Thursday, May 19, 2011

Yes, and…

Hayslett Group’s Katie Little and Michelle Fry attended a Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce luncheon this past Wednesday at Ippolito's on Holcomb Bridge Road. The topic of the luncheon was intriguing, “Improving Your Business with Improv,” and the garlic butter rolls were delicious. As a marketing and PR firm, folks often perceive us as “more creative” than other types of business entities and industries. We certainly exercise our creative muscles daily, but so do most people -- regardless of whether they are software developers, CEOs of hospitals, administrative professionals or any other profession you can imagine out there. Being “creative” means developing and exploring ideas and options in regards to problem-solving. That problem could be how to introduce a new product, how to motivate your employees, how to reduce costs in shipping, etc. You get the idea. Basically, we are all creative, and we all need ways to keep our creative muscles nurtured, healthy and strong.

Improvisation, or “to invent, compose, or perform with little or no preparation”, may seem a little artsy for a lot of companies, but I think some of the basic principles of improv can easily be incorporated in our workplace attitudes, even if we don’t go so far as to stand in a circle and shout out ideas. The following are just a few concepts or “commandments of improv” that were shared with us, and I think they are great concepts to keep near our hearts when we are problem-solving at work:

Trust

Trust your co-workers, boss, whomever you are discussing your problem with. Believe that they are interested in solving the problem too, and that they are interested in your ideas.

Agree on Stage: Don’t Argue

When brainstorming, or thinking through problems, saying “No, that won’t work.” immediately kills any creative juices. Negative comments make individuals feel uncomfortable – that their ideas are “not right”, thereby causing them to clam up and not share. There is plenty of time later to sort out the best ideas and approaches. This is where the “Yes, and…” comes into play as a segue to other ideas.

Listen

In improv, if you are not listening to your fellow actors, it just doesn’t work. You can’t build ideas off each other if you are not listening.

Mistakes Are Good

Know that out of 10 ideas, nine might not be so hot. Who cares? Mistakes come from trying to come up with great ideas. If you don’t try -- no ideas.

Make the Other Person Look Good

This ties into listening. Listen to others and their ideas. Recognize something good in their ideas, and compliment them about it. Build off it. This fosters trust, engagement and confidence, not just in your brainstorming session, but in the workplace in general.

While the presentation was brief, we had a refreshing glimpse of how we could rekindle the creative fires (and interpersonal relationships) at the office. I hope you can use some of these ideas yourself. If you want to learn more about improv for business, the speakers, or the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, check out:

Blank Stage Productions, www.blankstageproductions.com

Speaker and Author of “Improv to Improve Your Business,” Vanessa Lowry, LinkedIn, www.connect4leverage.wordpress.com

Speaker and Author of “Improv to Improve Your Business, ”Jim Hogan, LinkedIn

Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, www.gnfcc.com

Thursday, May 05, 2011

"Cheers for Communities" Fundraiser

On April 14, ten local women came together to raise funds and awareness for Communities in Schools of Atlanta, Inc (CIS). The event organizer, Hayslett Group’s Dori Mendel, selected the organization for its positive and local impact on Atlanta Public Schools and Dekalb county students.

The fundraiser event, held at a local Sandy Springs bar, Three Sheets Atlanta, featured a number of silent auction items and raffle tickets ranging from a signed CSI NY Script to private cooking lessons and custom jewelry. Overall, the event pulled in $1,000 in donations for CIS of Atlanta. The money raised will go directly to the organization and assist with special programs such as CIS attendance rewards.

“We all use our networking in everyday life for business pursuits, so I thought, why not leverage our collective connections for a greater cause,” said Mendel. “The turnout and donations from the event exceeded my expectations and underscored the generous and powerful nature of networking.”

CIS of Atlanta was established in 1972, and over the last three decades, it has helped thousands of young people earn high school diplomas and go on to become productive members of their communities. Currently, CIS of Atlanta supports 62 schools in Atlanta and DeKalb County, including 20 elementary schools, 19 middle schools, 22 high schools and one nontraditional school. In Georgia, there are 48 local CIS organizations, serving students in 52 counties and 59 school systems. To find out more about CIS in Georgia, go to www.cisga.org.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Gov. Deal Addresses GPHA Conference

Governor Deal recently addressed the Georgia Public Health Association on April 13, 2011, at its 82nd Annual Meeting & Conference. More than 400 public health advocates attended the conference held at the Crowne Plaza off of Powers Ferry Road.

