Tag: "David Henderson"

Self-Proclaimed Gurus Multiplying Like Rabbits

Self-Proclaimed Gurus Multiplying Like Rabbits

Social Media "Gurus"

by David Henederson, Parter, The News Group Net

Whether speaking before an audience and advising clients, I caution them to wary of today’s proliferation of self-anointed social media gurus. Don’t be taken-in by big talk, big claims. A lot of followers on Twitter does not an expert make.

Most such self-appointed gurus have questionable-to-no credentials … even those who were among the first on Twitter (possibly because they were unemployed) or those who have had other people write books on their behalf and are now on the lecture circuit. There’s often little behind the smoke and mirrors.

I’ve found that many social media gurus lack experience in communications or marketing, quite a few don’t have blogs (even those extol the virtues of blogging), and a simple search of Google reveals nothing about them to support their grandiose claims. They are, in my opinion, phonies.

At the core of social media is the essential need for established credentials in communications.

The New York journalist and writer BL Ochman and I seem to be on the same page. She recently wrote on her WhatsNext blog, “Self-Proclaimed Social Media Gurus on Twitter Multiplying Like Rabbits,” and I could not agree more. She’s given permission for me to re-post her findings:

In May 09 when we first used Tweepsearch to count of the Twitter bios of self-proclaimed social media gurus, experts, superstars and ninjas there were 4,487. A mere seven months later, we were shocked to see that there are now nearly 16.000. They are multiplying like rabbits.

Here’s a breakout (according to Tweepsearch) of the 15,740 self-proclaimed social media gurus we discovered in our most recent search:


As your company or agency scrambles to get up to speed on social media, it is wise to remember that “guru” is something someone else calls you. The consultants others are likely to call gurus:

  • bring experience to the table;
  • sell solutions, not formulas;
  • don’t promise that social media will provide a quick fix for your bottom line.

Check out BL Ochman’s blog because she knows what she is talking about.

Read more: http://www.davidhenderson.com/2010/01/26/self-proclaimed-gurus-multiplying-like-rabbits/#ixzz0djqPbrxb
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution

Next-generation online newsrooms bring stories alive

Next-generation online newsrooms bring stories alive

Imperial Sugar online newsroom - ISCNewsroom.com - powered by Wordpress

Ever since the dawn of what’s called Web 2.0 around 2004, a wide spectrum of exciting online tools have fueled an explosion in blogs, online sharing, web-based communities, social networks, streaming video and greater user control over online content. It’s all designed for better communication and connecting online. The original and mostly static style of HTML Web sites has gone the way of the hula hoop. Today, blog technology rules, not only as the preferred “under the hood” software of an estimated 200 million blogs worldwide, but also to power countless online news outlets, social media sites and an exciting new generation of interactive online newsrooms, powered by the dynamic features of Wordpress (wordpress.org). A primary objective of these newsrooms is to help manage the online conversation by becoming an active and primary exchange for news, information, stories, comment and sharing:

  • News stories are written by working journalists in a concise, balanced and legitimate news style, free of sales pitches and self-promotion.
  • Profiles of employees, executives and experts alike, are drafted as appealing features, giving personal insight and showing a distinctive human side to an organization.
  • Photos, shot by accomplished photojournalists, are used widely and add rich dimension to online newsroom stories. Online photo galleries provide easy access to high resolution images by the media.
  • Contact links instantly alert specific people assigned to media inquiries or questions from customers.
  • Social media tools are built-in to each story to provide easy posting to Twitter, rating on Digg, emailing to a colleague or any number of social networking sites.
  • Search engine optimization or SEO runs invisibly and automatically to ping or alert every search engine to new activity and stories and to boost the all-important ranking on major search engine pages.

The online newsroom of the Imperial Sugar Company, launched in May 2009, has become the most popular site in the global sugar industry. It was developed and is managed by the corporate journalists at News Group Net LLC.

IABC's CW Magazine Features New Approach to Newsrooms by The News Group Net

IABC’s CW Magazine Features New Approach to Newsrooms by The News Group Net

In the Digital Era, Make Your Own News

[Here's David Henderson's article in the January/February 2010 issue of IABC Communication World]

Strategic planning, storytelling and clear messages have always worked to point us forward.
They will do so in the digital era too.

