target audience.

But the era where online media was ignored has ended, leaving print as a comparatively archaic dinosaur catering to a rapidly shrinking demographic. Don’t be skeptical or afraid of online media: Embrace it before you are left behind.

Spotting the trends: Has trend-watching become the trend of the moment?

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

cartoon

By the time you read this, it’s already too late.

No, you don’t need to hurry out to try to save the planet from disaster (although you might want to consider recycling a little more and maybe conserving fuel).

We’re talking about trends – what’s trendy at the moment, according to journalists and publications, is probably on its way out. This isn’t a backhanded slap at our friends in the media, it’s simply an acknowledgement about how fast trends move today in this increasingly rapid-paced global economy.

And it’s not just trends themselves, it’s the word trend. Tracking trends is a lifeblood for millions of Americans involved in market research, product planning and, of course, marketing and public relations. But by the time a trend makes its way into the media, you’ve probably already seen examples of it on every corner in the country’s trendiest cities, let alone its sleepiest burbs.

We’ve obsessed over trends forever; from following the fashion styles set by royalty to seeing what’s hot on Twitter or Facebook, consumers the world over are positively trend-manic. With the power of social media and Internet journalism, staying trend-setting is even harder than ever. No trend-leader can emerge long enough to stay on top, so the masses follow whatever works to gain popularity the fastest.

Twitter users can stay on top of what’s trending every minute of every day by checking out the moment’s top tweets, while Google keeps tabs on what people are searching.

This matters to us because we can help manipulate trends, even if their staying power is only for a few minutes. Last fall, Ford simultaneously unveiled its 2011 Ford Explorer SUV at events held in major cities across the country – Los Angeles, San Francisco, Denver, Dallas, Atlanta, Miami, Chicago, Detroit, New York and Washington, D.C.

By inviting some of the most-connected journalists, Tweeters, social media gurus and even the old faithful print scribes, Ford helped make “2011 Ford Explorer” the most-searched term on Google all day. That consumer interest translated into sales just a few months later – the redesigned Explorer has seen demand more than triple over the last few months compared to the outgoing model. While a vastly improved product helped keep the nameplate more relevant to the marketplace as a whole, Ford’s dynamic debut made the Explorer a trendy item months before it officially went on sale.

Perhaps the trendiest trend at the moment is simply watching what’s trendy. It’s people watching in a digital world.

Giving media the artistic edge

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

Camara

If a photograph is worth a thousand words, it ought to be worth $1,000, right?

It only seems that way to most journalists, who desperately need visuals for their content but wind up falling way short when it comes to finding the money to pay for their desires. Budgets have dropped, but the number of outlets has increased as amateur news gatherers with incredibly large followings take on big budget newspapers, cable stations and even established news websites.

Both print and, especially, online journalists need easy access to good photography if you want them to get the word out about your product or event.

Unfortunately, that recipe is all-too-elusive for many companies and services. Most news outlets barely have the budget to buy their own point-and-shoot cameras, let alone enough cash sitting around to be able to hire a professional at a four-figure-a-day rate (plus per diem!). As a result, they often wind up without any photography to illustrate stories, an especially difficult case when it comes to online publications with plenty of room for multi-image galleries. Stories that they would otherwise deem important are relegated to poor positions because they didn’t have visuals.

The easy solution to this dilemma falls on your ability to make images readily available to members of the media. Reasonably high quality images aren’t hard to shoot; they just take some time. Learn the basics of a moderately-priced digital SLR camera, set the scene up properly and you’re probably going to get decent stills of your own product. If it’s an event or a service you want to shoot, you might want to hire a professional – a local photographer might be willing to give a more reasonable rate in exchange for ownership of some of the content you don’t choose to use. Make sure you own the photos you want to use, however!

From there, it’s all about distributing your photos to members of the media. You can sit back and wait for requests, but that won’t reap benefits very quickly and it makes you seem rather aloof. Instead, being proactive by sending out relevant photography with news releases makes everyone’s job easier. If an outlet has good photography to work with, they are considerably more likely to publish the content simply because all of the pieces fell quickly into place.

For archival images, a dedicated media site – or at least easy access to an FTP server – makes downloading photos a cinch for members of the media. You can even provide photography with a strict embargo date to trusted members if you don’t want word reaching the public until after a major announcement.

After an event, make photos available to the media and make sure to identify any important guests or executives pictured – otherwise, you’ll spend half your day fielding phone calls all asking the same question!

Of course, there are a few things you aren’t going to want to do if you want to make your photography easy to use. Don’t put watermarks on images; let the outlet watermark their own photography, for example. Also, when you’re setting up a media site, make it easy to use. A complex design with all sorts of bells and whistles might look good to you, but reporters and art directors need to be able to efficiently download photos. Finally, don’t waste your time with subpar photography. You’ll be surprised with the places your photos will end up – in beautiful magazine layouts, spread across wallpaper galleries online and even in enthusiast websites, when the product is appropriate.

It’s simple: If you scratch the media’s back with accessible photography, they’ll provide the extensive coverage you need.

QR Technology: The Future of the Print Industry

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

QR tech photo

QR technology will change the way people market in the United States.  The application  is a simple, yet powerful tool that will reinvigorate the traditional print industry by truly integrating collateral materials with digital assets.

In simple terms, QR technology uses 3D bar codes to instantly transport a person from a brochure, billboard, business card or flyer directly to a link on the Internet.  The bar code can be as small as a dime or as large as a billboard.  A person points their smart phone at the bar code using one of several available readers and the phone takes a photo of it.  The phone then opens a browser to go directly to the specific website page.

The link can be as granular as a special offer on a microsite or the front page of a site.  The ad for a concert could include a code to an e-commerce site to buy tickets.  A business card could have a link to the person’s bio online.

Since the digital asset can be rapidly changed, the QR code can stay the same, thus eliminating the problem of printing materials only to see them expire.

In Europe, movie posters and billboards advertise the latest film with a code to buy tickets.  Car dealers post codes for new models, giving customers the opportunity to review and buy their dream vehicle during a product launch.

How will Americans adapt to this new opportunity?  Smart business people will leverage the possibilities.  Print is still alive, given a new lease on life with QR technology.

Can you imagine the possibilities?

How’s your website doing?

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

002 - Internet worlds stats

According to InternetWorldStats.com, more than 1.8 billion people worldwide access the Internet. In North America, that number is just as dramatic, pulling in 14.4% or 259.6 million users. What’s online you ask? Well, in April 2010 Netcraft Web Server Survey received more than 205 million responses from websites worldwide. In the US, that’s almost the equivalent of having one site per Internet user!

So amidst all the millions of websites and billions of users, how do you drive traffic to your website? Well, knowing the “what” is just as important as knowing the “how” when it comes to increasing your website hits.

For example:
• What pages are getting the most amount of traffic now?
• What’s your bounce rate?
• What’s the average time visitors are spending on your site?
• What’s the highest ranked entry and exit pages?

These are just a few of the details you can get from a trusted analytics software. Being able to interpret these statistics will better help you identify the primary interests (or lack thereof) of your site visitors. Once you have an idea of what people are interested in, you can modify your web site content to give them more of what they want, or regularly update your information to make it relevant today.

A trusted marketing firm can better help you regularly analyze how, when, where and even the why (i.e. you sent out a news release) of your website traffic. Because knowing the “what” will better help you identify the “how” of making your website be a standout from a million others…literally.

Visit www.tprm-usa.com for more information about our PR, Print, Event and Digital Media services.