Gov. Deal's speech came right after the recent General Assembly's passage of House Bill 214, which would establish a standalone Department of Public Health.

The Governor praised the work of GPHA and their efforts in protecting the health of Georgia's citizens. In addition, he shed light on one of Georgia's most pressing public health issues - childhood obesity.


Dr. Fitzgerald, Georgia's new Director of Public Health, also addressed the more than 400 attendees. Dr. Fitzgerald was appointed by Gov. Deal in February 2011 to run the state's Division of Public Health, currently part of the Department of Community Health.

Media coverage appeared the very next day in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Georgia Health News, the Augusta Chronicle, and CBS Atlanta.

In addition to helping with conference planning and implementation, Hayslett Group's Partner Up! for Public Health campaign played an integral role in the three-day event. Campaign representatives hosted an exhibitor booth, inviting public health officials, advocates, students and others to view campaign press materials and ask questions about the campaign. Visitors were invited to explore the campaign's County-by-County Health Data and Rankings Report, sign up to receive news updates about the campaign and sign an e-petition stating they would support additional funding for public health.


Campaign spokesperson and Hayslett Group CEO, Charlie Hayslett, addressed the Board of Health Training Institute on the first day and presented a Workshop Presentation that focused on Rebuilding Public Health in Georgia.

For more on the Partner Up! for Public Health campaign, visit
www.togetherwecandobetter.com.

Partner Up! for Public Health is a statewide advocacy campaign funded by Healthcare Georgia Foundation and designed to advance public health in Georgia. The campaign was launched in October 2009 as part of a multifaceted effort to rebuild a public health system that has been decimated by budget cuts in recent years.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Online Benchmarking Challenges

Online interaction -- and how we measure its effectiveness -- seems to change daily! It can be frustrating to maintain online awareness and activity reports that can't accurately span six months when the very measurements (and the tools themselves) built into newer online tools like Youtube, Twitter and Facebook are constantly in development. While online communication STILL has a huge advantage to other traditional mediums when it comes to measured communications, I just wish the world was a little less BETA, and we could count on how things worked. That said, I suppose it is the challenges we meet each day that make life interesting. Read on to explore the implications of Facebook's Fan-to-Like transition and how it can mean much more than a simple number/name shift.

Thundertech's The Facebook "Like" button: what does it mean for brands?

Friday, April 15, 2011

Heads up to Government or Healthcare IT

It's rare that communications case studies focus on a government entity or healthcare IT, but for those of us working in these industries...our day has come! Come join us as we WILL be in attendance to talk with others who do what we do and experience similar challenges as we try to communicate to our audiences. IABC's breakfast event next week features:

Justine Holcomb of the State Personnel Administration addresses a massive engagement project recently completed with employees and agencies across the state.

and

Margie Driscoll of McKesson Provider Technologies shares insights into how McKesson builds relationships with diverse business targets and c-suite level executives.

Here's a bit more on the event and how you can attend...

You know your targets, here's how you really engage them...

Drop the kids off early and skip morning traffic altogether. Join us for breakfast to learn real tactics for finding and captivating your audiences today. IABC Atlanta is bringing you case studies and experiences that work - whether you're reaching out to diverse businesses, employee groups, sponsors or the public. On Tuesday, April 26, 2011, meet with IABC Atlanta for breakfast and re-energize yourself with excellent ideas to empower your audiences. Where are your audiences and how can you motivate them? What gets them to respond and stay tuned? Our speakers will share their initiatives, challenges, solutions and results to help you make the most of your outreach.
Register now.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Brains Agree: The Case for Website Usability Guidelines

I admit I am a minimalist when it comes to website design. This works to the benefit of the majority of our clients. Because the messages, issues and actions related to many of our clients' communications goals are extremely complex, I design extremely simple websites. The idea being that my clients need their visitors to concentrate on the task, information or action at hand, and not be swayed by anything that may distract them from their purpose. For example, I have designed sites that:
  • educate visitors on the importance of establishing a statewide trauma care network, and the need to encourage legislators to support funding for it;
  • explain the necessity of supporting Open Heart Services Certificate-of-Need application within a community and its connection to top-of-the-line care for individuals and their families; and
  • engage citizens in a multi-year environmental transportation study that includes input, research and reports from hundreds of sources.
While my strategy is to declutter and focus so visitors can begin to grasp the complexity of the content at hand, this strategy works just as well when you want a visitor to focus on a key message, new product line or service highlight. The idea being: if elements in your site are not working for whatever the goal of the page is -- they are working against it. Here's an article I recently read that helps explain how our brains work and how website design works (or doesn't) in relation to our brains' natural function.