Today’s digitally-driven information revolution is creating a new-world business matrix and model. Organizations large and small are finding they can simply bypass mainstream media to communicate their news, in their way, directly and effectively, to their publics. They can pick their media: Web sites, blogs, YouTube videos, and online sharing and social networking sites.

This communications tsunami is rolling our way and many of us are not sure what to do. We see the tide going out fast and far. But standing on the beach and waiting for it to roar back in is not an option.

So how do we get to high ground that’s well above the communications storm surge?

Let’s begin with the latest hot and sexy new trend in digital communications: social media. Today’s self-proclaimed disciples of social media preach about the need to get onboard the bandwagon, and wax rhapsodic about the features, functions and benefits of various technological bells and whistles.

But few possess the expertise to authentically exploit the medium by incorporating strategic planning or skillfully developed messages into this new communications juggernaut.

Even fewer extol the importance of telling an appealing story.

In communications, the tactical use of social media for social media’s sake can be terribly shallow and short-sighted.

This digital era is unquestionably the most exciting period of my career as a journalist and strategic communications advisor. But as an early adapter of online and blog technology, I believe it’s only going to work for us on a sustained basis when we stop long enough to embrace the core elements of effective strategic communications to drive any social media or online communications initiative.

Strategic planning, storytelling and clarity of messages have always worked like a beacon to point us forward. They will do so in the digital era, too.

Today’s online social media is just another in a long line of tactical communications delivery tools that stretches back to storytelling around the tribal fire, epic poems, parchment, books, postal mail, the fax machine and email. In fact, think back to when email first hit the big time. Pundits predicted world-shaking possibilities. Nobody predicted spam.

Brooke Gladstone of National Public Radio’s “On the Media” program says, “Journalists are taught to talk and write in human terms. Tell me a story.” We are all part of a storytelling culture in America. It’s been that way forever, and it’s no different in countries, cultures and communities around the world. We share infinite variety of stories about the human experience, and often the best stories are repeated over and over.

Even though an opportunity often missed by a PR industry seemingly obsessed with traditional press releases and predictable promotions, the use of storytelling cuts through competitive clutter far more effectively and with greater influence than anything else in an organization’s marketing or PR arsenal. It gets to the heart of what’s special about your organization and what you have to say.

My colleague Anne Bell at PBS NewsHour says it best: “A great story has legs that in today’s world can travel many miles per hour.” Consider how a great story can sprint the globe today in a nanosecond.

We are living in a communications world where new and not-so-new tools collide, merge and morph, all with the intent to better connect with audiences. To do that, we must use all these advanced technologies to do something ancient: tell stories that people want to hear and be motivated to share.

How do we make it work to break old habits, take advantage of new technologies, tell good stories and reach jaded audiences? How about relooking at the concept of an online newsroom?

Online Newsroom: No Longer Hiding in Plain Sight

In a demonstration of true counter-intuition, the typical online newsroom is usually the last place any self-respecting reporter or site visitor wants to go. Traffic numbers confirm it. It’s typically lifeless, dull, and more like the burial spot for press releases, speeches and legal-sounding statements than a relevant, active spot for timely, hot and meaningful news. Some newsrooms even require a journalist to fill out an online form and then wait for a response, which may take hours for approval … if ever. While it may be convenient for internal communications people, such a procedure can cause delay and frustration for a reporter on deadline.

But it doesn’t have to be that way.

A lively online newsroom can be the perfect place for a smart company to strategically position its expertise and experience prominently online; to be clearly heard and stand out in all the right ways; and to manage the conversation around its image and reputation in timely and relevant ways.

The hard part is expressing a corporate voice above the noise of the marketplace, where often people much less qualified — but far more vocal — shout out their opinions into mainstream and online social media. The sheer speed, volume and rapid dissemination of information — right or wrong — can inundate communications and sway public opinion.

