Archive for December, 2010

Lego for Christmas from Smoking Gun!

Friday, December 24th, 2010

Happy Christmas Eve! Last week we gave you all a Friday treat by posting some of our favourite viral videos from the last decade or so. Though not the same thing, we couldn’t help pointing you in the direction of this clip anyway.

Like all of our friends at PR companies in Manchester, our peers at North West marketing firms and acquaintances working for creative agencies we’re impressed by innovation. Suffice to say then, when we saw this stop motion mini-masterpiece from Custard Productions it made us more than a little happy.

Channel 4 revealed its Top 100 Toys list on Sunday, December 19th. There was a plethora of potentials for the top spot, but those colourful building blocks, bane of the parental bare foot, managed to bag pole position. And rightly so, after all, the original Lego sets pre-date everyone in our office, but the range remains popular to this day.

So here we are then, with a video featuring the iconic yellow men, in a short suited to the season. Extreme un-seasonal violence to one side, the clip is inspired by this year’s must have Christmas computer game, Call of Duty: Black Ops. We think it’s fantastic, and if you do too then check out Keshen8’s You Tube channel. There you can see more child-like works of genius to peruse, including Metal Gear Cardboard (inspired by Metal Gear Solid), and the Shutter Island blooper real- all recommended. Now enjoy this one, and have a great day tomorrow!

Image (C) Joriel “Joz” Jimenez

Video (C) Keshen 8 / Custard Productions

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Check it out… it’s like a virus

Friday, December 17th, 2010


Mashable recently reported that, according to web analytics specialist Visual Measures, Nike’s Write the Future video chalked up 6.3 million hits in seven days.  It’s a new world wide web record.

Many buzz-terms that have emerged in the internet age aren’t really in the common conscious. But viral marketing and advertising are. Everyone knows something about them, not just a PR agency in Manchester specialising in social media, like us.

Last year Pepsi announced its abstanence from America’s biggest promotional orgy. Instead of producing an advert for the NFL Superbowl, the choice of a new generation opted for a $20 million viral campaign. That’s a serious spend.

Hotmail can claim one of the first major campaigns based on the viral model. A simple message on the bottom of each email sent by every user of Microsoft’s dominant webmail service read: “Click here to get a FREE email account”.  Naturally, nobody could resist.

But then there have been major flops, where the message hasn’t spread like wildfire. Or, worse still, the flames can end up burning the brand’s reputation, which is what happened when the Chevrolet Tahoe was launched.

General Motors gave the public a chance to build an advert to promote the SUV. But instead of fawning fans, the company was hit with scores of shorts labeling the uneconomical, environmentally unfriendly model as an ignorant man’s dream machine. Needless to say the campaign was cancelled shortly after it began.

We prefer to focus on positives, though. As such it seemed like a good idea to celebrate some of the efforts we have remembered long after the smoke has cleared, starting with the aforementioned football fest…

Nike – Write The Future; 2010

The most successful promo ever to hit the small screen presented in all its innovative glory. See if you think it’s worth the hype.

BMW – The Hire; 2001-2002

Still cited as groundbreaking, eight short films were produced, Clive Owen’s status as an actor was elevated and many cars were sold.


Quicksilver – Dynamite Surfing; 2007

What’s better than watching surfers hurling sticks of explosives into a river in order to make waves? Not a lot, as this entry goes to show.

Fatboy Slim – The Joker (Fake Fan Competition); 2004

A fan won the chance to make a video. Norman Cook looks bored, the video is professional, and the web was alive with talk for weeks.

Burger King – The Subservient Chicken; 2007

When promoting ‘chicken, just the way you like it’ dress up as one, find a seedy room with a web cam, and then invite viewers to instruct.

The Blair Witch Project – Dead Filmmakers; 1997

Before the notorious handheld horror was released these trailers were trying to track down the missing cast, resulting in box office success.

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Are Press Release Distribution and News Wire Services worth their cost?

Friday, December 10th, 2010

We embrace the opportunities that online and digital PR offers brands and communicators here at Smoking Gun towers. Online and digital is often held as one of the great mysteries of the art of PR and we’ve noticed over recent years increasing numbers of web based but non-traditional PR business such as SEO specialists, e-commerce experts, web build companies etc all listing online PR as part of their offer.

On further investigation all too often their PR service is simply offering to use news distribution services to issue news releases online. And what are the results? We have trialled and tested various news wires our selves over the years and can honestly say we’ve never had a decent show in any media worth note. Even with stories we’ve subsequently pitched to our own national media contacts and achieved coverage.

We were very interested then to spot a debate about the merits of news distribution services being led  by Graham Parker of Parker PR and were happy to open the doors to the guest blog section to him and below is what he had to say:

I’m neither a Luddite nor technophobe when it comes to media relations and have embraced technology where I think it appropriate and it adds value to my client services.