From
Web Marketing Today, Brains Agree: The Case for Website Usability Guidelines, Todd Follansbee, WebMarketingResources.net - Apr 12, 2011


Monday, April 11, 2011

Significant Percentage of Bills and Resolutions Never Pass

Going into the last three days of the GA 2011 legislative session, the House has introduced 638 bills and 809 resolutions. The Senate has also introduced another 277 bills and 544 resolutions. This is a combined total of 2,268 legislative measures.

To date, Governor Deal has signed only 8 pieces of legislation, with HOPE, lobbyist registration and the Supplemental Appropriations being the most notable. Of the 638 House bills, only 83 have passed both bodies. Of the 277 Senate bills, only 27 bills have passed both bodies. Over the final days of the legislative session, usually 50-100 additional bills will pass. If this activity level continues, less than 1 out of every 6 bills introduced will ever become law.

Care of: Regional Business Coalition of Metropolitan Atlanta (RBC)

The Regional Business Coalition of Metropolitan Atlanta (RBC) is an organization of over a dozen local Chambers of Commerce throughout the metro Atlanta region. RBC member chambers represent over 15,000 member companies who employ over 2 million metro Atlanta residents. The RBC's primary goal is to represent the interests of RBC Chamber members on regional public policy issues impacting our transportation, water and air quality and to advocate for solutions that improve metro Atlanta's quality of life and economic vitality.

Friday, April 08, 2011

Top 5 SoMe Mistakes Small Businesses Make

Seems like clients are either desperate to use social media or horrified by the thought. We believe in using social media where appropriate and effective vs. jumping on the bandwagon. It needs to be the right tool for the right job, and you have to know how to use the tool, and commit to using it -- otherwise it is worthless. For example, if you buy an electric toothbrush, but (a) don't charge it, or (b) put it in your vanity drawer and don't use it -- it is a wasted investment. SoMe is the same way. If you choose to introduce a SoMe tool to augment your communications program, make sure you don't fall prey to these common pitfalls. While the article referenced is specific to Facebook, the rules can apply to most SoMe applications.

1. Broadcasting
2. Not Investing Adequate Time
3. Being Boring or Predictable
4. Failing to Learn About Application Mechanics and Tools
5. Violating the Application's Terms

Check out the full article @ http://mashable.com/2011/04/02/5-facebook-marketing-mistakes-small-businesses-make/

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Using Our Powers for Good!

Luckily for us, here at Hayslett Group we get to work on a large number of projects that make a difference in people's lives. Whether it's helping communicate important health care services to a community, educating citizens about the state of public services, or connecting individuals with the right people to achieve organizational goals, we often get to feel good at the end of the day in regards to what we've done. This recent article, pitched on behalf of our client, McCarthy Building Companies, is one of those happy stories we are always excited to share. It reminds us of how big companies can and do care about their communities and individuals.

With help from company, Lilburn resident gets ‘man cave’, Gwinnett Daily Post

LILBURN — Drew Leathers is a charming 23-year-old. He is funny, intelligent and engaging.

And he’s been living since age 10 with a condition called schwannamatosis, a rare form of neurofibromatosis, which has rendered him wheelchair-bound. Of the many changes this disease has brought into this young man’s life, independence and navigating his living space have been the two most imposing. But now all of that has changed.


After hearing Leathers’ story through the friend of a friend at McCarthy Building Companies’ Southeast team, company leaders decided to do whatever they could to help Leathers’ situation. Through a program called Heart Hats, McCarthy assembled a team of volunteers consisting of professional subcontractors as well as company employees. The team set to work changing the young man’s life, and the life of his family, for the better.

Read the whole article:

http://www.gwinnettdailypost.com/community/headlines/With_help_from_company_Lilburn_resident_gets_man_cave_116941173.html

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Three Cheers for Three Promotions!

Congrats to our recently promoted staffers! They deserve it!

Russ Williams, who marks six years at Hayslett Group and manages clients such as the Georgia Department of Transportation and Gwinnett Medical Center, was promoted from Vice President to Senior Vice President and will be assuming expanded firm management responsibilities.

