About

  • Advocacy journalism is fact-based story-telling with a specific point of view. You can practice advocacy journalism to spread your organization's message online, connecting with people by telling them stories that entertain or inform them.

    Lijit Search

    Subscribe to this blog! It's good for your disposition.

    Subscribe to the podcast.

    Subscribe to all my stuff in 1 feed.

PR

May 25, 2007

No idol necessary

Katya blogs about the Idol Gives Back campaign, the fundraiser organized by the producers of American Idol. It raised $70-million, but Katya has a great takeaway point:

"...remember, you DO NOT NEED AN IDOL to raise money. Idol is great for attracting a mass audience, and that audience is what led to the scale of the money raised, but it wasn’t Simon or Madonna who prompted giving as much as the compelling (and perhaps slightly exploitative, though effective) stories they showed about people in need on their show. While we’d all like an audience of that size, or a celebrity spokesperson, don’t despair if you don’t have an A-lister out promoting you."
What a great way of putting it! Now, more than ever, the important thing is that you're offering your community something valuable, and that you're effectively communicating that value by telling great stories. Think of yourself as a journalist-advocate -- telling stories for a cause, because you believe in that cause, and because the product or service you're offering can make a difference to people.

On a smaller scale, organizations often get hung up on their own "local idols." They spend so much time chasing after TV and radio and newspaper coverage, that they don't realize how easy it is to communicate directly with the people who care the most. Sure, you still need local media coverage of your events. But if you take the time to cultivate your community online, you'll be well-positioned to communicate important information when those "idols" of local media fail to come through for you.

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

May 03, 2007

Small organizations: serve first, communicate second

Seth Godin gives you the #1 reason you can pursue a successful new-media communications/marketing plan -- even if you're part of a tiny nonprofit organization. He writes about the devise of mass-media marketing, and how you should respond:

If I want a book review, I'll go read one. If I want to learn about turntables, I'll go do that. Mass is still seductive, but mass is now so expensive, marketers are balking at buying it (notice how thin Time Magazine is these days? Nothing compared to Gourmet.)

And yet. And yet marketers still start every meeting and every memo with ideas about how to reach the unreachable. It's not in our nature to do what actually works: start making products, services and stories that appeal to the reachable. Then do your best to build that group ever larger. Not by yelling at them, but by serving them.
The beauty of this new reality is that you don't have to connect with a lot of people. You just have to connect with the right people. How do you measure the ROI of making life easier for 50 or 100 people who are vitally important to your organization, by becoming their source of information about the stuff they need to know?

Look around your organization. Are you proud of the work you're doing? What makes you proud? That's the stuff you should be sharing with others as part of a new-media campaign -- not because you want to brag about your organization, but because it will genuinely serve the people who choose to receive it.

Technorati Tags: , , , ,

David's Bio

  • I'm a marketing and communications consultant specializing in online projects for Learfield InterAction. I help clients use new media tools to sell their ideas and their organization. This blog is about all the kinds of things I work on, but it's my personal blog, not an official Learfield one.

    Email me

Powered by TypePad