Looks like I picked the wrong week to stop blogging

So less than a week after I announced my latest indefinite hiatus from blogging, Georgy Cohen of MeetContent posts a great entry about the future of public relations in higher ed. The post consists of a Q&A with four higher ed PR folks representing a fairly diverse group of universities — Joe Bonner from (@bonnerj) from Rockefeller University, Tracy Mueller from the University of Texas (@tracymueller), Lori Packer from the University of Rochester (@LoriPA) and me. It’s interesting to read the different perspectives each of us brings to our changing roles, and to find some common threads.

One of those threads is something I discussed in a blog post earlier this year, Thinking like a media organization. In this post I borrowed heavily from author David Rogers (@david_rogers), who discusses the shift occurring from traditional brand-building techniques (read: advertising) to one less dependent on established brands and traditional channels. In a video of one of Rogers’ talks, he explains that “from a brand point of view, what this means is rather than piggybacking on this really powerful brand with a huge built-in audience [i.e., television], we need to look for opportunities to engage by creating our own content. Thinking like a media company, not like an advertiser.”

Similarly, those of us who have been doing media relations and PR work in higher ed need to think more and more like a media company, rather than a PR firm.

And for those of you who don’t get the reference in my headline:

We now return to our previously scheduled hiatus.

Extended break

We interrupt the inactivity of this blog to inform you that this blog will likely remain inactive for an extended time. This is due primarily to three things:

1. Work priorities are eating up a larger chunk of my day. (This happens to most of us during the beginning of a school year, so mine is not a unique situation.)

2. A pretty severe case of blog and social media burnout. (This, too, seems to be going around in higher ed circles.)

3. The St. Louis Cardinals made the post-season, which has accounted for some later nights in front of the TV and some mild distraction from my October routine. (This may soon end, however, as the Redbirds are down to the Phillies, 2-1, and if we don’t win tonight then it’s all over until next spring. But until then, #gocards.)

I’m sure I’ll get back to blogging. I’m just not sure when. In the meantime, I encourage you to follow all the dandy higher ed bloggers whose posts are aggregated on BlogHighEd.org.

See you soon, probably.