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Top 50 PR Blogs: August 2008
I've produced a list of the world's top PR blogs according to the AdAge Power 150. It's by no means perfect since it only features blogs on AdAge with PR, Public Relations or Publicity in the title, and a few that were suggested to me last month. It's just a bit of fun but I think it's a decent indicator of the top PR blogs nonetheless.
If your PR blog is missing please comment and let me know. If you haven't added your blog to the AdAge Power 150 yet you can do so by clicking here.
PR Rank....AA Rank............ Blog Name........................Country ............AA Score - .............29.....................PR 2.0...................................US.........................93
- .............36.....................PR Squared..........................US.........................89
- .............54.....................A shel of my former self........US..........................84
- .............83.....................POP! PR Jots.........................US.........................73
- ............122....................Strategic PR..........................US.........................66
- ............124...................PR Blogger.............................UK.........................66
- ............126...................Young PR..............................AUSTRALIA................66
- ............130...................Pro PR...................................CANADA................65
- ...........193.....................PR Communications............US..........................58
- ...........202....................PRNewser..............................US..........................57
- ...........206....................A PR Guy's Musings................UK.........................56
- ...........255....................PR meets the WWW..............US.........................53
- ...........260....................Corporate PR........................US.........................52
- ...........274....................PR Works................................CANADA..............51
- ...........276....................Common Sense PR................CANADA.............51
- ...........277...................Drew B's take on tech PR........UK.......................51
- ...........290....................KDPaine's PR..........................US..........................50
- ...........293...................Wadds' tech pr blog...............UK........................50
- ...........308....................Hispanic Marketing & PR........US.........................49
- ...........338...................Brendan Cooper.....................UK.......................46
- ...........343...................Corporate Engagement.........AUSTRALIA..........46
- ...........354...................Beyond PR...............................UK......................45
- ...........357..................Simonsays................................UK......................45
- ...........362...................Online PR Thoughts.....................US...................45
- ...........374...................Into PR.....................................US.........................44
- ...........380...................PRoactive...............................US......................44
- ...........385...................Observations of PR................US........................43
- ...........395...................Wired PR Works.......................US........................43
- ...........407...................PR Disasters...............................AUSTRALIA.........42
- ...........417...................This is herd.......................................UK....................41
- ...........438...................Valley PR Blog..........................US......................40
- ...........443...................Publicity Hound's.........................US....................40
- ...........456...................The New PR.................................CANADA............39
- ...........460...................Media Relations Blog................US......................39
- ...........464...................Client Service Insights................US....................38
- ...........475...................PR Meets Marketing..................US.......................38
- ...........476...................Pudding Relations......................UK......................38
- ...........501...................Student PR Blog........................CANADA..............36
- ...........511...................Profitable Business Edge 2........US........................36
- ...........513...................A view on PR..............................US......................36
- ...........519...................PRos in Training............................US......................35
- ...........537...................Tech PR Gems..........................US......................34
- ...........542...................PR Talk........................................US......................34
- ...........551...................Shiny Red.......................................UK......................33
- ...........561...................Eyecube........................................US....................33
- ...........567...................IndiaPRBlog!..............................INDIA..................33
- ...........585...................All Things PR...............................UK.......................32
- ...........588...................Engage in PR............................US........................32
- ...........597...................Mutually Inclusive PR..................CANADA.............31
- ...........609...................Morgan McLintic on PR...............US......................31
- ...........620...................Alan Weinkrantz PR....................US......................30
- ...........626...................Strive Notes...................................US....................30
- ...........627...................PR Voice......................................UK......................30
- ...........632...................New Millennium PR......................US....................30
- ...........647...................Norton's Notes.............................UK.......................29
- ...........661...................From PR to Eternity......................UK......................29
- ...........679...................PR. Differently..............................US......................28
- ...........686...................Mosnar Communications................US......................28
- ...........688...................Youngblood PR & Marketing.........CANADA...........28
- ...........691...................Launch PR.....................................US....................27
- ...........716...................Online Publicity Journal..................US....................26
- ...........739...................10 Yetis PR Blog..........................UK.......................24
- ...........745...................Blinn PR Report...........................US.......................24
- ...........752...................Minnesota PR blog.........................US....................24
- ...........787...................First Person PR............................US........................21
- ...........788...................Public Relations Matters...............US....................21
- ...........802...................EducationPR.................................US......................20
- ...........809...................HighVizPR....................................US.....................19
- ...........816...................PowerUp......................................US....................18
The top blogs by country:
Australia: Young PRCanada: Pro PRIndia: IndiaPRBlog!UK: PR BloggerUS: PR 2.0The top UK blogs: 1. PR Blogger 2. A PR Guy's Musings 3. Drew B's take on tech PR 4. Wadds' tech pr blog 5. Brendan Cooper, Your friendly PR Social Media Planner 6. Beyond PR 7. Simonsays. 8. This is herd 9. Pudding Relations 10. Shiny Red 11. All Things PR 12. PR Voice 13. Norton's Notes 14. From PR to Eternity 15. 10 Yetis PR Blog                                      Labels: adage power 150, blogs, european blogs, formby, london, marketing, matthew watson, pr blogs, public relations, tech pr, top 50 blogs, uk, world
Posted by Matthew Watson on Wednesday, 20 August 2008.
