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Networks and social networks push China strategy
July 18, 2008 in Communications, Social Media | Tags: Olympics | 1 comment
I wonder why it took Facebook so long to launch in China. With the summer Olympics almost upon us, all nodes of communication will be pointed at and out of China.
Some highlights:
- In a few week’s China will be home to 21,600 accredited journalists. Of these, some16,000 will be broadcasters, 5,600 writers and photographers, 200 broadcast groups and 10,000 non-accredited journalists.
- 1 in 1.3 of those online in China use online video, representing 160 million people.
- Instant messaging is hugely popular. One company, QQ Labs has 752.3 million registered users.
In other news, “Chinglish” a hybrid language that some say will emerge, is featured in this last month’s Wired.
Media measurement: a ‘good pulse check’ for communicators
July 18, 2008 in IABC, Public Relations, Social Media | Tags: Forrester, BurrellesLuce, IABC Phoenix | Leave a comment
How do you reach someone who’s fixated on print publications, and a digital nomad who’ll only scan the headline and the first few sentences of your story, online? What happens when both these people constitute your target demographic?
Johna Burke, VP of BurrellesLuce pried open that black box at the IABC Phoenix lunch seminar this afternoon. The “Four Generations” approach to media measurement means the Gen Xers and Millennials have to be reached –and tracked– in the same sweep as the Traditional and the Boomers.
It means PR practitioners and communicators should start paying attention to the core values, and what make these audiences tick. It’s not just about targeting (for marketing) but engaging them (for internal communications.) Media measurement is a “good pulse check” to understand how to best reach and manage these diverse generations, said Burke. For Millennials for instance, she recommends managers personalize their work and even their benefits package because one size does not fit all in their world. There were lots of other insights about measuring the outcomes based on this approach and the metrics.
Sidebar: There were echoes of the ‘social technographic profile‘ made popular by Forrester analysts Charlene Li and Josh Bernoff in their blog, and their book, Groundswell.
If you are interested, a condensed version of Johna’s presentation, “Four Generations of Audience, Four Generations of Media–One Approach to Media Measurement,” can be found at Bulldog Reporter.

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