CEO Blogging: Northern Trust communicators turn CEO into chief blogger

April 12th, 2008 Tim Burke Posted in Blogging, CEO Blogging, For Immediate Release, Ragan.com No Comments »

This item on Ragan.com chronicles how Northern Trust has structured CEO blogging on the company’s intranet. Interesting take on a structured and programmed CEO blog that appears to meet employees’ desire for the access to the executive that employees desire.

“We did an internal communications audit and through that employees stated they wanted to hear more from senior executives,” said Diane Treuthart, VP and director of internal and corporate communications for Northern Trust. “They also wanted to hear more about the bigger picture, the strategy and how their jobs related to key issues.”

Key attributes of the Northern Trust CEO blog:

  • Integral - “The blog is just one part of an internal communications strategy for [Waddell] that was developed as a result of the audit,” Treuthart said. “But the blog itself is a very important part because it’s a two-way communications vehicle that really provides [Waddell] with an opportunity to hook up with employees around the world.”
  • Integrated - Developed in conjunction with the overall internal communication strategy stressing “cascading, consistent messages” from top down, the blog is a focal point internally. It takes center stage on the company intranet, and employees are reminded via e-mail when a new blog has been posted.
  • Interactive - Employees actually reciprocate Waddell’s communication. “People do post comments, and Rick does personally respond to them,” Treuthart said. “And some of the questions can be rather pointed.” But there is a catch for employees who wish to comment on Waddell’s blog—their comments are moderated. “We review people’s comments before posting,” Treuthart said. “But they’re almost always appropriate since people’s name and titles are listed on the comments.” Still, despite being moderated, employees continue to read and comment upon Waddell’s blog. In fact, Treuthart said two recent posts about vacation time were particularly well-received by employees around the world.

The following box is from that article:

Three tips for getting your executive to blog

1. Show him or her the benefit by example.

Nothing inspires someone—particularly someone in the corner office—like a little competition. As a speechwriter you know that executives pride themselves on being the best at almost everything. So why not show them a great example of a successful blog? Sun Microsystems president and CEO Jonathan Schwartz has a particularly good public blog, and your executive could model their efforts on his.

2. Offer to help your executive but don’t do the actual blogging.

“We help with some of the technical side of it, like posting the blog,” Treuthart said. “But Rick does all of the actual blogging himself.”

3. Ask your employees what they think.

A mandate from the voting public is what politicians use to pass bills in Washington. Apply that thinking to getting your executive to blog.

“When we asked employees what they wanted more of, they said open and honest communications with executives,” Treuthart said. “The blog made the most sense for Rick to accomplish those goals.

Ragan.com article link

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Brand in a Web 2.0 world

April 10th, 2008 Tim Burke Posted in Blogging, Crisis Management, Twitter, Web 2.0/New/Social Media No Comments »

This clip from the March 17 For Immediate Release podcast discusses a white paper published by Deloitte Consulting entitled “New Media and the 2008 Campaign Season.” The clip and the white paper concisely lay out the business case why companies ignore New Media at their own peril.

 
icon for podpress  Brand in a Web 2.0 world [5:35m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
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Blogging bad for your health?

April 7th, 2008 Tim Burke Posted in Blogging, News Media, Web 2.0/New/Social Media No Comments »

Relax. No one here is as crazed as the folks in the this NY Time story. Still………..

They work long hours, often to exhaustion. Many are paid by the piece — not garments, but blog posts. This is the digital-era sweatshop. You may know it by a different name: home.

A growing work force of home-office laborers and entrepreneurs, armed with computers and smartphones and wired to the hilt, are toiling under great physical and emotional stress created by the around-the-clock Internet economy that demands a constant stream of news and comment.

Read the article here.

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Web 2.0: friend or foe?

April 4th, 2008 Tim Burke Posted in Blogging, Web 2.0/New/Social Media No Comments »

The respected science publication Nature gets the whole Web 2.0/social media/new media thing. In addition to fully embracing the technologies of Web 2.0 with blogs, podcasts and such, one of its blogs (Climate Feedback) has an item on whether this democratization of media is good for communicating detailed and technical subjects.

While all of this enables us to reach our audience in new ways – and to communicate science in a more engaging and rapid manner – the scientific community remains divided on whether Web 2.0 is good for science communication.

That’s one of the topics under discussion in this month’s issue of Nature Geoscience (subscription) which features a pair of Commentaries, one by Gavin Schmidt of NASA GISS and one by Myles Allen of the University of Oxford, giving their respective opinions on whether blogging is a worthwhile means of communicating science, and specifically climate change.

They conclude that the onus is on us to use the new media, not shy away from it.

  • …in an society where science rarely ever makes front page news and gets far too few column inches, blogs provide a forum for some of the best science journalists to communicate more frequently – and in more depth – than they could do otherwise.
  • Climate bloggers will get it wrong sometimes, as will journalists. But I would argue that the onus is on scientists to engage, engage and engage rather than shy away…

As communicators, we need to embrace the new media. There’s no putting this genie back in the bottle. I wouldn’t want to even if we could.

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When Blogs Attack

March 31st, 2008 Tim Burke Posted in Blogging, Crisis Management, Dan York, For Immediate Release No Comments »

From “For Immediate Release” show #309 (Jan. 10, 2008). FIR contributor Dan York recounts how a blog post streamrolls into a PR crisis for his company and how his company’s blogs provided the platform to fight back.

 
icon for podpress  When Blogs Attack [11:57m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

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