Feeling a bit nostalgic this weekend and recorded this version of Bruce Springsteen's "Dancing in the Dark" with my acoustic guitar.
Feeling a bit nostalgic this weekend and recorded this version of Bruce Springsteen's "Dancing in the Dark" with my acoustic guitar.
Posted at 03:01 PM in Guitar, Music | Permalink | Comments (1)
Really great "On the Case With..." PRSA profile with Paul Argenti. He has great fundamental lessons to think about. More PRSA profiles HERE.
Name: Paul Argenti
Childhood ambition:
To be a heart surgeon — I was pre-med until junior year in collegeCurrent livelihood:
Professor of corporate communication at the Tuck School of BusinessWhat changed (i.e., how you became interested in public relations):
I couldn’t stand the sight of blood! I changed my college major at Columbia University from biology to English and went into a Ph.D. program at Brandeis University to become an English professor. Jobs for English professors were hard to come by in the late 1970s — I was blessed to find a two-year appointment teaching “Written and Oral Communication” at the Harvard Business School. I needed more education in business, and went back to Columbia to get my M.B.A. in marketing. The two combined made for a good foundation to start my career.First public relations job:
Assistant professor of communication at the Tuck SchoolWhat you know now that you wish you’d known then:
How fast time goes by — the secret of life is learning to enjoy the passage of timeBest piece of advice you’ve ever received:
My mentor in graduate school told me to forget about being an English professor — that was definitely the right choice for me.Greatest professional accomplishment:
Getting a Fulbright Scholarship early in my career and my textbook, “Corporate Communication” — out in its sixth edition next yearIf you weren’t in public relations, you would be:
A jazz pianist — I love musicDesired legacy:
That I helped my students think about changing the world rather than moving another widget out the doorMake a “business case” for public relations:
Communication is the only way to execute strategy. You can’t execute it if you can’t communicate it. If more senior executives thought about that, then they might do things differently.
via www.prsa.org
Posted at 10:51 AM in Business, Communications, PR, Reputation management | Permalink | Comments (4)
via www.usatoday.com
This book is next in my reading list. Great review HERE.
I like it when the review outlines author Roger Parry' 16 main media types: theater, books, pictures, posters, postal systems, newspapers, magazines, comics, telegraph, telephone, recorded sound, radio, cinema, television, video games and the Web.
Exercise: let's pretend we are public relations professionals in a world of theater only. How would we leverage theater to do our work?
Posted at 03:56 PM in Books, Communications, Media, PR, Reputation management | Permalink | Comments (1)
Richard Edelman delivered a really inspiring speech at the Institute for Public Relations' Annual Distinguished Lecture and Awards Dinner on the need to clearly define the public relations profession around 4 key principles: Drive the operating strategy; practice radical transparency; take full advantage of democratized media; and attract and develop talent with broad skills. The speech is available for download here.
Here are some lines I found myself underlining when I read the speech:
Posted at 04:14 PM in Business, Communications, PR, Reputation management | Permalink | Comments (1)
via www.buzzfeed.com
For the corporate history nerds like me, HERE is a great post listing 50 big company names and the story behind each name. You'll find a really great mix of intended and unintended consequences.
Posted at 07:47 AM in Brand, Business, Reputation management | Permalink | Comments (1)
...Make the most of it.
Today is the 48th anniversary of the March on Washington on civil rights. Little did people know back then that Martin Luther King's "remarks" near the end of the program would turn out to be his "I Have a Dream" speech and cement a new chapter on what it means to be part of the American journey.
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Posted at 11:35 AM in Communications, Speechwriting, Thought leadership | Permalink | Comments (1)
via www.prophet.com
By way of a recent post from the Institute for Public Relations ("Where Should PR Sit in an Organization"), I learned about Prophet's US Reputation Study, which can be viewed HERE. PDF version of the study HERE.