That said, I’m a firm believer in tried and tested techniques for gaining media coverage – why mend a wheel that does not need fixing? I’m fairly long in the tooth and happy to say a graduate of the old school of relationship building between journalists and PRs – I simply don’t think you can beat knowing the person at the other end of the phone line or email address.

However, I recently decided to try out a couple of press release distribution services when I felt a client’s story deserved wider coverage than my contacts book could provide. I shan’t name the two as it seems a tad unfair to do so but it’s fair to say that one of them has been around quite a time while the other is pretty much a new kid on the block.

I signed up to both on the basis that they promised access to hundreds if not thousands of journalists and news desks, many of whom had subscribed to their services. For the relatively modest outlay I felt both were worth the punt.went with the NKOB first and was pleasantly surprised at the content in the report I got back showing me where my press release had been featured.

The report contained 54 on-line links to coverage of the press release, which looked good until I opened them up. Most of them were websites hosting the uncut press-release (with which I had problem) as news feeds. Others were simply links to connected sites such as their Digit and Delicious pages.

54 different on-line presences may look good but when you put such coverage before a client, what exposure are they really getting and is it having any influence on their target audiences? I doubt it very much indeed!

I set up Google alerts for all of my clients as part of my monitoring of comment about them. In the four weeks since the first press release went live through the distributor not one of the above 54 presences were picked up by my Google alert for that client’s name.

The report I received from the more established distributor informed me that it was sent to an opt-in list of 2346 staff journalists, freelance journalists and news desks at broadcast, print and online media outlets. It resulted in 226 unique viewings by people on that list, a 9.6% reading rate. Since it went live Google has only picked up one reference to the press release and Twitter has reported three tweets about it, whereas the feature I generated in the Yorkshire Post was reported in my in-box within hours of it going live on the newspaper’s website.

I have often wondered about the value of such services blindly sending out thousands of releases a day to journalists who know that the agency has not taken the time to call them or build rapport. I cannot help but conclude that this is, to a large extent, a wasteful exercise, an opinion I’m not alone in sharing.

Helen Marriot of Kudo Communications in East Sussex also felt the persuasive power of the wire services and ended up feeling much the same way as I do.

“This (mine) is exactly my experience. I buckled recently when I ran out of time on an account where I needed to really try and secure some coverage fast. I paid for a service and immediately realised I would have been far better serviced by getting in a temp (even someone with no PR experience whatsoever) and continuing with the tried and tested sell in to a very targeted list of key journalists. One to chalk up to experience and not to be repeated!” says Helen.

Across in East Anglia John Haschak, Managing Director of Partnership Plus says his approach to successful media coverage generation is to focus on the client’s needs and the specific journalists that cover their business.

“Although pretty unfashionable these days we also try and talk to, and meet with journalists, to build relationships and make sure we provide the information in the most appropriate form for their needs. We believe this is the best way to achieve influential coverage for clients.

“We have trialled so called press release distribution services and while the numbers at first look impressive most ‘coverage’ tends to be self-posting websites or those linked in some way to the distribution service provider. There was zero coverage in print media. No point showing any of it to the client as they would see straight through it,” says a very forthright John.

And yet there does appear to be some value in these widespread postings. Anthony Hewson at AH Copy says that as a copywriter he doesn’t do a great deal of PR but has always seen the online distribution channels as being beneficial primarily for search engine optimisation.

Interestingly this thought is echoed by the Chairman of the more established wire service I used, who says that even if a wire does not deliver much in the way of original coverage, there is value in the sort of web presence and syndication provided by many wires as it can deliver valuable in-bound links, which can be good for a client’s search rankings. He also argues that because of this the service provided by the newer wire service I used “may have delivered value for money (for my client). This does however require a fairly well-informed client in order to understand the value of such activity.”

He may be quite right in that, but I doubt that many clients sign up for a media PR campaign in the hope of increasing their SEO, as opposed to reaching key audiences through specific and targeted media.

I am left wondering though, if Google is not picking up these on-line sites just how it is helping with SEO, but then that is not my specific field of expertise.

It is true that my experience of using wires would not stand up to scientific analysis, but seeing as others share my experience I cannot help but conclude that there are questions to be asked about the value of such services. Many of them clearly do work for PRs and their clients; otherwise they would not still be in business.

A PR freelancer from Dorking informs me that she’s always had great results from using a particular wire service but strongly recommends backing it up by contacting the Press Association early in the morning to gain their interest in running with your story.

She is not alone in advocating this strategy. One leading wire service provider I spoke with said that the PRs using his service get good coverage – not just online but in print and broadcast too “though we would always recommend distribution to a hand-picked press list in parallel with using any wire service.”

