Practical Public Relations Experience That Works For You

Sawmill Marketing Public Relations, headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland, is a full service public relations firm offering social media, traditional media relations programs, crisis communications planning and execution and media training. MBE-09-043

Archive for BBJ

The Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism is studying the “news ecosystems” in cities across the U.S. PEJ wants to find out: Who is providing the news? Where is it coming from? and How are people getting it? I attended a meeting of the Baltimore Public Relations Council last week when Amy Mitchell, PEJ deputy director, walked through a set of PowerPoint slides showing the key points from their first study which looked at a single week of news in the Baltimore market during July of 2009.

You can read more about the PEJ report here, but below is what Mitchell said were the “most surprising” points:

The study described Baltimore as a media “echo chamber,” with very little original reporting and lots of repetition of the same story among the media. “Fully eight out of ten stories studied [83%] simply repeated or repackaged previously published information,” the report states.

Mainstream media – mostly newspapers – still lead the way: “Of the stories that did contain new information nearly all, 95%, came from traditional media — most of them newspapers. These stories then tended to set the narrative agenda for most other media outlets,” according to the report. Mitchell said most stories originated from The Sun (print) and The Sun’s Web site.

Since its January publish date, there have been some worthwhile rebuttals and alternative viewpoints pointing out flaws in the report. For the full picture, they’re worth checking out, including posts by Allbritton’s Steve Buttry of “Pursuing the Complete Community Connection” and this post by Jeff Jarvis of the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism.

While I agree that more than a single summer week in a single market is needed to understand what’s happening, here are a few tips for Baltimore public relations firms and professionals:

  1. Don’t ignore the mainstream media just yet. While they struggle to find the right business model, they’re still an effective way to set the agenda for all the other “aggregators” who will feed the echo chamber.
  2. At the same time, learn more about the 53 “news outlets” that the Pew researchers identified in Baltimore and focus on ones that directly reach your audiences. The “legacy press,” as Mitchell called it, is short-staffed and can’t devote the attention and resources to your story the way they could just a few years ago.
  3. While the new media (blogs, Twitter, etc.) can break the news, the PEJ study showed it doesn’t get noticed until the legacy media weighs in, so be patient.
  4. Work your story through the system. Start with a tweet or approach a blogger first. Then if you get attention from the mainstream media, you’ll get picked up by that echo chamber.
  5. Join the news ecosystem yourself. Pew identified Twitter and blogs as part of the media universe, and there’s nothing that says you – or the organization you represent – can’t blog or tweet and become a part of the new media.
Comments (0)
Aug
14

Tweetup at the Baltimore Business Journal

Posted by: Buzz | Comments (0)

Here we are this morning at the Baltimore Business Journal’s first-ever tweetup! It was good to see the new offices on Pratt Street, take a tour of the newsroom and catch up with our BBJ friends. You’ll see Reporter/Researcher Rachel Bernstein with Jeff; Susan and Managing Editor Scott Graham; and the impressive new lobby with scrolling news ticker (that’s Scott Dance speaking with Julekha Dash). If you want to follow them on Twitter, go to our “Sawmill Guide to Baltimore Media on Twitter” section (see the link above) and scroll to the BBJ listing.

<Sorry to disappoint. Having trouble with the pics>

Categories : PR, Twitter, media relations
Comments (0)

“Jeff Davis has a PR alter ego – “contactjeff.”

That’s how an article in the current issue of the Baltimore Business Journal begins. The story takes a look at how Twitter is being used by PR professionals in Baltimore and Boston, under the headline “What are you doing? PR firms answer that question and more via social networking phenomenon Twitter” Check it out, here.

BBJ Associate Editor Rob Terry weaved some of my 140-character “tweets” into the article, including this one that conveys the essence of Sawmill’s take on social media:

“Cruising along with PR plan for client – not all traditional media, not all social media. A nice integrated mix to reach the target audience.”

While we believe we’re ahead of the curve when it comes to social media and its uses within a PR program, Sawmill has by no means lost touch with the power and techniques of traditional PR. We realize people continue to read newspapers, watch TV and listen to the radio, so we’re just as likely to recommend a “traditional” PR approach as we are a blog or Twitter campaign. Ideally, our recommendations are an integration of all of these options.

- Jeff Davis (aka @contactjeff on Twitter)