Public Relations & Social Media Insight
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PR insight, social media & thought leadership - from The PR Coach www.theprcoach.com
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Firefly’s Phil Szomszor says there’s no “perfect curve” in B2B social media - Opinion - PRmoment

Firefly’s Phil Szomszor says there’s no “perfect curve” in B2B social media - Opinion - PRmoment | Public Relations & Social Media Insight | Scoop.it
Five arguments for going digital when doing business-to-business PR by Phil Szomszor, head of business and digital at PR agency Firefly..

 

When I think of PR social media gurus, I imagine Siobhan Sharpe from the BBC comedy Twenty Twelve delivering her web strategy for the Games. In her view, Myspace was the best channel because it has the fewest number of people using it, and therefore is the fastest growing and most exciting. She also highlighted that social media during the Games wasn’t all about the sport, but public opinion about athletes and “all aspects of them”..

 

It’s not surprising that the PR industry was lambasted in this way – there are a hell of a lot of people making claims about social media that just can’t be supported and I’ve heard more than the occasional “perfect curve” quote from so-called gurus.

 

It’s in the world of B2B PR that this anti-social media attitude is most prevalent. And while I agree that there’s a lot of smoke and mirrors with social media, that doesn’t mean to say that it should be dismissed altogether – in fact, I’d argue the future of B2B PR is digital....

 

[Here's a good argument for why digital PR is the future for PR ~ Jeff]

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The Benefits of Poetry for Professionals | Harvard Business Review

The Benefits of Poetry for Professionals | Harvard Business Review | Public Relations & Social Media Insight | Scoop.it
Even avid readers may be missing a genre valuable to their personal and professional development.

 

...I've written in the past about how business leaders should be readers, but even those of us prone to read avidly often restrict ourselves to contemporary nonfiction or novels. By doing so, we overlook a genre that could be valuable to our personal and professional development: poetry. Here's why we shouldn't.

 

For one, poetry teaches us to wrestle with and simplify complexity. Harman Industries founder Sidney Harman once told The New York Times, "I used to tell my senior staff to get me poets as managers. Poets are our original systems thinkers. They look at our most complex environments and they reduce the complexity to something they begin to understand." Emily Dickinson, for example, masterfully simplified complex topics with poems like "Because I could not stop for Death," and many poets are similarly adept. Business leaders live in multifaceted, dynamic environments. Their challenge is to take that chaos and make it meaningful and understandable. Reading and writing poetry can exercise that capacity, improving one's ability to better conceptualize the world and communicate it — through presentations or writing — to others....

 

[Poetry in PR or your business? You may not want to present this idea to the CEO just yet. But if it gets results, it's a winner. A tantalizing and poetic approach to management. ~ Jeff]

Gamo-science's curator insight, May 20, 2:26 PM

Huir de este mundo con la tinta olvidada de la mente...