May 19, 2024

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How not to manipulate journalists

In my previous life, I was a journalist for 25 years in newspapers and magazines. So it was interesting to hear an internal presentation this week from a B2B marketer advising other B2B marketers how to deal with journalists. I had a strange, voyeuristic kind of feeling about the whole thing, as though I had stumbled into a group therapy meeting focused on troubled relationships.

And you can guess who is portrayed as the troubled one in this relationship.

I was half angry and half amused to hear the usual stereotypes about journalists thrown around: that they seek negative stories and that they thrive on conflict and tension. But in a power point slide entitled “What Does the Media Want?” there didn’t seem to be room for what drove me as a journalist: to serve the reader.

I can sense your eyes rolling, but hear me out. Journalists are frustrated communicators, desperate for recognition and connection. Often shy and inarticulate in person (I’m even talking about some broadcast journalists here) they shine most when speaking directly to their audience through their chosen medium, whether it be print, broadcast, or now, blogs. That connection is important to them—the idea that someone is listening and cares about what they are saying and thinks it’s valuable. This is what drives journalists—especially B2B journalists, whose chances of recognition, fame and fortune outside of their limited audiences is generally slim to none.

The reputation of journalists being what it is—bad—journalists know that their audiences have a tendency to question what they write—the BS meter is turned up to 11. This creates paranoia about bias among good journalists: their audience expects them to be biased, so they are driven to act with a kind of institutionally imposed integrity. They have to doubt what people are telling them, they have to seek multiple viewpoints and try to synthesize a majority and minority view, or an assenting and dissenting view. It is a job requirement and necessary to eliminate the perception of bias among their editors and their audience.

Another thing that the media wants is freedom. And journalists have an incredible amount of freedom. Sure, you may be stuck covering wireless networking, but within that subject area, you are completely free to pursue whatever you want, talk to whomever you want and write whatever you want (at least until the editor gets hold of it). Journalists love that freedom and guard it jealously. I say jealously because journalists give up things to be journalists—a predictable work schedule, high pay, stock options, etc. They are often smart and talented people who could probably succeed in higher paying endeavors as well as anyone, which only adds to their determination to protect that freedom—it’s basically the only perk the career offers.

This is why I almost fell out of my chair when the marketer put up a slide showing how he had meticulously mapped targeted journalists according to whether they were:

1. Novice

2. Skeptical

3. Neutral

4. Friend

5. Champion

I felt like I was getting a peek at Nixon’s enemies list (which was also heavily populated by journalists). The idea that marketers spend time and money trying to categorize journalists this way boggles my mind. It is delusional and a complete waste of time and money. Here’s why: a journalist who is a “champion” for your company will not enjoy his or her freedom as a journalist for very long. We didn’t go into detail about how this company defines a champion, but at the least it has to be someone who writes what you as a marketer and as a company believe to be fair and accurate all the time.

But companies don’t have any institutional drivers to eliminate bias. Companies are biased by definition. They have to believe they are better or they shouldn’t be in business. And public relations exists to push that view among customers and shareholders. So a journalist who is your champion isn’t doing his or her job. And I can guarantee that any good editor who finds out that one of his or her reporters is listed as a “champion” by a company’s PR department will start examining that reporter’s copy extra carefully.

Look, your goal as marketers should not be to build cozy, friendly relationships with journalists. It’s definitely good to get to know them and help them when they want interviews or information, but it’s not a great investment of your time and money to go beyond that. You are only as valuable to them as the content that you provide and the quality of spokespeople that you provide for them to interview.

Here’s what journalists really want from marketers and PR people: content and validation.

The content is good thought leadership that focuses on the issues they cover rather than the ability of your company to deal with those issues. The content should display your content experts and quote them with names and titles so journalists can pick up an interesting point of view, attach a name to it and send you an e-mail saying, “I want to talk to the person who said that.” Surveys are also wonderful ways to get journalists’ attention, because journalists don’t have to spend time trying to decode the level of bias built into the content. They just have to make sure the survey is legit. If you survey their audience, all the better. And conferences about general topics that feature your reference customers are another big draw.

The way you gauge whether you’ve succeeded in developing their respect is not whether they call you to have a drink but whether they come to you for validation. Good journalists pride themselves on surveying their coverage areas and picking out threads of logic that are new, unique, or that signal change in the status quo. You should have a mechanism for making it easy for journalists to present this thread to you (and it will usually be thin and poorly articulated to start) and a process for helping them develop the thread with content and spokespeople. I can’t tell you how many times I went to PR people with a thread and got an e-mail back saying something to the effect of, “Sorry man, I wouldn’t begin to know where to go to get that information.” You should try to figure it out. The analyst firms—both Wall Street and the technology firms like Forrester and Gartner—have this figured out. Even if they didn’t understand what the hell I was talking about they got someone on the phone who they thought might be able to figure it out and say something worth remembering.

