Category: Image and Reputation

Is Corporate Photography Dead?

Is Corporate Photography Dead?

From Cincom’s Expert Access Online Magazine (http://expertaccess.cincom.com)
By Ed Lallo on November 22nd, 2009

Is Corporate Photography Dead?

Ed Lallo

Ed Lallo

Corporate photography may not be dead, but it’s on the critical list. If the patient is to survive, photographers must reinvent themselves, along with their profession. A new and healthy photography industry must be willing to accept some hard-to-swallow changes.

I’ve seen many changes in corporate communications over the last 15 years. The value of photography to companies whipsaws from one extreme to another. In high times, more photography is better. As budgets tighten, its importance falls to the bottom of the must-do list.

Editorial Assignment for Plus Publishing - Lallo Photography

Editorial Assignment for Plus Publishing – Lallo Photography

For the past 12 months, we’ve been at bottom, struggling to get back up. For many corporate photographers, the ride already has taken far too long. They’ve either closed their doors or altered their business plans to include weddings, school portraits or local sports teams.

Photographers are struggling with a mix of old standby marketing tools while experimenting with the new social media; neither of which have brought the desired results.

Standards, including the Black Book, are having a hard time finding photographers to advertise at the over-inflated rates. The online photography search market is oversaturated with sites such aswww.creativeshake.com. Facebook, Linkedin and Twitter are not reliable alternative sources to find the limited amount of corporate work available.

For years, photographers partnered with designers as a way to find work. This model also is severely shaken as design firms and ad agencies continue to downsize. Cheap online stock has become the answer for many of these firms to stay in business. Gone are the four-color magazines, and the days of annual reports with 30 to 40 days of location shooting. Now, a simple online 10k will fill all SEC mandates.

The standard “day rate” and “photo usage rights” are two main reasons for the industry recession. With corporate budgets cut to the bone, costly photography is given a pass in lieu of royalty-free stock, or having a staff member with a digital camera shoot the assignment.

Management can see little benefit to pay what they consider excessive fees for a professional photograph they will use only once. Communication staffs are being challenged on every budgetary decision, and few are willing to risk their jobs to fight for this expense.

Corporate photography is first of all a business, and secondly, an art form.

Michael Dell, for Bloomber News - Ed Lallo Photography

Michael Dell, for Bloomberg News – Ed Lallo Photography

Photographers who shoot corporate assignments must take heed about how their clients are coping during this economic downturn. It’s time to position photography in terms of strategic communication—something that adds a definite value to a company.

For the most part, photographers are a reactive group. A client calls with an assignment and the photographer reacts, shooting what the client wants. Photos are sent to the client, and the interaction ends when the check clears the bank. The cycle continues only as long as the client keeps calling. When the client fails to call, the photographer then calls the client and asks why there is no work.

The corporate photographer has failed to engage beyond the lens with clients. To be worth more than a one-time photo, a photographer has to become a strategic partner to corporate communications: to help build a brand, save time, expense and, most importantly, portray the company in ways an insider cannot see. The photographer is the one behind the camera, and should use this unique business vantage point wisely.

For too long, we have relied on art directors as a constant source of assignments. It’s now time to seek new partnerships, take risks and to expend time and effort that is sometimes not always compensated.

One new possible partner in moving corporate photography into the strategic communications realm is another communication entity facing turmoil in this downturn—public relations and communication firms.

Ed Lallo on location in Nevada for MidAmerican Energy Holdings/Bershire Hathaway.

Ed Lallo on location in Nevada for MidAmerican Energy Holdings/Bershire Hathaway.

Traditional public relations and communication firms never appreciated—or had much success with—using great photography. Based on the premise of billable hours, they are more entrenched in using a host of staff time to place as many press releases as possible.

What escapes most agencies is the knowledge of how to successfully use photographers to enhance their businesses. Instead, photography comes as an afterthought, a one-time line item to expense.

