Journalism 2.0: a social network experiment

Despite the challenges “old media” face from the new world of social networking, these appear to be exciting times for journalists who are willing to embrace the new reality — or to at least experiment with it.

A new weblog, Beat Blogging, is one such experiment. The idea behind Beat Blogging is to connect reporters via a social network — a blog, in this case — to help them improve their beat reporting.

The group of 13 journalists — one each from various news organizations — includes a couple of journalist-bloggers whom I try to read occasionally:

  • Eric Berger, who blogs as SciGuy for the Houston Chronicle. Berger says he joined the network because he hopes “to raise the level of debate on my existing blog by adding considerably more commentary from practicing scientists, and giving scientists a non-threatening place to interact with the general public.”
  • Eliot Van Buskirk of Wired’s Listening Post blog. His editor, Evan Hansen, says, “One of the lessons we’ve learned is that blogging offers a fundamentally different relationship with readers than traditional newsgathering, and with this project we hope to tap even deeper into that phenomenon.”

Via The Chronicle of Higher Education‘s news blog. The Chronicle is one of the 13 news organizations to take part in the experiment and has assigned Brad Wolverton, who covers the business of college sports, to Beat Blogging.

—————-
Now playing: The Who – Naked Eye
via FoxyTunes

A little more conversation: ‘Beyond Buzz’ book review

A couple of weeks ago, I published an email interview with Lois Kelly, author of Beyond Buzz: The Next Generation of Word-of-Mouth Marketing. I promised to review the book, and so I have. Read on.

Book review: Beyond Buzz: The Next Generation of Word-of-Mouth Marketing
Lois Kelly
(2007, AMACOM Books)

Beyond BuzzEight years ago, four guys who saw a future for the Internet in the midst of the dot-com bust wrote The Cluetrain Manifesto, a thin text that espoused the virtues of something called “conversational marketing” — the idea that marketers should forsake one-way messaging (talking at customers) and buzzword-laden obfuscation for two-way discussions with customers and plain speaking. According to the Cluetrain authors, the Internet’s open, interactive and disintermediated nature freed consumers from the tyranny of traditional advertising — they could now discuss brands openly on forums and in blogs — and was changing the rules of marketing forever.

Picking up where Cluetrain left off — and bringing conversational marketing into the offline world, too — is communications consultant Lois Kelly. Kelly’s book Beyond Buzz: The Next Generation of Word-of-Mouth Marketing (2007, AMACOM Books) offers a practical guide for communications and marketing practitioners who want to infuse their branding and marketing approach with a little more conversation.

Usually, I’m wary of books with terms like “beyond (insert buzzword — like buzz? — here), or “next generation of (enter current marketing trend here)” in the titles. Usually because such books fail to deliver on the titles’ promises. But Kelly’s book isn’t one of those. Beyond Buzz lives up to its promises with detailed, real-world examples of how how conversational marketing works in a variety of organizations (including higher education). In addition, she provides practical tips and techniques to get people in any organization talking like real people — and listening to their customers.

The author is the co-founder of Foghound, a strategic communications firm based in Marblehead, Massachusetts, where her list of clients includes Dunkin’ Donuts, SAP and Sun Microsystems. She also has a solid background in digital marketing, having led one high-tech marketing firm and hold the VP title with another, so she has the credentials to talk about conversational marketing in the online world.

Beyond Buzz advocates involving people at all levels of an organization — from the CEO to the sales rep and secretary — in conversational marketing. “One step,” she writes, “is to create conversational marketing approaches, such as salonlike meetings, online customers communities, more regular radio talk show-like conference calls, and more conversational sales meetings.” She rightly acknowledges that these tools should not replace traditional marketing approaches, but augment them.

But what good are these tools if organizations have nothing interesting to say? Kelly urges marketers, PR people, CEOs, sales reps and others to pull together to find the organization’s point of view and incorporate it into the marketing messages. “A good point of view gently (or not so gently) smacks people in the face and gets the response, ‘That’s interesting. Tell me more,'” Kelly writes. “It lures people into the conversation, sparking dialogue that helps us understand issues, products, and companies in mutlidimensional, rational, and emotional ways.”

Kelly guides the reader through techniques designed to help articulate an organization’s point of view, then offers ways to uncover “talk-worthy ideas” in your organization, as well as ideas for building a conversational mindset and “talk” culture. She’s even included checklists and templates in the back of the book to help readers incorporate the ideas in the workplace.

Most refreshing, from my perspective as a higher ed marketing, was discovering that Kelly is more attuned than your average marketing writer to the challenges and issues facing non-profit groups and universities. (Her involvement on the board of a non-profit probably gives her a broader perspective.) In one section about nine themes that get people talking, for example, she points out how former Harvard President Lawrence Summers created some conversation with his ideas about the gender gap in engineering and the sciences. “Sometimes,” she writes, “shaking things up offends people so much that any good intentions are obliterated.” That’s what happened to Summers, whose “style more than content” was the reason his speech offended so many. “Summer likes to provoke people to get them into the type of intellectual food fights that generate meaty discussions. He is a classic contrarian — arrogant, intense, challenging, and insightful.”

With Beyond Buzz, Kelly has given anyone in the marketing business a work that is also challenging and insightful. For some of us, it might even be contrarian. Let’s hope it gets more of us talking.