The analyst firms have an advantage, of course. Their analysts are all trained public speakers—accustomed to dealing with tough audiences and explaining complicated things. You need to identify and train your thought leaders to be able to handle difficult questions—and clueless questions. You also need to train them to be patient if they perceive the journalist to be nasty or biased, or when the 60-minute interview turns into a five-word quote—or doesn’t appear at all. Good PR people train that frustration out of their thought leaders or absorb it as part of their job. Passing it on to the journalist gets you nowhere. Journalists are under a lot of pressure and they may be as frustrated as you are about what happened to the story. There is so much that happens between the time a journalist interviews someone and the point that a piece appears that you just have to accept that “wasted time” comes with the PR territory.

Another thing that I imagine would get a journalist on the “champion” list is that they don’t call about tough or negative stories. Or when they call and you refuse to comment, they’re okay with it. Journalists can smell a fair-weather source from a mile away—and they don’t forget it. You have to engage with them even when the subject is something you’d rather not talk about.

The marketer who spoke to us said that his PR agency had earned its fee by recommending that the company not respond to inquiries from a reporter who wanted to discuss a sensitive subject for the company’s industry. The marketer said he considered it a victory that when the story appeared, its competitors were quoted and it was left out.

I can tell you that it wasn’t a success—unless the company wants to disappear from public view altogether (and judging from the statistics we saw, that’s what is happening). The companies that go to bat and agree to speak about the difficult stuff (and you can still look good talking about difficult stuff in the eyes of readers) will be first on the list to get the call when it’s time to explore the less threatening thread next time. It demonstrates backbone and makes journalists think you’re a smarter, more forthcoming organization, and therefore, that you will generally make a better interview in all scenarios.

Marketers and PR people should focus on content and validation to win the attention—if not the hearts—of journalists. The content that appeals to them will be the same content that appeals to prospects and customers: thought leadership with objective proof points. Don’t bother with press releases. The ranks of journalists have thinned so much over the past few years that they cannot spare the time to read them—and few ever read them anyway because most are so poorly written and self-promotional. The only ones I read were pitches from PR people promising interviews with customers, or publications such as surveys and position papers about business and IT issues.

Here’s another recommendation: hire an external agency to do PR and create an incentive plan for them to get placements in the media you covet. If you leave it to your internal folks, it will never happen. There’s little incentive for internal PR people to help journalists because they only put themselves and their jobs at risk. They are viewed by business executives as the protectors of the company and will be rewarded for preventing journalists from talking to employees, not by helping make it happen. So you need to move accountability for the relationship with journalists to outsiders.

Notice that I didn’t say you should relinquish responsibility; business people need to know that internal PR has at least some high-level control over the relationships with journalists. But when an employee says something in the press that executives in the company don’t like—which is inevitable—there needs to be a third party to absorb some of the heat. Agencies have the flexibility to be fired. They can always move on to another client if they screw up, and they have the credibility of an outsider to argue with internal executives who have gotten into a snit for no good reason.

In the end, the goal should be to provide journalists with the content they need to serve their readers’ interests rather than trying to win friends and create “champions.” If you try to manipulate journalists, you are going to be disappointed more often than not—and waste a lot of time and money in the process.

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Plucking the Low-Hanging Fruit

The results of our marketing automation survey are out. The results show that two primary forces—driving more business and improving the tracking and measurement of marketing activities—push marketers to automate.

The good news is that you are starting to put more emphasis on those goals. About 63% of marketers in our survey said they expect to increase spending on marketing automation this year.

More good news is that there’s evidence that marketing has a reasonable budget for automation. This percentage, 3-5 percent on average, mirrors the overall spend on IT in most businesses today—in fact, it’s on the generous side. And while marketing automation surely accounts for most of marketing’s IT spend, it doesn’t cover everything. So investments are being made.

Unfortunately, however, the overall state of marketing automation today is pretty mediocre. Only four percent of respondents in the survey said they consider themselves leading edge users of technology.

Many different marketing processes can be automated with software. The trick is to figure out which ones will:

1.       Benefit the most from automation (some processes just don’t lend themselves to being automated).

2.       Translate into business benefits-not just productivity or operational benefits.

So we looked at the most important goal of services marketers today. Based on our past research that goal translates this way:

Use highly targeted thought leadership content to build awareness, develop relationships, and generate leads that will close business.

Using that lens, we wanted to figure out which processes we could automate to help accomplish that goal more productively and effectively. We see four:

  • Segmentation and predictive analysis. You need to find and focus your efforts on the right customers
  • Content management. A smart, efficient system for managing all that great thought leadership content you’re creating.
  • Campaign management. A way to coordinate the development and dissemination of that thought leadership
  • Lead management/nurturing. This is an emerging area of automation. You need to send the right thought leadership to the right prospects and customers at the right time in their buying process.

These are the processes we would expect would be automated.

Unfortunately, that’s not what we’re seeing. What we saw on the survey is that we’re automating the low hanging fruit—the easy stuff like email marketing, contact management and web analytics.

Are you surprised?

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One of the Reasons Marketing Gets No Respect: Lack of Automation

We’re all like the geek who is consumed by technology but doesn’t own a computer.