Now that some PR agencies are finally realizing that companies have strategic communications plans that employ a wide variety of visual media, corporate photography suddenly becomes a marketable tool.Corporate Journalism, as media-guru David Henderson has deemed it, is the future of communications for the digital era.

A growing number of organizations and companies are finding that as news coverage wanes, they are hiring accomplished reporters and photographers, Corporate Journalists, to post stories and photos on their online newsrooms.  The LA Kings hockey team, for example, hired Rich Hammond who writes for the Los Angeles Daily News to cover their team online (http://lakingsinsider.com) because they were getting no space in the traditional local press.

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In the corporate world, Sugar Land, Texas-based Imperial Sugar Company, hired The News Group Net (http://www.thenewsgroup.net), of which I am a partner, to develop an online news site for the company to provide a steady flow of timely stories and photos.  Since it first launched in June of 2009, the Imperial Sugar Newsroom (http://ISCNewsroom.com) has become the most popular online news site in the global sugar industry.

Corporate Journalism has spurred the growth of company online newsrooms, which constantly need to be fed updated stories and photos. It is creating a market with great opportunities for the corporate photographer, especially when partnered with a knowledgeable, professional communications company.

Online newsrooms, Facebook, Twitter and other digital tools tell the company story to a wide variety of audiences: media, employees, shareholders, analysts and even the competition using Corporate Journalism. Management is much more willing to invest when the audience it reaches is greater and sustainable. Great photos drive traffic to these digital tools and are one of the main reasons for repeat traffic.

Since the conception of online websites that use quality photography, the industry has struggled with how to be compensated. Much like the music and movie industries, that struggle still continues today.

Millionair CEO - Ed Lallo Photography
Millionair CEO – Ed Lallo Photography

At most, online photos are a mere 900k in resolution. The photos are available virtually forever on the Internet and can easily be downloaded to a computer, or used on other sites. Traditional print use of an Internet photo, however, is not a factor, and there within lies the problem. Most assignments now being shot for the Internet still are being invoiced as if for traditional publication.

If photographers strategically place their talents with a company, they can increase the day rate to a “monthly rate” by relinquishing Web usage fees and offering set prices for their services over the course of the month. By highlighting the overall corporate savings, plus the ability of the company to more effectively build brand by adding effective visuals, the photographer can eventually grow the business from within and add a proof of concept for new business.

By adding great photos as a visual communication tool, especially on the Web, an often unheard voice—the shooter—becomes part of the corporate strategic communications function.

Organizations like IABC (International Association of Business Communicators) and PRSA (Public Relations Society of America) are excellent conduits to meet potential strategic communication partners.

To reach senior executives, organizations such as NIRI (National Investor Relations Institute) and local executive strategic forum organizations like the Houston Strategic Forum, should also be included as places to form new relationships.

Opportunities for strategic alliances abound daily for photographers with the right business mindset. Being ready to seize those opportunities requires presenting a clear, concise approach to tying what you do so well with what corporate communications shops need so badly.

Always remember, corporate photography—when focused on the right ROI (Return On Investment)—has its rightful place today among both old and new media and technologies. As professionals, we just need to get the business aperture right to earn a seat at the table.

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Bulldog Reporter's Visual Thumbs-Up

Bulldog Reporter’s Visual Thumbs-Up

rsz_1ed_1I would like to thank the staff of Bulldog Reporter’s Daily Dog for giving The News Group Net, and me, the opportunity to share this strategic communication initiative on the future of visual communications.

Barks & Bites [October 12]

Visual Media Means Business: PR Should Work More Closely with Shooters to Seize Web 2.0 Opps

By Ed Lallo, Founding Partner, The News Group Net

Traditional public relations firms have never appreciated-or had much success with-using great photography. Based on the premise of billable hours, they are more entrenched in using a host of staff time to place as many press releases as possible. What escapes most agencies and corporate PR teams is the knowledge of how to successfully use photographers to enhance their businesses. Instead, photography comes as an afterthought, a one-time line item to expense.

