Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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How Long Are The Most Shared Stories On Social Media?

How Long Are The Most Shared Stories On Social Media? | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Using NewsWhip Analytics, we found the top 10 stories from five of our top 10 Facebook publishers in December 2016. NewsWhip Analytics can give data on hundreds of stories from different publishers over various time periods, allowing audience development and analytics teams to perform in-depth analysis on their most successful content.

We ranked the stories by total engagements they received on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Pinterest, and then calculated the average word count for the top ten stories. We didn’t include headlines, subheadings, pull quotes, or calls to action within the story (‘Read More’, ‘Scroll down for video’ etc) in the word count.

Here’s what the average length of the top ten most engaged stories from five top publishers were in December....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Helpful analysis from NewsWhip to help you decide how long your story should be.  Simple answer? Depends.

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The state of storytelling in the internet age

The state of storytelling in the internet age | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

It’s easier to reach millions of people than ever, and great stories are doing just that.While a post on Buzzfeed or The New York Times is far likelier to get 5 million hits, a post on your personal blog can still accomplish that.It could hit the front page of Reddit or get shared tens of thousands of times on Facebook or get syndicated by a big publication.


Storytellers today have the best tools, the best distribution channels, and the largest audience in history....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Journalism. It’s the best of times, it’s the worst of times. A thoughtful look at journalism and storytelling today and in the future. Recommended reading. 9 / 10

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Innovative Storytelling, Engagement Reflect Trends in Newsrooms

Innovative Storytelling, Engagement Reflect Trends in Newsrooms | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Innovative storytelling, audience engagement, and financial flexibility are key ingredients for newspapers to cope with pressures from competitors, budget constraints, and the speed at which technology is changing."It came as no surprise when The New York Times took home a Pulitzer for 'Snow Fall' - the immersive multimedia package impressed journalists and web designers alike with its seamless integration of text, audio, videos, photos and interactive graphics."The comments in "Trends in Newsrooms 2013," the World Editors Forum's report on the state of the news industry, about the attention-grabbing content, underlined the importance of stories that jump out at readers....
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Social media and the rolling news vacuum | The Media Blog

Social media and the rolling news vacuum | The Media Blog | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

When a helicopter crashed in a densely populated part of London around 8am today, next to one of the busiest trainlines in Europe and a large bus station, the news was always going to be broken, within seconds, by members of the public on Twitter, armed with camera phones.


Twitter user Craig Jenner was one of the first to put a picture on Twitter which was shared far and wide.


What happened next is indicative of the way the media are increasingly playing catch-up on such stories, moving from reporting to aggregating (or curating, if you must) - images, eye-witness accounts and videos. Journalists were asking to use the picture with a credit and were trying to get Jenner on the phone...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

This is a really interesting story about a news story and how mainstream media were chasing  citizen journalists to get eyewitness accounts and reports. the Twitter feed provides a nice sense of reality. Lots of lessons for PR pros too.

Professor Sanabria's curator insight, January 17, 2013 11:12 PM

Este es un artículo muy interesante sobre el rol del público en el quehacer noticioso. Agradezco a Jeff Domansky el haber añadido esta noticia a Scoop.it!

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Can Stories Make Us Better?

Can Stories Make Us Better? | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

For most of us, we can absorb this continual stream of antisocial programming and not be affected by it. We still know what's right and wrong. But in a world where it’s the “black swan” outliers that grab the news headlines, we have to think about the consequences that reach beyond the mainstream.  When we abandon the moral purpose of stories and focus just on their entertainment aspect, are we also abandoning a commonly understood value landscape?


If you’re looking for absolute answers, you won’t find them here. That’s just not the world we live in. And am I naïve when I say the stories we chose to tell may have an influence on isolated violent events like what happened in Orlando? Perhaps. Despite all our best intentions, Omar Mateen might still have gone horribly offside.


But all things and all people are, to some extent, products of their environment. And because we in media and advertising are storytellers, we set that cultural environment. That’s our job. Because of this, I believe we have a moral obligation. We have to start paying more attention to the stories we tell....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Thoughtful post by Gord Hotchkiss about media, storytelling and moral responsibility.

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Trend spotting: the best and worst of ‘Snowfall’ design

Trend spotting: the best and worst of ‘Snowfall’ design | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

In the startup world, we hear a lot of talk about the Web and digital media “disrupting” traditional business models in a positive sense. But one rather important old-school industry, journalism, has found its lot in the digital frontier to be a pretty unhappy one. Newspaper subscription rates have plummeted, and only a select few publications have managed to successfully monetize their online content.


Many people have proclaimed multimedia to be the solution to this issue. The logic is that, if you could seamlessly integrate beautiful photographs, graphics, audio and even video into your articles, then you’d have yourself a truly viable product for digital natives.So it became a design problem. And, in late December of 2012, The New York Times may have solved it...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

5 examples of awesome, and 5 that probably would have been better designed and presented the old-fashioned way.

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Writing and reporting advice from 4 of The Washington Post’s best | Poynter.

Writing and reporting advice from 4 of The Washington Post’s best | Poynter. | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Last Saturday I had the honor of teaching at a public writing conference at The Washington Post. After I finished my part of the program, I spent the day listening carefully to four of the Post’s most accomplished writers and reporters: David Finkel, Bob Woodward, DeNeen L. Brown, and Ezra Klein.

 

I took copious notes, wrote down anything that struck me as wise or useful, and want to share with you what I learned from them. Please don’t take these as direct quotations, but as handwritten paraphrases containing the gist of their advice. Particularly notable were the shared values of craft and sense of mission and purpose in a gang of four that ranged from the 70-year-old Woodward, still cranking out books, to the young phenom Ezra Klein, who is trying to re-invent how to make policy stories interesting and relevant. I’ll take them in the order of their presentations...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

A really good read and writing, reporting and storytelling insight from four leading journalists.

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