Sound advice indeed, but it still leaves me wondering just how many times you have to test the variables of story content, headline, timing and relevancy etc before you see real tangible results from a wire service. It may be that my two chosen experimental releases were below par; but both gained considerable coverage via my personal press contacts when I spoke to them. It may also be that the results from such services come with just a hint of opaque mystery, which is something the PR industry as a whole can do without full stop.

Will I use a wire service again? I’m not sure, my jury is out on this one at the moment, but one thing is certain I won’t ever advise a client or a fellow PR to rely on it alone.
You really can’t beat the good old fashioned way of building relationships to get your clients coverage and while a wire service may help, you really do need to make sure you pick the right one before putting all your PR eggs in one basket.

Read the original post and more from Graham Parker at his blog.

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Holidays are coming……

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010

So the weather has turned frozen, Christmas parties are planned but there was one thing missing from my pre-Christmas rituals; a good festive advert.

Now I understand that adverts at Christmas are big business just look on Facebook for all the people who are ‘fans’ of the Coca Cola advert (including myself). However I think the honour of best Christmas advert this year belongs to John Lewis, have a look and judge for yourself:

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What a difference a street makes

Monday, December 6th, 2010

50 years. That’s 18,262.5 days (give or take). Whatever the measure, in broadcasting terms it’s an awful lot of episodes.

PR moves fast, and times change rapidly. Like all public relations agencies in Manchester, we only hope we will be so popular after such a long time in the game.

Of course we’re talking about Coronation Street, which celebrates its half-centenary this week. That it remains the UK’s favourite serialised show is both understandable and astounding. With so many awards on the mantelpiece it’s clear the writers are doing something right. But then who would have thought that a bunch of people living in two-up, two-downs in Salford would engage a nation with their problematic lives?

Still, the truth is they have touched us all, in one way or another. Ask Joe Average who Deirdre Barlow is, and there’s a good chance they will be able to answer. Furthermore, many people could recall Bet Lynch, despite the fact she hasn’t been a regular on The Street for over a decade. Suffice to say, whether absorbing narratives and character traits subconsciously, or as a result of dedicated viewing, we all know something about what’s going on around these parts.

Tonight the highly anticipated anniversary week kicks off. Or rather it bursts onto our screens like a tram that de-rails, and plummets from a viaduct into a shop front. Over the next five nights nearly four hours of broadcast time will be dedicated to the tragedy awaiting the poor, dear residents of Wetherfield. And if that’s not enough, you can also have a look at the first ever episode, originally broadcast in 1960, tonight on ITV1.

Those looking for a keepsake might already have grabbed themselves a copy, or all 12, of Radio Times‘ commemorative issue, boasting various covers featuring classic and contemporary characters. Or if you want something a little more timeless, The Royal Mint has produced a series of medallions; each sporting famous faces from the soap’s history. What more fitting way could there be to immortalise TV gold? It might seem crazy to some, but we’re sure there will be more than a few fans ready to part with their hard earned cash. And to think when it all started The Daily Mail claimed it would barely last three weeks…

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Copywriting v1.2

Sunday, December 5th, 2010

As we said before, we take our role as a PR agency in Manchester very seriously. That’s why we pride ourselves on providing comprehensive public relations services when it comes to anything from social network marketing to blogging and web writing.

But it’s also our understanding that not everyone’s like us. People are in the business they’re in because that’s what they do best. And for many, Facebook, SEO, Twitter and targeted campaigns are all words that really barely register. So here’s some help lifting a little more of the lid on the key principles of creating online content to make the web work for you.

Fish for fans

‘Link baiting’ is (yet another) new term for an old idea that people are quite excited about. Provide great content for other web publishers and they won’t be able to resist linking to your site, driving traffic to your business.

Hands across the (web) water

Linking to other websites is vital. Not only does this make your content easier to read by nullifying the need to provide in-depth descriptions, it helps build relationships, and can increase your page ranking.

Tags, meta-descriptions and other odd terms

SEO rich copy is only the start. Write a well-worded meta description to post to social networks, and tag categories in your content to make searching easier, and increase what Google et al understand about your site.

Break down content to increase eye-fall

The way a person reads from a screen or sheet of paper isn’t left to right. Take an example from editors, and use lists, well-placed headlines and images to break the page, and keep your audience interested.

Useful headlines, not clever puns

We all like summarising writing with witty words. But online this may not be a good idea. Don’t impress with intelligent innuendos, but consider the headline to be another line for search engines to examine.

Don’t fear Flash, but be wary of it

For a while Flash sites were the most popular new online development. But without a decent web designer, who can code properly, Flash is invisible to most search engines. By all means use it, but do so wisely, with proper advice.

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