Katie Little Blevins, who has been with the firm for three years and leads much of the firm's social media work, was promoted from Account Executive to Senior Account Executive; and

Dori Mendel, who recently marked her second anniversary with Hayslett Group and plays a key role in its media relations work, was also promoted from Account Executive to Senior Account Executive.

When asked what they felt was the most satisfying accomplishment they achieved during their time at HG, our team members said:

"Winning a PRSA Georgia Phoenix Award for a McCarthy Building Companies, Inc. feature in College Planning & Management’s July 2010 issue." - Dori Mendel

"I would say working on the Georgia Statewide Trauma Campaign was the most satisfying. It was so exciting to drive a campaign that brought together business people, healthcare folks and citizens statewide – all in an effort to make the lives of all of our citizens better. I was allowed the opportunity to meet and work with people from everywhere, share their stories and energize their actions…and I guess I am pretty happy that my media relations efforts scored pretty high too!!! (500 news clips/49 newspapers/19 television stations/102 radio stations and affiliates)
" - Katie Little Blevins

“Assisting Gwinnett Medical Center in achieving approval from the state to create their open heart program is one of my most gratifying achievements. We helped build a groundswell of public support that is bringing a vital lifesaving service to a community in need.” - Russ Williams

Monday, March 07, 2011

Post Expo Excitement

Business people–and aspiring entrepreneurs–showed up in droves to the 2011 Business Expo, presented March 4 by the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce.

The six cities of North Fulton–Roswell, Alpharetta, Johns Creek, Milton, Mountain Park and Sandy Springs–were the title sponsors, along with Progress Partners.

Hayslett Group's Charlie Hayslett, Katie Little Blevins and Michelle Clark Fry attended and presented our services at a booth. We made great contacts, had some fantastic local food and engaged in spirited and enthusiastic conversation regarding the state of North Fulton. A great time was had by all!

Don't believe us? Check out the Roswell Patch's shot of Director of Creative Services, Michelle Clark Fry, as she gesticulates excitedly, explaining our services to a fellow Chamber member and Expo attendee. For more photos from the event, visit Roswell Patch.


Thursday, February 24, 2011

Heart-ly working….


Hayslett Group Senior Account Managers Dori Mendel and Katie Blevins test out the photo booth at the most recent Gwinnett Medical Center (GMC) community event. Hayslett Group works with GMC to plan and communicate a series of community health events presented by Gwinnettt Medical Center and the Gwinnett Chamber of Commerce. The event pictured marks a year of successful events with attendance swelling to over 225 participants! In 2010, Hayslett Group and GMC received a Public Relations Society of America (PRSA) Certificate of Excellence for the program series. Here’s to continued success in 2011!

PRSA Georgia Real World Conference Video

Check out the video from this inspiring event for young communications professionals! Thanks to Dori Mendel for her hard work on the Conference and her commitment to guiding and growing the future of PR!

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

Visit Hayslett Group at the 2011 North Fulton Business Expo

Sponsored by the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, the 2011 North Fulton Business Expo is a full day of extraordinary business opportunities. This event features over 85 of North Atlanta’s leading companies in the Exhibit Hall and University Seminars that are focused on putting your business on the path to success! Come visit Hayslett Group and other businesses on March 4th!

For more information, go to: www.gnfccexpo.com

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Hayslett Group supports PRSA Georgia Real World Conference

Hayslett Group is serving as a in-kind sponsor for PRSA Georgia’s Real World student conference on Feb. 18, 2011. In addition to donating name tags for conference participants, Hayslett Group is represented through Senior Account Executive Dori Mendel. Serving as this year’s Student Outreach Team Lead, Dori is responsible for coordinating student outreach, communications and conference registration. Hayslett Group is proud to support this program for the second year in a row and wishes all the PRSA Georgia supported schools and other attending universities success at Real World 2011.

Tuesday, December 07, 2010

Losing Control of the Public Health Brand

"Losing Control of the Public Health Brand: Cost & Consequences"
Charles Hayslett, Atlanta Hospital News and Healthcare Report

For more than a year, our firm has been managing an advocacy campaign aimed at rebuilding Georgia’s Public Health System. Called Partner Up! for Public Health, the campaign is funded by Healthcare Georgia Foundation, a philanthropic organization whose leaders had concluded that the state’s public health system was falling into a state of crisis.