To have a meaningful conversation online, a company needs to do the following:

Articulate clear points of view on the things that it cares about the most.
Identify its own compelling voices of experts and champions — in and outside the organization — to tell compelling stories to advance its case and strengthen its market position.
Create ever-evolving public platforms and forums where it can consistently and frequently showcase its views, along with other respected industry experts and thought leaders.
Support and complement the organization’s overarching strategic initiatives.
Create a forum for openly sharing comments, generating a conversation and listening.
It’s a bold step for any organization to cast aside old tactics, like press releases, to get attention. That’s why it’s essential for a company to take charge of telling its own stories with appeal and credibility to its audiences. For starters, a company or organization must avoid the compulsion to sell or promote, because it no longer works in the online environment.

For example, the Los Angeles Kings hockey club didn’t believe it was getting enough coverage in the dwindling local mainstream newspapers. As a result, the team’s owner decided to launch an online news blog, LAKingsInsider.com, and hired a seasoned sports reporter, Rich Hammond, to write stories. The spotlight of attention quickly shifted to the Kings when both The New York Times and National Public Radio did stories about this new approach to making news in the digital era.

A company must also realize that its “Googleability,” and the news that appears about it on page one of any search engine, will help drive its perceived believability.

That’s one of the reasons why the team at The News Group Net LLC (of which I’m a founding partner), developed a groundbreaking online newsroom for the Imperial Sugar Company (ISC). The goal: focus on delivering legitimate and timely news about the company and the global sugar industry.

Case in point: When an explosion and resulting fires temporarily closed Imperial Sugar Company’s large sugar refinery at Port Wentworth, Georgia, in February 2008, many news stories and images of the incident appeared in mainstream and online media, including at Google and other search engines. Those reports about fire, death and tragedy continued to show up on the first pages of search engines for months, even though much of the information was sorely outdated.

The online newsroom went online in June 2009, and delivered the latest news about Imperial Sugar Company rebuilding its refinery, resumption of sugar production, business expansion and other relevant stories about business and community involvement. By positioning Imperial Sugar Company as an authoritative voice in the sugar industry, the Google headlines gradually moved from disaster-related stories to more positive news about employees, products, customers, business partners and industry analysts.

It took a few months, but the result is the most popular online site in the sugar industry and has dramatically improved the company’s image and reputation with employees, investors and the marketplace.

It worked … and continues to works today … because the stories are what people want to read and to share.

Incidentally, both LAKingsInsider.com and ISCNewsroom.com are online newsrooms built on blog-turned-news-delivery technology … just like the news sites of NYTimes.com, WSJ.com and PEOPLE.com.

It’s About the Bedrock of Strategic Communications

So, let me pull this together … Storytelling conveys personality that everyone can identify with, and it can lead to transformational leadership that energizes all levels and corners of an organization. Used in the online environment, storytelling can reflect passion, uniqueness and immediateness.

The discipline of storytelling used with a dynamic, interactive online newsroom can energize (or reenergize) any business or organization. It becomes woven into the fabric, stimulates excitement and understanding of vision, builds consensus of purpose, and triggers sharing far and wide.

In today’s online world, the influence and payoff of good corporate storytelling can be staggeringly powerful.

One great, timely story on an active and credible corporate newsroom smoothly cuts across all boundaries to achieve a common purpose in an organization’s daily conversations:

Shareholder/financial communications
Internal communications
Web sites, blogs, social media
Media relations and external relations
Government and regulator relations
New business development
People like to share good news, so give them a story that they will get excited about and tell someone else. Increased media coverage, enhanced word of mouth and greater awareness all build exponentially from a great story that is carried by many legs.

Stories are the bedrock of interaction, building blocks of knowledge, the foundation of memory and learning. Stories connect us with our humanness and link past, present and future by teaching us to anticipate the possible consequences of our actions. Stories help define what is authentically special about something or someone.

Propelled by today’s engaging digital communications tools, a good story will be carried — credibly and influentially — by many voices and travel many, many miles.

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

rainn_wilson1

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.

dh-80x80

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.