Yet now that some PR agencies are finally realizing that companies have strategic communications plans that employ a wide variety of visual media, corporate photography has suddenly become a marketable tool. Corporate journalism, as media-guru David Henderson has deemed it, is the future of communications for the digital era.

Corporate has spurred the growth of company online newsrooms, which constantly need to be fed timely updated stories and photos, as opposed to being simply dull repositories for boring press releases. Online newsrooms, Facebook, Twitter and other digital tools tell the company story to a wide variety of  audiences: media, employees, shareholders, analysts and even the competition using corporate journalism. Corporate management is much more willing to invest when the audience it reaches is greater and sustainable. Great photos drive traffic to these digital tools and are one of the main reasons for repeat traffic. This is all creating a market with great opportunities for the corporate photographer-especially when partnered with a knowledgeable, professional communications company.

On a side note, since the conception of websites that use quality pictures, the photography industry has struggled with how to be compensated. And much like the music and movie industries, our struggle still continues today. Specifically, online photos are a mere 900k in resolution, at most. The photos are available virtually forever on the Internet and can easily be downloaded to a computer, or used on other sites. Traditional print use of an Internet photo, however, is not a factor and there within lies the problem. Most assignments now being shot for the Internet still are being invoiced as if for traditional publication.

This means that photographers must now act as well: If they strategically place their talents with a company, they can increase their day rate to a “monthly rate” by relinquishing Web usage fees and offering set prices for their services over the course of the month. By highlighting the overall corporate savings, plus the ability of the company to more effectively build brand by adding effective visuals, the photographer can eventually grow the business from within and add a proof of concept for new business.

So what does all this mean to PR professionals? It means that by adding great photos as a visual communication tool, especially on the Web, an often un-heard voice-the shooter-can become part of the corporate strategic communications function. After all, corporate photography-when focused on the right ROI-has its rightful place today among both old and new media and technologies, and deserves a real seat at the table.

Ed Lallo is a founding partner in The News Group Net <http://www.thenewsgroup.net/>, corporate journalists delivering editorial solutions for clients in ways that matter to employees, customers,  investors and the media. Ed’s personal blog can be found at http://www.lallophoto.com.

IABC’s “Be Heard” is Heard on Examiner.Com

IABC’s “Be Heard” is Heard on Examiner.Com

ExaminerOn Jan 30 of 2007, IABC (International Association of Business Communicators) launched a new campaign with a lot a fanfare and publicity. Promoting “Be Heard” as more than a log or tag-line, it was to be IABC’s new mantra to get an emotional connection for it’s worldwide communication membership. The organization even trademarked the logo.

As a lifetime member of IABC, imagine my surprise while researching a twitter post by IABC Dallas member Scott Cytron on the effectiveness of the media site Examiner.com, that the slogan being touted by Examiner.com was “Be Heard.”

HeardExaminer.com, formally known as Clarity Digital Group, is a unit of Anschutz’s Denver-based Clarity Media Group. Clarity also publishes free newspapers in San Francisco and Washington, DC under the Examiner name.

The online edition of Clarity’s newspapers, Examiner.com, was launched in April of 2008 as a stand-alone online network. It expanded rapidly to 110 markets, including my hometown of Austin, TX. Examiner.com features posts on various subjects from writers it calls “examiners” as well as a variety of local, state and national headlines from wire services and news sources as well as information on weather, stocks and traffic. The website is automatically localized for each market based on the user’s location.

The “Be Heard” logo is most apparent while signing up as an examiner for the online publication. It also appears as a pop up window at various points as the site is navigated.

IABC1The whole point of trademarking a logo is to prevent the usage of that logo by other companies, especially a company in a related field.