The readers of this publication will understand that crisis better than most. Over the past decade, as the state’s population grew 20 percent, its public health budget fell from a high of $171.8 million in FY2003 to $148.4 in FY2010 (and these cuts began well before the economic downturn). Today, we spend about four cents per capita per day on public health – less than one-fourth of what Alabama’s spends – and we’re pretty much getting what we pay for.

Read more...

Monday, October 04, 2010

IABC Golden Flames Announces HG wins!!!

We know we are up for Bronze, Silver or Gold for these projects!!! Wish us luck!

AWARD TITLE: Partner Up! For Public Health logo
AWARD RECIPIENT(S): Healthcare Georgia Foundation / Hayslett Group

AWARD TITLE: revive285 Alternatives video
AWARD RECIPIENT(S): ARCADIS/GDOT/GRTA / Hayslett Group

AWARD TITLE: Open Heart Campaign
AWARD RECIPIENT(S): Southern Regional Health System / Hayslett Group

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

2010 Public Relations Society of America Phoenix Finalists!

Yay! We have won either first (Phoenix) or second (Certificate of Excellence) for the following projects:

Gwinnett Medical Center and Hayslett Group - The Heart Truth: An In-Depth Investigation (Event)

Healthcare Georgia Foundation and Hayslett Group - Partner Up! for Public Health Leadership Academies (Event Series)

ARCADIS/GDOT/GRTA/Hayslett Group - revive285 Alternatives video (YouTube video)

Arnall Golden Gregory and Hayslett Group - Interbasin Transfers: Whiskey is for drinking; Water is for fighting (Article)

McCarthy Building Companies, Inc. and Hayslett Group - Safety 101: A Contractor's Perspective (Article)

https://www.prsageorgia.org/awards/phoenix-awards.cfm

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

HG goes BIG with Gwinnett Chamber Expo

Network, network, network. This age-old concept of basic face-to-face communication is resonating more than ever with businesses and organizations in terms of procuring new business leads and keeping active businesses afloat. After almost 16 years, Hayslett Group remains a believer in building lasting relationships through networking, exemplified by our participation in Gwinnett Chamber’s BIG Expo event, sponsored by our client, Gwinnett Medical Center. The event drew in a diverse mix of businesses and organizations, offering a range of services and goods. With approximately 7,000 attendees, from both the neighboring job fair and expo participants, Hayslett Group had the opportunity to scope out some of Gwinnett’s business offerings, showcase a number of our successful client campaigns, and build relationships with fellow Chamber members.

Events like the Expo, half networking event-half trade show, serve as a platform for businesses to share and discuss their achievements while also learning about current markets’ needs. They also create a relaxed setting in which to connect with individuals you may not come across on a daily basis (We met someone whose husband works for one of our clients- small world). At the close of the expo, with sore throats and tired legs, we emerged with a good number of businesses interested in our services, a few new friends and a newly energized spirit about how Hayslett Group can serve the Gwinnett market. This expo provided an exercise in what it takes to: remain marketable and relevant to a local community, engage potential clients, and reaffirm the value of the most basic tactic for making any business a success – networking.

Thursday, August 05, 2010

Measuring Success in Social Media

Came upon this article as I was reading the CW Bulletin, a publication from the International Association of Business Communicators. With new media campaigns in full force, and everyone touting the value of how many friends or followers they have, I am happy to see someone else notice that it is quality not quantity that measures social media success. I also love the straightforward responses to this.
Measuring Success in Social Media: An interview with Katie Paine

Katie Paine is CEO and founder of Katie Paine and Partners, a marketing and PR measurement consultancy, and the author of the book Measuring Public Relationships. In an interview with Executive Editor Natasha Nicholson for the CW Radio podcast, she talked about how social media have changed marketing and PR, and offered tips on how communicators can measure their social media efforts.

NN: In your article for the November-December 2009 CW, you mention three mental earthquakes, or changes, that are taking place in marketing and PR because of social media. Could you explain more about what those are?

KP: Well, the first one is probably the one that everybody is probably most aware of, which is the redefinition of timeliness. I use the example of when there was a dust-up with the leading blogger Robert Scoble and Facebook. At the time Facebook was our client, and I was following it pretty carefully. A couple of hours after I started following it, Shel Israel, another very prominent blogger, said, “It’s been three hours, where’s Facebook?” And it suddenly occurred to me that three hours is a lifetime in social media. So our whole notion of what it is to be timely has to change.