The News Group Net Will Miss Founding Partner Springfield Lewis

The News Group Net Will Miss Founding Partner Springfield Lewis

Bourbon Street in The French Quarter

Bourbon Street in The French Quarter

IMG_0644

Springfield Lewis on Bourbon Street

New Orleans changes people, sometime for the better, sometime for the worse.

Springfield Lewis, his real name is Robert, had hired me a couple of times to photograph stories for his IBM publications before we met in the Mississippi River city almost 25 years ago.  Over the three weeks we worked in New Oleans on a project for IBM, the city brought us together as life long friends.

A few months after New Orleans, Springfield was responsible for introducing me to my wife Adrienne, with whom he was a co-worker.  I am not sure whether I should thank him for that or not, 24 years later we are still seeing if we are right for each other.  It might take another 24 to be sure.

Bourbon

Girls at Night in the French Quarter

During the time I lived in Atlanta, Springfield was a close part of Adrienne and my circle of friends.  After we all left Altanta and moved on to other jobs, Springfield  dropped off the radar.   Years later when Adrienne and I moved to Texas,  Springfield once again emerged as a blip at EDS in Dallas.

It wasn’t until last May that Springfield and I reunited.  After being downsized from EDS where he was director of communications for the America’s group, I asked Springfield to join David Henderson and I in a unique project, The News Group Net.

Springfield Lewis in the French Quarter

Springfield Lewis in the French Quarter

David had landed an important contract with Imperial Sugar to develop and staff an online newsroom.   Imperial Sugar was coming off of some very bad years that included a major tragedy, it needed a voice to move into the future.   The News Group Net was asked to become an important part of strategically developing that voice, and Springfield was an intregal part in developing the tone.

During the next few months Springfield and I travelled extensively together, and regained the fast friendship that had started in New Orleans 25 years earlier.

Springfield and Me

Springfield and Me

Last week was Springfields last day with The News Group Net.  Harris Communications, a defense contractor based in Melbourne, Fl has lured him away and it really hurts to see him go.  David and I wish him all the best in his new job as Director of Worldwide Corporate Communications. We realize he is needed there, and he will take the company to new heights.

It was fitting that the last job we did for The News Group Net, would be in New Orleans.  As we wondered around the French Quarter at night, it was as if we were once again 25 years the younger.  He will always be an important part of this company.

New Orleans does change people.  It changed mine with a lifelong friendship.

Springfield you will be missed!

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.

The Image of Neda

The Image of Neda

NedaMy good friend and parter David Henderson was on top of this story from the very beginning.  This is a tragedy in Iran that should have never of happened.

From the blog of David Henderson -

Much of the world has kept track of events in Iran following the questionable outcome of elections there on June 12 via Twitter. With severe restrictions by the regime in Iran on media coverage and apathy by the news media in the West, Twitter has served to redefine how many of us view the concept of media in the Internet era.

It is no longer about some editor or TV producer making decisions for us but rather we are sharing information and drawing our own conclusions.

Nothing has been more profound, in my opinion, than watching video of a young woman named Neda Salehi Aghasoltan die on the streets of Tehran yesterday.

Neda

She was a student of philosophies at Tehran University. According to reports, she was shot by a police sniper while standing with her university professor, watching protesters.

The video is haunting, especially her last moment alive when she looked at the camera as if to seek our help. At least that was what I saw in her eyes.

The story of Neda is being heard around the world today, carried first – with a few exceptions – not by the sleepy, slow-moving traditional news media but by people, sharing on Twitter and online.

The Passion and Inspiration of Video

The latest popular thing to do among many organizations and PR firms is to create videos that they believe will deliver some “killer” message, and put it on YouTube. There are hopes the videos will be viewed by millions, and somehow make the earth stop dead in its tracks while people are thrilled by what they see in the video. Reality is that it rarely – if ever – happens.

The best videos inspire, connect with our shared human emotions of hope and passion, and are memorable. Most of all, they are authentically original. Here is the best I’ve ever seen, created by the infinitely talented group of individuals in the Playing For Change Project:
YouTube Preview Image

About the Author: David Henderson is a veteran communications strategist … writer … blogger … online publisher … and Emmy Award winning former CBS Network News correspondent. He lives in the Washington, D. C., area, and works worldwide.  Visit his blog at:  DavidHenderson.com.

