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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Why You Should Never Tweet A News Release | The Buzz Bin

Why You Should Never Tweet A News Release | The Buzz Bin | Public Relations & Social Media Insight | Scoop.it

...I was recently sitting in a webinar on news releases with my co-workers when the presenter recommended we tweet our news releases to promote them. I felt like gasping out loud. I tried to hold back and finally I just couldn’t. “I just have to say I do not agree,” I blurted. Our intern looked up curiously and asked why. My reasoning? Would you sit down with your friends and read your press release to them? No. Would you read it to a group of prospective new business clients? Would you pass it out to people as you walked down the street? NO. Or at least I hope not.

 

I have been asked many times to tweet a news release and every time it makes my blood boil. That’s not social. It’s not a conversation. It reminds me of the annoying person that only likes to talk about themselves, constantly. No one cares. It’s like shoving dry cereal down someone’s throat without stopping to offer them milk. And my favorite reason, “if you tweet it the media could see it.” Oh please, I assure you the media isn’t going to pick up your news release because you blasted it on Twitter....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Great reminder that news releases don't qualify as a conversation in social media.

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Rescooped by Jeff Domansky from Just Story It
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Offline Storytelling for Online Scanners -- How to share stories on the Internet

Offline Storytelling for Online Scanners -- How to share stories on the Internet | Public Relations & Social Media Insight | Scoop.it

Are you a headlines person? You know, the kind who reads the first few chapters of business books on Google and then move onto the next? Are you probably going to scan through this post for bolded phrases and numbered lists and then retweet it before really digging into the details?

 

What an interesting take on sharing stories on the Internet! I just love this new twist, and the ideas shared here for creating content. And with valuable points to take to heart.

 

The premis of this article is that many people will simply scan the content you create for your blog, website, social media posts, etc. Yet storytelling requires reading, not scanning.

 

So what's a person to do? Follow the advice here! Make your stories scannable, also. Seems like an oxymoron and there are times when it might not work. But then there will be times when you can follow the advice here and still have your stories be effective.

 

How do you do that? This author suggests saying the same things lots of times but in different ways, and using visual shortcuts.

 

Read the article to understand her points and think about what you might want to do.

 

Then share with me what your next steps are. I'd love to hear them!

 

Link to original article: 

http://www.bigspaceship.com/2012/07/offline-storytelling-for-online-scanners/ ;

 

This review was written by Karen Dietz for her curated content on business storytelling at www.scoop.it/t/just-story-it ;


Via Karen Dietz
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Content as Conversation | Using Stories & Story Elements

Content as Conversation | Using Stories & Story Elements | Public Relations & Social Media Insight | Scoop.it

Every use of your website is a conversation started by a site visitor. Think about it: why do people come to your site or app?

 

If you read my review and article on this same page ("Forget About Content Management...") about moving away from content management systems to developing audience development systems, then this article explains more about how to do that. Yeah!

 

I really like the specific examples and concrete steps laid out in this post. It all makes sense to me!

 

Once again, while never mentioning storytelling per se, the article is all about using stories and story elements to generate conversations and engagement with customers/prospects. Like: converse with personal prounouns, invoke action using verbs, and write visually. Sounds like storytelling to me.

 

So go grab this article and its tips so you can continue developing audiences and engagement to build business success.

 

Review written by Karen Dietz for her curated content on business storytelling at www.scoop.it/t/just-story-it ;


Via Karen Dietz
Karen Dietz's comment, June 6, 2012 5:26 PM
Thanks Jeff! Have fun today :)