THREE COMMUNICATION PRUNKS
 I was tagged by Ben Matthews, in an Internet MeMe, that involves picking three innovative communicators, that have influenced me. This is the blurb: "The idea’s simple. We’re asking you to list the three communicators living or dead who have most influenced your way of thinking professionally and perhaps personally too. Who do you think the real innovators are? Who’s been most responsible for kicking the industry forward? And just who are the communication PRunks?" Rather than pick three innovative communicators that have influenced me, I've chosen to pick three innovative inventors that have truly transformed the way people communicate, and thereby influenced every person working in the public relations industry. Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of the telephone. Bell invented the telephone in the late 19th century and changed the way we all communicate . The first successful phone call in 1876 started with this: “Mr. Watson, come here, I want to see you.” I like that fact. I cannot imagine the PR industry without the telephone. Having to send press releases by post or telegram is unthinkable now in a world of 24/7 news. Without the telephone we'd have no fax machines, internet connections or e-mails either. Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the world wide web. Berner-Lee invented the web just seventeen years ago in 1991 and in that short time has changed the PR industry in ways that we still don't fully understand. Nowadays every business worth its salt has a company website and online coverage is often seen as more important than news in that very last century medium that is the printed press. Everyday PR's across the world do research online, read the news, make press lists, engage in Blogger outreach campaigns, network with others in the industry, and many other things thanks to the web. Ray Tomlinson, the inventor of e-mail. Tomlinson wasn't the first person to send an e-mail in 1971, but he was the first person to invent an e-mail system that let users send a message from one computer to another. Previously users could only send messages to other users who used the same computer. E-mail has thoroughly transformed the PR industry too. We use e-mail for everything from sending press releases to receiving information requests from journalists, and even brainstorming ideas with colleagues sat next to us. If only we didn't have to put up with all that pesky spam... Now it's my turn to get tagging. I tag Richard Millington, Chris Norton, and Tom Harle. Update: Freakily I've managed to pick the exact same three as Giles Shorthouse. I promise I didn't copy! Ugh, this blogging is more stress than it's worth. Labels: ben matthews, chris norton, formby, giles shorthouse, matthew watson, meme, prunks, richard millington, tom harle
Posted by Matthew Watson on Wednesday, 13 August 2008.
 According to the New York Times bloggers are living in a world of 24/7 stress. Berocca news jacked this by setting up a website offering a free blogger relief pack to rejuvenate stressed bloggers with much needed vitamins and free goodies. That's a great strategy to create some online buzz about your product, it which is why worked well with many bloggers picking up on the story and blogging about it. That was in June. Two months passed and for many of us there was no sign of the relief pack. Not good news for blogger's stress levels, or the nice people at Berocca who must have been quite concerned by posts like this declaring the exercise a PR fail. Since commenting on that post, I received a relief pack in just a matter of days. Coincidence? To avoid this Berocca should have carried out a weekly send out of relief packs so that bloggers weren't waiting too long to receive their goody bag. And, when they did send out the relief packs they should have taken a little time to address the nice letter inside with my name. Dear blogger doesn't exactly build up a personal relationship with the brand. That said I'm very impressed by the campaign. It's very brave for a non-techy brand to experiment with blogger outreach and I commend that. Also, it's especially important to try relationship building exercises like this during a recession when premium brands like Berocca are in danger of being abandoned by consumers in favour of cheaper supermarket versions. Well done Berocca, this blogger is now full of vitamin goodness and will stay that way. Labels: berocca, blogger outreach, blogger relief, buzz, credit crunch, formby, matthew watson, new york times, recession, simon collister, vitamins
Posted by Matthew Watson on .