Not being an insider in the IABC hierarchy, I question if perhaps the logo might not have been properly trademarked, or did IABC given permission to Examiner.com? Perhaps since the “Be Heard” campaign is now almost two years old, it is time for IABC to move on to another slogan. I hear that the Washington Post needs help with a new slogan to get them out of the journalistic hole they have dug for themselves.

In the Digital Era, David Henderson is the One to Call!

In the Digital Era, David Henderson is the One to Call!

Actor Rainn Wilson from NBC’s “The Office” sums up the value of the new book by David Henderson — “Making News in the Digital Era” — when he says:

“Henderson gets it. He knows the online media world and has interesting things to say. Besides, he’s the dude who got me on Twitter.”Picture-1-354x550 copy

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Rainn Wilson

Wilson turned to Henderson earlier this year for tips about how to use Twitter to promote the actor’s new spiritually based social media gathering place, SoulPancake.com. Since then, Wilson has attracted a staggering one and a half million followers on Twitter and SoulPancake.com is a big success.

Why did Wilson turn to Henderson? Because Henderson is an accomplished media strategist and expert in a new medium that many use but few understand … and even fewer know how to make money with it.

His new book is packed with timely, practical examples and guidance for anyone who wants to make sense of today’s changing media world and generate attention, whether for a small business, major corporation or for themselves.

In today’s scramble for competitive leadership, the status is no longer quo. Today’s organizations, large and small, are seeking the best ways to bypass mainstream media to communicate their news, their way, directly and effectively, to their publics. “Making News in the Digital Era” has the answers.

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David Henderson

Media strategist and award-winning journalist David E. Henderson reveals how to navigate today’s complex, evolving online media environment. As new and not-so-new ways of communication collide, it’s imperative to maximize an organization’s voice and awareness to better connect with audiences.

For executives, business people, communications professionals, not-for-profit executives and managers, Making News in the Digital Era makes sense of the merging online and traditional media and delivers practical ways to communicate effectively in today’s competitive world.

Making News in the Digital Era is available in late September at bookstores everywhere and online.

Order now! Directly from the publisher, iUniverse, $13.95 plus shipping.

Transparency Transcends Print, Social Media

Transparency Transcends Print, Social Media

Interesting article from my friend Scott H. Cytron, ABC.  Scott is a Dallas native who has worked more almost three decades in the communications profession in internal and external roles

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If you publish content for your firm, company, or even blog, Facebook, Tweet or have a LinkedIn profile – and don’t think people are listening and watching to what you do or say – you need to wake up!

Microsoft pulled a fast one when it took a photo of an African-American man and changed the person’s color to White. Plain and simple, this was a huge no-n0, and did not go unnoticed by the bloggers who pounced on Microsoft for inappropriate ethical behavior. Advertising Age was one of new news media to report the story; the altered photos are included in the story.

Although the fact that Photoshop can change skin color is a huge, separate discussion in itself, I think the larger story is whether Microsoft thought the stunt might go unnoticed. It’s not how stupid MS thinks we are; it’s how invisible the company think we might be.

I once knew a guy who regularly got together with his buddies to watch movies just to find the mistakes. Although I’m quite sure no one spends a great deal of his or her time trying to find mistakes, anyone publishing content – online or in print – can rest assured knowing someone will notice!

Boost Your Business with an Online Newsroom

Boost Your Business with an Online Newsroom

Newsroom

Rachel Foster,an award-winning business-to-business copywriter and owner of Fresh Perspective Copywriting, has just published an exciting article about the need for online newsrooms on her e-newsletter “freshmarketing”.

“Boost Your Business with an Online Newsroom – Even if You Don’t Have Any “Real” News” is an inciteful article promoting the need for corporate online newsrooms.   I must admit a little bias, Foster included my quote about the need for company to use all the social tools on the online newsroom.

Edward Lallo, Partner at The News Group Net, says “today’s new type of corporate newsroom must be a place to listen and interact with your audience, as well as use all the popular social media tools.” Savvy companies are incorporating social media into their PR to build relationships with customers, discuss industry trends and distribute news.”

