Friday Five, post-Thanksgiving edition, a day late: reading for tech-savvy PR and a request for input

The Thanksgiving holiday and an over-indulgence of turkey, football and college basketball has thrown off my circadian rhythms. So I’m a day late with this week’s Friday Five. Technically, I should’ve taken the week off, but this particular topic is timely, as it relates to the Advanced PR Institute I’ll be helping out with on Dec. 3-4. (“Developing a Technology-Savvy Communications Approach” is the theme for this institute, and if you would like to attend, there’s still time to register if you hurry.) Anyway, my co-faculty and I discussed some pre-reading for the conference participants to help bring them up to speed on the impact of new technology on PR, and we came up with this list of materials:

1. Beyond Buzz: The Next Generation of Word of Mouth Marketing, by Lois Kelly. (Executive summary available online. So is my review of the book.)

2. The Cluetrain Manifesto, by Christopher Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls and David Weinberger. The whole book is now available online.

3. Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers, by Robert Scoble and Shel Israel. (I also reviewed this book.)

4. Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything, by Don Tapscott. The introduction and chapter 1 are available online (PDF).

5. Now it’s your turn. What other book about technology, social networking, the web 2.0 world, etc., would be on your list of recommended reading for higher ed PR folks? Leave your recommendations in the comments below and I’ll be sure to share these recommendations with the folks in Austin on Dec. 3-4.

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Now playing: The National – Apartment Story
via FoxyTunes

Buy Nothing Day and the marketing of anti-marketing

buynothingday20071.jpgIf you were hoping to purchase some Buy Nothing Day swag from Adbusters today, you’re out of luck. Adbusters’ Culture Shop is one of the few stores, online or otherwise, that is closed for business today.

That’s because Adbusters is practicing what it preaches. At least today.

While many Americans, thanks to plentiful reminders from local and national news outlets, celebrate the advent of the holiday shopping season today, the opposite is happening in the anti-consumerism movement. Today is Buy Nothing Day. Adbusters, the culture-jamming magazine behind BND, describes the annual event as “a 24 hour moratorium on consumer spending” and urges would-be shoppers to refrain from buying anything at all today — to “participate by not participating.”

New York Times blogger Andrew Revkin writes that the BND proponents’ goal “is to get as many people as possible to buy nothing at all over a 24-hour span on Friday in the United States (and Saturday elsewhere around the world), as a small blow against what they say are the destructive efforts of advertisers and corporations to fuel the deep-rooted human tendency to want the next new thing.”

buynothingdayshoes.jpgThe irony of BND’s “anti-consumerist” approach is that it relies heavily on the same promotional and marketing techniques as the very culture it seeks to strike a small blow against. True, many of the techniques — posters, stickers, demonstrations and the like — originated with do-it-yourself underground movements and were appropriated by the corporations, so maybe the culture jammers are just reclaiming what they see as rightfully theirs. But if you take a good look at the Adbusters website, you’ll find a healthy dose of good old consumerism, proceeds from which ostensibly go to help stick it to The Man. There’s the Blackspot Shoes, the Corporate America T-shirts and the 2008 Adbusters calendar, all prominently displayed as for sale under the “Culture Shop” banner.

Then there’s the “latest news” headline about how MTV has refused to run a 30-second ad for BND. Why would the culture jammers complain about being refused airtime from one of the monolithic corporations that help to “fuel the deep-rooted human tendency to want the next new thing”?

I have nothing against Adbusters or the idea behind Buy Nothing Day. In fact, I’m actively participating by not buying anything today — with the exception of some needed groceries. (Hypocrisy, thy name is Andrew.) I just find it odd that so much of this activity relies on the techniques that drive and feed consumer behavior in our culture.

I also should point out that these aren’t necessarily my original ideas. My view has been informed recently by a new book from Anne Elizabeth Moore called Unmarketable: Brandalism, Copyfighting, Mocketing, and the Erosion of Integrity. It’s a decent critique of corporate culture’s use of indie/DIY/underground methods for the purpose of marketing the “next new thing.” But Moore also critiques activists’ reactions and approaches. It’s an even-handed analysis of consumerism and I recommend you read it.

Just don’t go out and buy it today.

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Now playing: Bruce Springsteen – Devil’s Arcade
via FoxyTunes