I liked one of the study's takeaway points:
"As developments over the last two years have reinforced, reputation drivers are influenced by macro-economic forces and industry-specific factors. This makes it critical to be mindful of these circumstances in managing a reputation program. While half of the leading reputation drivers were consistent across 2009 and 2010, those that changed centered on the “macro” forces that impact all industries (e.g., pacesetter attributes like openness and behaving in an ethical manner)."
I think reputational drivers in the energy industry are heavily influenced by macro-economic forces and industry-specific factors, and I think most people realize this. However, I find mostly that how one defines "industry" ends up affecting whether one succeeds in navigating this reputational challenge.
For example, one can view the oil & gas industry as separate from the clean energy industry, and I think most companies operating in either camp insulate themselves as such, which may make sense from a purely "operational" perspective. However, this does not make sense at all from a reputational perspective if one thinks about what stakeholders expect, which is for pretty much every sector of the energy industry to be "clean" and working toward full sustainability from energy production and delivery (and "usage" too for those companies working in this emerging area of the energy business value chain).
This expectation may be unreasonable (one may think our energy system will not be fully "clean" for some time). However, if a company completely ignroes this stakeholder expectation and does not manage it in a strategic way, chances are the company may not survive in the future.
Thus in the end, in looking at industry-specific reputational factors, I think you have to cast a much wider net in your thinking about "industry."
Posted at 01:59 PM in Climate, Communications, Energy, PR, Reputation management, Sustainable development | Permalink | Comments (1)
Posted at 06:04 PM in Business, Communications, PR, Reputation management | Permalink | Comments (2)
The important issue is recognizing that Wall Street is no longer what it was designed to be. Wall Street was designed to be a market to which companies provide securities (stocks/bonds), from which they received capital that would help them start/grow/sell businesses. Investors made their money by recognizing value where others did not, or by simply committing to a company and growing with it as a shareholder, receiving dividends or appreciation in their holdings. What percentage of the market is driven by investors these days ?
via blogmaverick.com
This post HERE by Mark Cuban finally helped me understand why I have been so uninspired by business stories and business news, and why it has become very difficult to get great company stories in the news and public discussion.
That's because the discussion is so much around the macro issues (problems, mainly) that come about because of the super complex trading schemes and products designed to win the stock market game. So the stories end up being not about single companies that are kicking butt and taking names, but instead about the issues that end up affecting ALL companies. Hardly the kinds of stories that real people can listen to and be inspired to create and grow businesses.
Posted at 07:46 PM in Business, Communications, Media, PR | Permalink | Comments (1)
Of course companies need to pay people well. If they don't, compensation becomes a bone of contention, and a distraction from their work. But if you really want outstanding creative performance, you need people to focus on intrinsic motivations - factors inherent in the work itself. Things like challenge, interest, learning, meaning, freedom, and creative flow. They are what really motivates creative people - and the research demonstrates a strong link between levels of intrinsic motivation and creativity.
via the99percent.com
Great article HERE on the realities of working with creatives (of all types, not just "artsy") and how to motivate them to do great work.
I am a big believer in inspiration as a driver of good work. Sharing inspiration with a team is not easy to do, and frankly many in the corporate world seem to consider it kind of wimpy, or at least consider it difficult to get "inspirational." I once was laughed at during a meeting when a manager asked me what I wanted to get out of a meeting addressing a reorganization and the challenge of doing your work while your position is under review.
"I hope to get inspired," I answered. They laughed.
Posted at 05:54 PM in Communications, PR | Permalink | Comments (3)
I live in Houston TX and work in corporate communications and public relations, currently working for Shell on energy and sustainability thought leadership communications and reputation management.
I blog about communications and public relations, with a current focus on understanding and mapping the wide-ranging energy advocacy landscape and understanding influence. All content in this blog is my opinion only, and not the opinion of my past, present or future employer.
I also love photography and occasionally play a song or two on the guitar. More...
NOTE: I recently moved my blog to this platform and transfer of content from my old blog platform is ongoing.