Shel Holtz: Seminar and Keynote Review II

Shel highlights TheNewPR/Wiki, which is one of his (and my) favorites for PR professionals. This site has, among other things, examples of corporate blogging policies. I blogged about it here.

I need to also check out LinkedIn, a social network for grown-ups (like MySpace.) Shel has talked a lot about Second Life, too…which today announced it had surpassed 1 million virtual residents.

I need to look into the Social Media News Release, which pulls out key facts, quotes, and adds multimedia instead of having all of the narrative of a regular press release. This is a neat concept.

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Shel Holtz: Seminar and Keynote Review

Shel quoted the Edelman Trust Barometer (with some reservations about doing it, given the recent Wal-Mart controversy) saying “A person like me” is the most credible person for companies.

The key to this is authenticity. Organizations with lots of happy customers/patients/employees would be well advised to just help those audiences find the tools they need to communicate, and to encourage them to start talking. If word-of-mouth has been important in the past, it’s on steroids in the blogosphere.

One of the concepts Shel mentioned yesterday but didn’t get into as fully in today’s shorter keynote is “Edge Content.” He particularly called attention to edgeio, which is a distributed alternative to eBay or Craig’s List.

I need to explore this more, but the concept is really neat. Why submit your listing into a common site, when you can put it on your own blog, with a code that notifies outside sites like edgeio?

Another topic I need to explore is The New Media News Release. I think this site will be good for learning.

With the launch of Internet Explorer 7 today (according to Shel), the use of RSS is going to explode. In the Macintosh world, Safari already has incorporated RSS feeds. So do Opera and Firefox. Now RSS is going to be called Web Feeds.

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ALI Conference on Blogging and Podcasting: Day One

The preconference seminars were immensely helpful yesterday, and now we’re going to be getting into some networking and a series of case studies that will, I hope, give real, practical advice and examples.

The conference description promises “practical solutions you can apply immediately…” and based on a quick glance at the workbook of handouts, I’m confident it will meet those expectations.

Shel Holtz is giving the keynote…and even though I’m on Holtz overload (having heard him at the Ragan Conference in Chicago in September, and a three-hour seminar yesterday, I’m looking forward to the review/overview.

Bring it on, Shel!

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New Thread: It’s All Free (and Mostly Easy)

This morning I added a second thread to this blog, which will be a description/tutorial on how to get started blogging for free, and how you can do everything you see on this blog without programming knowledge. Go here — or click It’s All Free (and Mostly Easy) in the navigation bar above) — for the start of the tutorial.

Why do you start a new thread? If you are posting regularly, some of your good stuff will move way down in the reverse chronological format of the blog. For reference material you want to have easily accessed, and which isn’t commenting on news of the day, adding a new page (with child pages or sub-pages) instead of a new post is the way to go.

In this case, I hope to make it easy for people who want to get started blogging to do so, and to eliminate excuses for not starting.

I’m at a conference on blogging and podcasting where people are spending a minimum of $1,699 plus travel and lodging (and two days of their lives) to learn about these topics.

I think that’s a really worthwile investment. Conferences like this are great to get you out of the routine and think about the bigger picture.

Why not take the next step and really apply what we’re learning, especially since it’s FREE? By investing 90 seconds or less now, and no money, you can start a blog. Then, for those who are at the conference, you could even blog about the presentations, as I am. Or, when you go home, you could take a couple of hours to write about (and link to) the blogs and resources you found most helpful. It will be a great way to get hands on experience and really have the information sink in.

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Healthcare and News Media

I was recently asked by the Minnesota News Council for a good source to speak on the quality of news coverage of medical and health stories.

The forums will address the quality of news coverage of health-related matters. How do journalistic decisions like disease-mongering, use of commercial research, and coverage (or lack thereof) of health care policies/reform impact news and health care consumers? What can do to we create more informed and balanced coverage of health issues?

I recommended Brooks Edwards, M.D., who is the Medical Editor-in-Chief for MayoClinic.com, and wrote an article on the topic for Mayo Clinic Women’s HealthSource that is posted here.

Health News Review is another site that does helpful analysis of selected stories, and how they live up to quality standards developed by a group led by Gary Schwitzer, a University of Minnesota journalism professor (who also formerly worked for CNN and MayoClinic.com).

This post is a little off the ALI Conference track, but in responding to the request from the News Council I thought it would be good to share that recommendation with the world.

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