PR Professionals need to be trained so they avoid the pitfalls of online PR
Over the past two years the internet has been changing from a deposit
Web 2.0 has given the average person the power of voice. The barriers to online publishing are gone. Anyone can set up a blog in mere minutes and have their say online. In text, images and video. They can podcast and videocast. They can syndicate their thoughts and ideas in an RSS feed, making their comments visible to the entire w
What does this mean f
What w
We’re used to looking f
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Authenticity and transparency are paramount. Some agencies and in-house PR people have learned this lesson the hard way. The Dell Hell debacle need never have happened if their PR department were up to speed on PR 2.0.
What was the PR department at Panasonic thinking when they invented a fake persona f
Richard Edeleman said he is making sure that his staff gets m
Perhaps some PR firms just didn’t get the memo, comented one blogger. Perhaps not, since PR 2.0 training is not yet widespread.
Only one in four universities in the UK are adapting their courses to reflect advances in social media. In the US, just 28 per cent of PR course content includes modules on blogging and new media techniques.
In other European markets, the trend is similar, with a minority of university PR and marketing degrees incorporating any online communications elements.
It’s time for a change – it’s way overdue vitally needed.
PR 2.0 training resources
