On Your Own But Not Alone

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On your own but not alone Social media and the solo PR practitioner Peter Faur, Owner RightPoint Communications, Phoenix March 25, 2010

Transcript of On Your Own But Not Alone

Page 1: On Your Own But Not Alone

On your own but not alone

Social media and the solo PR practitioner

Peter Faur, Owner

RightPoint Communications, Phoenix

March 25, 2010

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What high school did I go to?

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A lonely life?

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Get used to it

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Ingredients for success

• A marathon, not a sprint

Based on “How to Succeed in the Age of Going Solo,” WSJ, Feb. 8, 2010

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Ingredients for success

• Join a network, create a network

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Ingredients for success

• Have your own space

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Ingredients for success

• Have your own space

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Ingredients for success

• Have your own space

– Co-working• Gangplank

• A St. Louis version

– Have Boingo, will travel• Work from virtually any

coffee shop, McDonald’s, etc.

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Ingredients for success

• Think like an entrepreneur– A business plan

– A mission statement

– Ask for, and get, what you’re worth

– Walk away sometimes

– Good practices• Good records

• Good accountant

• Good legal advice

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Now for the social media part

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The real question

• What are you trying to do?

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What I’m trying to do

• First of all, learn how social media work

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What I’m trying to do

• Have outlets to promote myself as a thoughtful professional

– Display my writing, thinking on the blog

– LinkedIn endorsements

– LinkedIn discussion groups

– Twitter postings to promote blog

– Facebook postings

– Always looking for the right audiences

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What I’m trying to do

• Connect with thought leaders in social media– Chris Brogan – e-mail

– Gini Dietrich

– Charlotte Shaff’s story

– Because of what they do, these folks are approachable and responsive

– Don’t wear out your welcome

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What I’m trying to do

• Learn how the media use social media– @12SPORTSARIZONA Need a

great pass rusher, more depth in secondary, and a fountain of youth for Kurt Warner 5:31 PM Jan 18th via TweetDeck in reply to 12SPORTSARIZONA

– Direct interaction with reporters, editors -@fayfredricks

– An insightful blog entry: Valley PR blog

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What I’m trying to do

• Learn how my clients might use social media– One application to date: an internal blog

– Another application – social media section in a crisis communications plan for a university

– Monitor what’s being said about clients – Google alerts, collecta.com

– Side benefits from social media involvement• Learned about plug-ins

• Learned how to get the technology platform for free

• Learned enough to overcome IT anxieties

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Using time wisely

• The Brogan formula

– ¼ time listening – “Grow Bigger Ears”

– ½ time commenting, communicating (Twitter, leaving comments on blogs of interest, etc.)

– ¼ time creating content

• It takes me an hour to write a blog, so that would be four hours a day

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Using time wisely

• The Dietrich formula

– One hour a day

– Get an account at www.socialoomph.com

– 15 minutes finding, scheduling Tweets about interesting articles, news (alltop.com works)

– 10 minutes scheduling self-serving Tweets

– 10 minutes on Tweetdeckfinding items to retweet

– 5 minutes on ping.fmsetting up distribution of content to other social networks

– 10 minutes answering questions on LinkedIn

– 10 minutes responding on Facebook and Twitter

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My formula

• Write three/four blogs a week – 1 hour each• Skim Alltop, RSS feeds each day (15 minutes)• Use Stumbleupon to schedule tweets to promote my

blog entries (< 5 minutes)• Visit Twitter via Tweetdeck two-three times a day –

spend 10 minutes reading, commenting, retweeting• Visit Facebook once a day – comment as needed in 10

minutes• Visit LinkedIn groups twice a week for 15 minutes –

comment as I can add value• About two hours a day in all

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Benefits of social media for you

• Only you can decide

• Need to know what they can do, so you might as well use yourself to learn