Blogging Myself

During the pre-conference seminars and the first day of this conference, I have been blogging the presentations other people have been making for three reasons: as my personal note-taking device, to give my Mayo Clinic colleagues a reference resource on these topics, and to make the information available to my fellow conference attendees and any others who might find it valuable.

So now, given the fact that I’m doing the presentation, it’s kind of difficult to blog it contemporaneously. That’s why I did it in advance. Here’s my prediction of what I will be discussing. And if I’m wrong, this should be a good resource anyway. That would be the best of both worlds, because it would mean what we discussed was more valuable than what I had planned.

I define new media broadly, as anything that doesn’t require an FCC license or buying ink by the barrel.

As Shel Holtz says, new media do not replace old media. They are supplementary and complementary. And given the relative audience sizes, traditional media are still more important than new media, and should be the primary focus. Rocketboom, for instance, has a worldwide audience about the same size as what WCCO TV has in the Minneapolis-St.Paul DMA alone. But if we can pursue new media in a way that opens opportunities for mainstream media, that’s the smartest way to go.

New media (audio and video files on the web) have led to significant traditional media stories, such as this one:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xaaAYVUWP0I]

Just as important is being smart about production, to get as many media applications out of a single video shoot as possible.

I talked with Shel just now about how to get “Add to Del.icio.us” and “Digg This!” added to my posts, and he suggested that FeedFlare, which is available through feedburner.com (also free).

Even though they are not technically blogging or podcasting, innovative use of the web relating to a big story can help facilitate major news coverage while minimizing the burden on the people involved in the story. Here’s one example of a web update site used in this way, and here’s another.

Here’s the big wrap-up:

Everyone who is here today has already invested significant time (2+ days) and money (travel, lodging, conference fees) to learn about new media. It would be a shame

  • Get a FREE RSS reader and subscribe to some feeds (like this one)
    Get iTunes (FREE) and subscribe to some podcasts, including For Immediate Release
    Start a FREE personal blog and experiment with links, comments and trackbacks
    Open a FREE YouTube account and upload a video
    Try Flickr or another FREE photo service
    Get Audacity to record audio FREE
    Incorporate these assets into your blog so you better understand the possibilities for your business
  • Thursdays with Morri…

    …and Corinne, and Norma, and Caitlin, and Tom, and Jen (help me out with the rest of the names, dudes.) Some of you have handwriting on the sign-up sheet that indicates you may have a future in medicine.

    Morri is Morri Chowaiki from San Diego, and he is working on an interesting vitamin site. He mentioned that he’s been on the web ever since Al Gore invented the internet. He has some other interesting projects in the works, and I’ve got another suggestion for him: the Chowaiki Wiki.

    Our Dine-Around session at A. SaBella’s was a good time for all, I think. We discussed our airline horror stories, children and the expectation thereof, and when ingestion of contaminated seafood makes it wise to seek immediate medical attention.

    Thanks to all of you for your company and conversation. And thanks to Melissa and Amy for making the reservation and offering the opportunity.

    Jeanette Gibson (Cisco) Presentation

    Here is Cisco’s on-line press room.

    Jeanette cited a September 2006 report about the influence of blogs on purchase decisions.

    Cisco provides some corporate blogs with approval of the company. Otherwise people can go to Blogger or WordPress to do their own blogs. One example of their Cisco-hosted blogs is the one on High Tech Policy. They want to have at least 3-5 members of a team to ensure that the blog won’t die on the vine. Here is the complete list of Cisco blogs.

    Event blogging is an interesting concept, which they have put up for two weeks around an event. The limited time frame is appealing to the legal group, and the blog is promoted at the event. I don’t know if I like this idea. It seems like an anti-Long Tail concept, if what goes up there disappears after just a couple of weeks.

    Having a blog in the newsroom, on the other hand, seems like a great idea.

    Jeanette’s Key Takeaways:

      Include blogs as part of your communications strategy
      Spread workload amongst a team
      Be ready to address risks – have your policy at hand
      Inform and involve your executive team
      Add RSS feeds
      Be yourself and have fun

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    CENTCOM on Engaging the Blogosphere

    Captain Anthony Deiss is the Electronic Media Engagement Officer for U.S. Central Command. CENTCOM doesn’t have a blog, but is engaging with bloggers to communicate.

    He highlighted the Little Green Footballs site and its role in watching the media, both in the Reuters Photoshop controversy and the Green Helmet Guy story.

    Capt. Davis went through the process his three-member team uses to identify receptive bloggers and approach them to consider adding links to the CENTCOM web site.

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    The American Family Podcast

    Dan Cooke from Whirlpool presented the case study of this podcast, which is aimed at breaking out of the “sea of white” customers face when they go to buy major appliances.

    Whirlpool’s target is the psychographic segment called the “active balancer,” someone who is “time-starved, willing to delegate household chores to others, open to new technology and change, and for whom quality and brand are extremely important.”

    One point I think is important here is that they see this as “not as polished as other consumer-facing efforts.” It doesn’t have to be fully produced. These are done as phone interviews, so it’s not CD-quality sound.

    This strategy also appealed to Whirlpool’s conservative nature, as it seemed less risky than blogging, because they could control the message.

    Results: It has grown from 800 downloads a month in the first quarter to > 30,000 per month.

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