David Henderson Speaks at Univ. Houston IABC Student Chapter

David Henderson Speaks at Univ. Houston IABC Student Chapter

As a new member of the Houston IABC Chapter (don’t worry I am still keeping the Austin Chapter my home), I was pleased when my good friend David iabc26Henderson, author of The Media Savvy Leader, was announced as a speaker for the Houston IABC Bronze Quill event.

It is always great to spend time with David, so the day of the Bronze Quill I tagged along with him as he spoke the the IABC student chapter at the Unversity of Houston.

“I have to say that while it was an honor to be the keynote speaker among peers at the IABC Bronze Quill Awards,’ said Henderson, “my personal highlight was the chance to participate in a roundtable discussion with students at the University of Houston about trends and opportunities in the fields of the media and public relations. They are the future leaders in our industry.”

Henderson, a thought-leader and consultant in the evolving and
complex field of strategic communications, shared his insight with the students on merging the best of online communications and and traditional techniques.

Using Visual Communications to Create Partnerships

Using Visual Communications to Create Partnerships

shrine1As our nation enters the severe economic downturn, there will be a greater need for creative use of public relations by both corporations and non-profit organizations. A new creative approach using photography and other visual communications, to team up these two players can be an essential partnership of both corporate and non-profit public relations.

It was by chance that my son, Alex, and I received tickets to the East-West Shrine Bowl football game in Houston this January past. A friend of my mother’s in Kansas gave a large donation to the Shriners and received the tickets. Not being close to the site of the game in Houston, she passed the tickets on to my mother knowing that I lived in Austin, and had a better chance of using them.

The tickets were for fantastic seats on the 40-yard line, ten rows up from the nation’s best college football talent.

Sitting in the sparsely filled University of Houston stadium waiting for the game to start, I was enthralled watching a seven or eight-year old bald-headed girl sitting a few rows in front run around the seats taking photos with her digital camera. It was obvious that she must have been the recipient of treatment by one of the noted Shrine Hospitals.

Sitting next to her dad, she would jump up run down the concrete steps close to where the players were practicing, shoot a photo and then run back up to her a dad and proudly show him what she shot.  This scene continued over and over again for a good 20 minutes before the game started.

As I looked around the stadium, I noticed more children, some in wheelchairs and others on crutches, were also armed with digital camera’s trying to get shots of their favorite college players, their families and their friends.

It wasn’t till a week later that I realized that there was an untapped public relations possibility in what I had witnessed at that Shine football game.

While watching the festivities of Barrack Obama becoming the 44th President of the United States, one could not help to notice the Kodak digital camera in Malia’s hand and the Filp Video in Sasha’s. Two events, two totally different type of children, but united with one purpose…taking photos.

As the newly elected president addressed the nation calling for a new spirit of volunteerism, it came to me that this would be a perfect partnership opportunity between corporations that have ties to the photographic industry and non-profit organizations that have seen their seed money continue to shrink in this economy.

A project like this could be adapted to children’s hospitals, school systems and volunteer programs. The project could be tailored for both local and national projects.   It could be partnered with corporations that have visual communication interests such as:  Fuji, Nikon, Canon, Kodak, Apple, Dell, Intel, HP or others.

A sample project could be something as simple as children in the devastated New Orleans school district capturing random acts of kindness in the community.

Having students photograph people who are helping others. Start with a core group of students.  Incorporate the photo project into a class requiring students to volunteer a predetermined amount of hours in their community.

With digital camera in hand, students would focus on people helping people.

Selected photos and the student photographers would be aired on local TV, featured in local galleries and the works could be used by the sponsoring companies in public relation and advertising campaigns, and auctioned off to benefit the needy. This program would indirectly teach students the importance of volunteering, community and self-worth.

No better example of letting the youth tell their own story comes from David Henderson’s book The Media Savvy Leader.

Media Savvy in the Internet Era

Media Savvy in the Internet Era

ebook1