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Month: October 2005

What Blogs are Not

_This article is by Guest Contributor Kate Trgovac, reporting from the “BlogOn”:http://www.blogonevent.com/blogon2005 conference. Here are Kate’s impressions of “What Blogs are Not” by “David Weinberger”:http://www.hyperorg.com/blogger/ – Fellow, Harvard Berkman Center for Internet & Society and co-author of the Cluetrain Mainfesto._
I’ve been a fan of Weinberger for quite a while (not so much the Cluetrain Manifesto, but for his newsletter “JOHO – Journal of the Hyperlinked Organization”:http://www.hyperorg.com/ *and* because he has the best email address in the universe – self@evident.com). He certainly did not disappoint from an energy or content perspective. Weinberger (possibly by virtue of being a Harvard Fellow) gave a presentation that was a perfect mix of some ivory-tower stuff with some actionable takeaways.
The first half of Weinberger’s talk was about what blogs are not. Note: I think he is addressing his talk to marketers trying to understand how to enter the blogosphere (either as participants or observers); he’s not trying to describe the blogging process to the general public.

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Communicating With Customers During A Crisis

_This article is by Guest Contributor Kate Trgovac, reporting from the “BlogOn”:http://www.blogonevent.com/blogon2005 conference. Here are her impressions of “Damage Control – Communicating with Your Customers in Time of Crisis Conversation” with Gil Schwartz, EVP Communications, CBS Television._
Lisa Poulson, Managing Director of Burson-Marsteller led a lively discussion with Schwartz on the similarities and differences in crisis communication in the pre- & post-blog eras.
When asked what the big differences are, Schwartz suggested:
# Time frame. Everything happens *now*. Before, in PR, you had time to prep your clients, craft a message, get all the right people involved. Now, you have to respond immediately. And sometimes things get missed.
# Possibility for *any* issue to become a huge PR issue. Before, it was easier to predict what would become a big PR issue – for example, crises like the Tylenol tampering and the Union Carbide disaster. Now, anything can become a crisis – and that isn’t necessarily a good thing.

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