Foster, based in Toronto, Canada helps companies generate sales by providing compelling marketing copy that motivates their prospects to take action.  Pleae visit freshmarketing to read the entire article, and freshperspective writing & editing services to find out more about Rachel Foster.

Height of Political Spin

Height of Political Spin

Jules Sotnek, my father-in-law, sent me  this in an email.   It is just too good to let drop.  It shows the height of how good the staff of politicians have become at doing political spin.

It just all depends on how you look at some things…

Judy Wallman, a professional genealogy researcher in southern California , was doing some personal work on her own family tree. She discovered that Congressman Harry Reid’s great-great uncle, Remus Reid, was hanged for horse stealing and train robbery in Montana in 1889. Both Judy and Harry Reid share this common ancestor.

The only known photograph of Remus shows him standing on the gallows in Montana territory:image001[4]

On the back of the picture Judy obtained during her research is this inscription: ‘Remus Reid, horse thief, sent to Montana Territorial Prison 1885, escaped 1887, robbed the Montana Flyer six times. Caught by Pinkerton detectives, convicted and hanged in 1889.’

So Judy recently e-mailed Congressman Harry Reid for information about their great-great uncle.

Believe it or not, Harry Reid’s staff sent back the following biographical sketch for her genealogy research:image002[3]

“Remus Reid was a famous cowboy in the Montana Territory . His business empire grew to include acquisition of valuable equestrian assets and intimate dealings with the Montana railroad. Beginning in 1883, he devoted several years of his life to government service, finally taking leave to resume his dealings with the railroad. In 1887, he was a key player in a vital investigation run by the renowned Pinkerton Detective Agency. In 1889, Remus passed away during an important civic function held in his honor when the platform upon which he was standing collapsed.”

NOW THAT’s how it’s done, Folks! That’s POLITICAL SPIN

Value of a Great Online Newsroom

Value of a Great Online Newsroom

Imperial Sugar Company online newsroom

Imperial Sugar Company online newsroom

With the newspaper business in America in shambles and much of the rest of mainstream media adrift somewhere between wild sensationalism and chaos, there are fewer and fewer places for a corporation, association or not-for-profit to get their stories shared and heard.

Sure, mainstream media may show up if some scandal or crisis is brewing. But they could care less about such things as best practices, new and more efficient approaches to doing business and worthwhile programs that help people.

The reality today is that it is a significant challenge for any company or organization to get meaningful attention on a consistent basis.

Sending out press releases is the least effective method of getting the media’s attention in today’s world although news releases are still the staple of lazy PR people who lack actual working relationships with the media or knowledge of the online media environment.

In this digital era, a great online newsroom is needed together with a strategic plan for building an enhanced footprint of awareness. The problem is that most online newsrooms are either dusty, molding depositories for press releases that date back to when God invented dirt or merely advertising showplaces to boast over new products with complete disregard for legitimate “news” about the company.

Imperial Sugar Company, headquartered in Sugar Land, Texas, has boldly taken a better direction. The company has created an honest-to-goodness working newsroom, ISCNewsroom.com, and after just a few months online, site traffic and ranking reflect its popularity. Awareness about the company’s news has increased on all major search engines.

At a time when most online newsrooms are generally the least-visited section of a company’s Web site, the ISCNewsroom has quickly become the most popular online news source in the sugar industry, reaching out to investors, employees, communities, suppliers, the media and the industry, as a whole.

ISCNewsroom.com was developed by The News Group Net - with offices in Washington, Austin and Dallas. It is a consultancy of veteran communications strategists and journalists really know legitimate news and how to strategically communicate and connect with audiences … and the results are in the impressive audience numbers that help to position Imperial Sugar as the #2 producer of high quality cane sugar products in the United States.