 It occurred to me today that just one of the many blogs I subscribe to is written by a woman; the lovely Susannah Wyeth. In an industry were 62 per cent of people are female, it would appear that women are highly unrepresented in the PR blogosphere. Now, I know that there are female bloggers, very good ones at that such as Katya Trubilova and Eleanor Lovell, but what I'm saying is that there don't seem to be that many. I'm not really sure why this is, but I don't seem to be the only one that thinks it. Alena blogged about it last year in her excellent blog about PR women. But, unfortunately it would appear she stopped blogging after just three months. Perhaps there aren't many female bloggers because there are fewer women in senior roles in PR agencies, and I find many PR blogs are written by senior staff. Or to be a bit stereotypical, are there fewer female bloggers because women are less geeky than us menfolk. Or perhaps I'm just completely wrong and there are a lot of ladies blogging about PR. But in my recent post, I found there wan't one female blogger in my list of the UK's top ten PR blogs. Earlier this year, Stephen Davies did a great post looking for student PR bloggers. This is my version:
Where are all the female PR bloggers?Please recommend some fantastic female bloggers for me to follow or identify your own blog so I can balance out my blog intake a little. Thanks. Female bloggers you've recommended:Balancing ActStrive NotesCasey LeaverTracy PlayleHeather YaxleyElleEmily WearmouthEmma Please note: In the spirit of true transparency, Susannah Wyeth, works at Lighthouse PR, which is one of Rainier PR's sister companies. I helped develop her blog and wrote about it here. Labels: blogosphere, eleanor lovell, female bloggers, formby, katya trubiloba, matthew watson, public relations, stephen davies, susannah wyeth, women
Posted by Matthew Watson on Tuesday, 12 August 2008.
THE AMOOSING TWITTER TALE OF COW PR
Cow revealed some great research in PR Week recently about how 7 out of 10 of the FTSE 100 companies have not registered their company name on Twitter and therefore risk imposters damaging their reputations by brand jacking their name. There's been a bit of a stir in the PR blogosphere since then, as Wadds registered @CowPR on Twitter. Since then things have escalated with a blog post here, and a blog post there, here a post, there a post, everywhere a blog post. Old MacDonald had a farm ee i ee i o... Cow PR have however registered @Dirkthecow but not @CowPR. They apparently dropped the PR part of their name a while ago, but it still lives on and even PR Week referenced them as Cow PR. Last Summer I worked at Concept Communications, but it was known as Concept PR by clients. The reason being as you build up a good relationship with your publics it's only natural that they will rename you with a sort of corporate nickname. For example Marks and Spencer became M&S, Apple Computer became Apple, Woolworths became Woolies, and McDonalds became Maccies. The list goes on. So registering your brand name online can become a bit of a hassle as there's so many variations of your name in use. Nelson Mandela aka Richard Millington rightly points out it is impossible to register every conceivable variation of your brand name online. Registering a few is always a good idea though. If Cow had registered Cow, Cow PR, and Cow Communications they could have avoided being brand jacked. It's fortunate for them that Wadds didn't try to damage or imitate their brand - instead he did some PR for cows before deleting the account. Cow aren't the only ones that haven't registered a few possible variations though, despite reporting the story, I noticed that @PRWeek hadn't registered their own name on Twitter. So obviously I nabbed it. If I was a little more mischievous I could wreak havoc and damage the PR Week brand, but fortunately I'm quite nice and will probably delete the account next week as I don't really want it. If PR Week do though, please feel free to ping me an e-mail and I'll send you the details. UPDATE: I have now deleted my @PRWeek account. I've also noticed that I've been brand jacked too. @Mattwatson and @Matthewwatson have both been registered! Name jacking? And, hats off to Dirk at Cow PR who fessed up here. Labels: brand jacking, cow pr, formby, ftse 100, matthew watson, pr week, rainier pr, richard millington, twitter
Posted by Matthew Watson on Saturday, 9 August 2008.
3 WAYS TO IMPROVE YOUR FACEBOOK POLLS
 This week, Rainier PR conducted a mid-summer media consumption study. We surveyed 1,000 Londoners to find out which silly season stories they find least interesting. It turned out that nearly half (48%) are tired of hearing about Amy Winehouse. Setting up a poll on Facebook was incredibly simple, whereas coming up with the right question and answers was a little trickier. Here are three ways to get the best out of facebook polls:Pose an interesting question.Facebook users don't have to fill in your survey, so attracting their attention with an interesting question is a key factor in generating as many responses as possible. Be concise.Your question can be a maximum of 100 characters long, and your answers can only be half that length. So it's crucial that you keep the word count down. Also, a lengthy question and answers could be offputting to some users. Keep it simple. Terms like Web 2.0 and mobile applications may make perfect sense to you but they could appear like gobbledygook to some users who might not know their RSS from their elbow. Do you have any more tips for improving Facebook polls? Or have you conducted any interesting surveys recently? Please let me know! Labels: amy winehouse, beehive, facebook, formby, london, matthew watson, mid summer media consumption study, pr blogs, rainier pr, social media, technology
Posted by Matthew Watson on Tuesday, 5 August 2008.
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