The other thing is that our whole definition of success has to change because for too long communication was really focused on gaining eyeballs. That it’s somehow communication’s role to reach media or some other interim thing that eventually reached the customer. It was all about if I reach this, I can reach this many potential eyeballs.

We have to redefine our measure of success. Because it used to be that big numbers were better. So a million “eyeballs” in The New York Times or a million “eyeballs” per month on nytimes.com doesn’t matter anymore. What matters is how many people actually do something. So it’s not how many eyeballs but what the people who own those eyeballs are actually doing with the stuff you are sending. Are they clicking? Are they engaging, responding or retweeting? Are they signing up? Are they giving you an e-mail address? Are they actually interacting with your brand? That’s what matters. And it’s going to be very small numbers.

I use the example that in the olden days, Walmart would have counted success by reaching 11 million people or 11 million moms. Now they credit 11 moms who got a whole bunch of people to get engaged with their product. They literally said, “one of the reasons we made our profit numbers in quarter one of this year [2009] was because of those 11 moms.” Eleven. Not 11 million, but just 11. That’s all it took, because those moms became engaged with the brand, passed on the information and literally contributed to sales.

NN: How do you think communicators are reacting to these changes? Do you think they are in tune and able to be nimble?

KP: I actually think that this is going to be one of those big times where you see people being nimble and getting a huge jump on the competition. As with any company or organization in down times or times of a recession, those companies that continue to invest in marketing, continue to invest in communication, tend to leapfrog the competition, if the competition is retrenching and retreating and cutting their communication budget. Really what’s happening now—never mind the recession—is a great opportunity.

Probably about 40 percent of people out there are really embracing social media and getting into it, understanding it and really learning how to take advantage of this whole new crazy social media world. And then there’s the other side of the coin, which is, “I can’t deal with it, it’s too scary; the lawyers won’t let me, it can’t be measured”—excuses, excuses, excuses. And those people doing that aren’t going to be around for very long.

NN: It’s that last question about measurement that keeps coming up probably from that last 60 percent—the question of, “Well, how do you measure it?” If a company is doing well, how can you point to its social media presence as part of that success?

KP: It’s not very complicated. It’s the same kind of measurement we’ve had all along. There are three basic tools you use.

One is content analysis. So you analyze what is being said about you, you analyze the conversation and you find out: Are they positioning you the way you want to be positioned? Are they communicating your key messages? Are they communicating the thoughts of your thought leaders? Are they getting your brand premises, your brand promises, characteristics and attributes? Are those things being talked about?

Or are they talking about the competition? Are they basically bashing you? There are lots of different ways to hurt your brand in social media. And what you want to know is: Are they? So there’s basic content analysis. We’ve been doing it on traditional media for decades now, and yes it’s a little more complicated now because there’s a little bit more variety. It’s not like five different article types or 27 different types of conversations. It’s not as easy to say simply that there’s a reporter and a publication because there’s now actually a blogger, the blog itself and commenters. So now it’s a little more complicated, but basically [it’s] the same principle—you develop a set of parameters you want to track, and you track them, and you have people coding them. That is all one way of saying yes, my share of favorable positioning is 20 percent better than it was at last year this time. That’s success.

The second method that we’ve had all along is surveys. Granted, the surveys are now being done electronically, but if you want to know whether you are improving your relationships with your customers, or improving your reputation, or the awareness of your product, or your brand preference or any of those things, you can still do that. You can basically do a study, institute some social media stuff and do another study and see whether things have changed. That’s the same way we’ve been measuring awareness, preference, reputation and relationships for decades.

The big difference, and this is probably the biggest difference between old measurement and new measurement, is now we have very sophisticated web analytics. Whether you pay for something like Omniture or you use Google Analytics, you have far more sophisticated things. So when Southwest does something on its blog, it goes into its tracking system, which goes into its CRM system, which says yes in fact that blog is responsible for X number of ticket sales. If you don’t have a system like that, you can still look at your Google Analytics and say, “Yes, in fact my traffic is up 20 percent since I did XYZ on Twitter. From my Facebook page, I am getting 37 percent more downloads of my white papers.” Google Analytics, web analytics is not a new thing. It hasn’t been used very broadly in communication, but it is the third leg of the measurement toolkit that you have to measure your results. It’s not really hard at all. I think a lot of this “can’t be measured” stuff is just a bad excuse.

Reprinted from IABC’s CW Bulletin: http://www.iabc.com/cwb/archive/2010/0810/Paine.htm