Watching the Washington Post Crumble

From the blog of my good friend David Henderson (www.davidhenderon.com)

Dana Milbank and Chris Cillizza, Washington Post goofballs

The Washington Post is flailing. The signs are there that the newspaper is struggling, directionless, out of control. The Post is becoming a less credible and responsible newspaper. I have written here that if the Post were located in any other city but the nation’s capital, it would be out of business.

The paper cannot figure out how to connect with audiences online despite an investment of millions of dollars.

The most recent sign of decline at the paper comes in the form of a video posted on the paper’s 3rd rate Web site – Post columnist and wannabe celebrity Dana Milbank and White House correspondent and blogger Chris Cillizza appeared in smoking jackets to poke fun at politicians. Milbank took a mean-spirited shot at Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton by suggesting she would drink “Mean Bitch Beer.” It wasn’t journalism, it was the lowest kind of sexist, off-color and demeaning stupid humor.

Even though the paper pulled the video, it survives online at YouTube and will be yet another embarrassment to the former great newspaper for a long time:

YouTube Preview Image

The Post’s problems stem largely from its lack of leadership – The paper’s publisher, Katharine Weymouth, came into her job only because she was born into it … the granddaughter of the legendary newspaper woman Katharine Graham. Just a month ago, Weymouth got caught up in a another scandal of major proportions in a scheme to sell exclusive access to Post reporters for lobbyists and power brokers.

Katharine Weymouth
Katharine Weymouth

Weymouth is no journalist and neither are many of the people she has surrounded herself with. They also are not skilled in the ways of the Internet.

While much of the newspaper industry has been crumbling as the result of economic and societal trends – audiences and advertisers are streaming to online news sources – the Post’s worst enemy is itself. What we are witnessing happen is the self-destruction of the Washington Post.

David Meerman Scott: Creating Authoritative Voice

David Meerman Scott: Creating Authoritative Voice

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Author, consultant and communications thought-leader David Meerman Scott has come out squarely in support of my project with the Imperial Sugar Company, saying “brand journalism creates an authoritative voice” for the company’s new online newsroom.

In his popular blog, WebInkNow.com, David writes:

I’m particularly excited about how ISC hired journalists to create their newsroom, something I’ve advocated for years. This is something I’ve called brand journalism and is an increasingly effective marketing tool. In fact, ISC has hired the skills of a print journalist, a television journalist, and a photojournalist.

When a company creates information in a newsroom like ISC and updates it frequently, the valuable content is indexed by the search engines, and will gravitate into the top positions.

Imperial Sugar’s new online newsroom was developed by The News Group Net, of which I am a partner.

Click here to read David’s full story.

The Ideal Online Newsroom

The Ideal Online Newsroom

iscnewsroomThese days, it seems pretty obvious that any smart company has to prominently position its expertise/experience to:

  • Be clearly heard and stand out in all of the right ways.
  • Best “manage the conversation” around its image and reputation.
  • Be timely and relevant.

The hard part is expressing its corporate voice above the noise of the marketplace, where often people much less qualified – but far more vocal – pump out their opinions into mainstream and social media. The sheer speed, volume and rapid dissemination of information – right or wrong – can inundate communications and sway public opinion. A company’s “Google-ability” – and the news that appears about it on page one of any search engine – often can determine its believability. To have a meaningful conversation online, a company needs to:

  • Articulate clear points of view on the things that it cares about the most.
  • Identify its own experts and champions to tell compelling stories to advance its case and strengthen its market position.
  • Create ever-evolving public platforms/forums where it can consistently and frequently showcase its views – along with other respected industry experts and thought leaders.
  • Create a forum for sharing comments, generating a conversation and listening.

The team at The News Group Net, of which I am a member, recently created the ISC Newsroom. It is intended to position the Imperial Sugar Company as an authoritative voice in the sugar industry – U.S., Mexico and elsewhere. Meant to be a one-stop shop for the best thinking and views on sugar and all of the issues/market forces that surround it. We think it is one of the best online newsrooms around.