Cluetrain plus 10 – why common sense never goes out of fashion

To celebrate the Cluetrain Manifesto turning ten years old, a group  of marketers and bloggers have got together to update the essays and my colleague Ged Carroll (Renaissance Chambara to many) has written one over on our agency blog, here’s a taster:

Before I started my first job, my Dad told me that ‘common sense never went out of fashion’ and the same could be said for the Cluetrain Manifesto ten years on. I had signed up to blog about one of the theses (number 83) in the book via this site.

Ten years later and providing the media with preferential treatment in comparison to consumers seems more ridiculous. My friend Paul Armstrong’s Twitter feed @themediaisdying chronicles the slow death march of traditional news media.

As people are updating the essays, they are posting them here so worth checking back for a full set over the next few days.

PR freebies

Interesting piece by Danny Rogers in The Guardian today on the topic of PR freebies – a tried and tested way of getting the attention (not always for the right reasons) of journalists and bloggers:

Last week a journalist from the Australian daily the Standard, in Warrnambool, Victoria, was alerted to the news that a live shark had just been left on the doorstep of his newspaper. As far as we know, the shark delivery wasn’t part of a quirky PR campaign, but most journalists will have received equally surprising gifts at some point in their careers.

Earlier this year, many hacks received a parcel containing a bottle of Imperial Leather bodywash on a bed of lettuce leaves with an attached message: “You wouldn’t, would you?” – a PR stunt from Vitacress, which sells salads that it says are never washed with detergents.

Levi Strauss jeans once famously sent journalists pairs of (fortunately unworn) underwear as part of its “shrink to fit” campaign, while the editorial team at PR Week still have nightmares about the time one wacky PR decided to send in chocolate-covered brussels sprouts on a particularly warm day.

I always felt it is a fine line between smart giveaways and shameless stunts that leave a bad taste in the audience’s mouth.  It has to be good enough to stand out, useful enough to not be immediately binned and remarkable enough to get your brand talked about – a bit of bravery required.

links for 2009-04-27

Lucy Kellaway on Twittering executives

While Ashton Kutcher, husband of Demi Moore, is the first to have 1m followers on the strength of posting pictures of his wife in his knickers, the chancellor of the exchequer had only 1,800 takers for his plans for the British economy.

Yet his tweets last week were perfect – short, clear and informative. They made me think that if the Budget can be done on Twitter, it must be possible to do all corporate communications the same way, and put e-mail in the dustbin forever. …Not only would messages be quicker to read and easier to understand, most would not get sent at all….To communicate this way – either on Twitter or on Yammer, which is a similar service aimed at companies – would have another advantage. It would make clear who are the really powerful people in a company. Humble employees who happen to have good ideas could easily have more followers than the chief executive.

via FT.com / Columnists / Lucy Kellaway – Twittering executives reveal too much.

Good example of how you can reveal too much whilst revealing way to little.  Back to my colleague Ged’s mantra…don’t just be nice, be useful.

journalists on Twitter

Came across a site today that is really handy for following what journalists are talking about on Twitter, especially as more and more are requesting that PRs pitch stories and get in touch that way.

The site has been created by SawHorse and can be found at www.muckrack.com.

The following list of journalists have been added, their tweets being syndicated  and also some info on their profile, follower numbers etc.