Thanks to the folks over at Mashable, we have our new post here! Although the article is geared towards people managing their social lives, it does have resonance for folks doing PR. I must admit that I've not yet tried one of Facebook's newest additions - Groups.
But I am going to try it today to see if I get any more traffic for my December 5th Holiday Open House at my studio. My plan is to NOT set up an event page on FB, but instead set up a group for all my local contacts here in Sacramento. I set up an event page on FB for the Capitol Artists Studio Tour this past Sept and I didn't get much action from it. I'll also set up an Evite list and see if that helps build the crowds for me.
The reason some of this works is that the biggest part of PR is merely communication. Although PR can also take in marketing for some folks, it's really trying to find a way to get information to the individual. We used to do it with newspapers but due to their dwindling editorial space and the fact that most folks under the age of 30 don't even subscribe anymore, social media is the other place we can post information, without even having to sell a reporter on a story idea!
Is it more effective? Only time will tell or have you had great success in using social media to promote your clients and causes?
After a 10-year career in Radio and Print Journalism, Ann Tracy became a PR Consultant primarily for nonprofit groups, arts groups and many small businesses. Her clients have included: Asylum Gallery, Beyond the Proscenium Productions, Mother's Cuppord, Madrona Vineyards, River Stage, Whitewater Rafting Association of Northern California, Marshall Gold Discovery State Historic Park.
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Arts and Social Media
Today instead of focusing on just PR, I thought we're branch out into another interesting topic - The Impact of Technology on Cultural Partnerships. I must thank my Irish Twitter friend Saoire O' Brien for turning me onto this. If you;re on twitter, go ahead and follow her for very interesting stuff that's arts-related.
Labels:
technology in the arts,
Twitter
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