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Effective media relations strategy; what it can and can’t do

Aug 31 2009

Posted by: Paul Matthews

Paul Matthews

media-relations21Last week I delivered a workshop at the Annual Media Relations conference in Wellington which, among other things, stressed the need to synchronise communications throughout the organisation; internally, externally, online and offline. There was much discussion, most notably on the surprisingly diverse ways in which organisations measure the effectiveness of their media relation strategies.  More on this later…

I reminded delegates however that media relations cannot eliminate negative publicity, nor control the media or their message; bad news is bad news, and media relations is not a quick fix. While effective media relations gives you some ability to manage your own reputation, it does not ensure that your competition is squeezed out of media coverage.

On the plus side, building an effective media relations strategy develops credibility in what you do; improves the external, and internal knowledge and perceptions of your company. It also provides depth and breadth to your communications strategy, increasing the frequency of your message.

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Search Engines, Transparency, and Online Reputation; Five year old plagiarism comes back to haunt the author

Oct 2 2008

Posted by: Nicholas O'Flaherty

Nicholas O'Flaherty

As Canada heads to a federal election this month, the opposition Liberal party has dropped a timely bombshell concerning incumbent Prime Minister, Stephen Harper. It turns out he delivered a speech to Parliament when he was Opposition Leader in 2003 which appears to largely plagiarise a speech delivered in another part of the world, two days earlier, by then Australian Prime Minister, John Howard. The speech writer in question has resigned this week, acknowledging that he was “overzealous in copying segments of another world leader’s speech”. Canada’s Globe and Mail has the full story as well as the two videos side by side.

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