Let me explain. In this year’s ITSMA Services Marketing Budgets and Benchmarks Survey, you said that online marketing is the fastest-growing category of spending in your marketing budget this year (79% of you plan to spend more in 2008), yet only 36% of you have a marketing automation system to track marketing programs and results.

This adds up to a dramatic difference between the way you use technology externally with customers and internally in your own operations. This is not a sustainable gap. The good news is that 63% of you say that spending on marketing automation will increase this year—with total spending increasing from 3.1% to 4.2% of your services marketing budget in 2008.

Lots of Data, No Insight

In the meantime, online marketing is generating tons of data, and many of you don’t have automated means of converting it into knowledge and insight. Indeed, there seem to be no plans to change the situation. For example, “Advancing data mining and customer analytics” ranked last on your list of priorities for 2008.

This isn’t just bad for marketing; it’s bad for marketing’s reputation inside the company. In my research into this subject over the past six months, one theme has emerged over and over: Marketing is the least automated major function in the corporation.

While other functions have been automating—and more important, integrating—their operations since the mid-1990s, marketing has been mostly on the outside looking in. Indeed, when it comes to technology, marketing is one of those messy best-of-breed environments that your company might make millions fixing. Talk about the shoemaker’s children.

Automation Equals Accountability

It’s no accident that marketing struggles to prove its ROI. With automation comes accountability and efficiency—the ability to assemble hard numbers and data. Not only does marketing lack this ability, but it trails most other functions that are trying to do the same thing. No wonder that marketing struggles to get the respect of top management in many companies.

But before you get defensive, don’t think I’m blaming you for all this—at least not entirely. Software providers don’t offer an integrated marketing platform that does it all. IT and the business leadership play a role here, too. My sense is that many marketing groups do not have a strategy for IT, in part because leadership changes and reorganizations within marketing are common. I also suspect that IT does not pay as much attention to marketing as it does to the rest of the business. Indeed, I wonder if marketing even controls its own budget in most of your companies.

This month we have a survey out to the membership that will address all these issues and more. I hope you will join us for the September 9 Online Briefing, where we will address the future of marketing automation and offer some best practices for addressing the marketing automation challenge.

In the meantime, please tell me about the state of marketing automation in your company and the challenges you face.

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Podcasting with production values

Since podcasting springs from the DIY heritage of the internet, we tend to think of it like home-brewed beer: We hope the content outshines the creation process. But dig a little deeper into the etymological heritage of podcasting and you come up with something much more elegant and ambitious: Radio.

If you know the people behind BI Radio, the series of thematic podcasts from Cognos, the maker of business intelligence and performance management software, the name should come as no surprise. Two of the three producers have radio backgrounds.

But there is a lot more behind the metaphor than that. BI Radio is a series of “programs,” each with a theme, that contain three segments offering different views on the overall theme. For example, a program about leadership contained a segment with a leadership book author, another with a leadership consultant, and a case study segment about supply chain leadership.

The programs also try to bring fun and informality to the usual business topics. “Love and Other Killer Apps,” offered a podcast with a “personal growth” author and a segment about how IT and Finance can develop shared passions for performance.

All of the programs have one thing in common, however: High production values. There is a professional announcer, smooth mixing of sound elements like music and quick-cut voice clips—even commercials. The slick production serves everyone’s needs. Listeners get consistency and a certain sense of comfort that the podcasts will meet the kinds of basic expectations that they have had for decades from radio and television productions. For Cognos, it is a way to further the company’s quality brand image and do a little targeted marketing through the commercials.

I interviewed the three producers of BI Radio recently: Delaney Turner, Manager, Product and Solutions Communications; Kelsey Howarth, Manager of Content and Multimedia; and Derek Schraner, Senior Specialist, Marketing Multimedia. They talked about how to raise the production level of podcasting to that of broadcasting—and why they won’t touch video with a ten-foot telephoto.

Chris Koch: You guys have invested in production values for your podcast. You have images, music, and professional announcers. Based on your experience, what are the minimum production values necessary for a successful podcast?

Delaney: Compelling content. That’s it.

Chris Koch: So you are saying you could have bad sound quality, but as long as you’ve got a scintillating interview, it’s going to be alright?

Delaney: If you recorded Kelsey doing an interview through a phone and didn’t edit it and didn’t give her a theme song, I think it would be just as compelling in a lot of ways. I think we can take something great and make it better, but I still think a raw interview could make a good podcast.

Derek: I think the production values that we add to our programs give them a kind of heft and signal to the listener that it’s not one single, one-off podcast, but it’s an actual coordinated program. It’s bigger than the one show that you are listening to—it’s a fully realized, fully conceptualized show that surrounds and contains the great content.

Chris Koch: How do podcasts fit into your broader marketing strategy?

Delaney: In a certain sense the company viewed this project as low-hanging fruit because the writing team was already out there doing interviews and writing up the stories for other marketing purposes.

Derek: In our broader team we are big believers in the reuse of content. So we offer up the podcast as a loss leader through iTunes and on the web, but we also repurpose the podcast elsewhere. We post the show transcripts on Cognos.com to drive our search engine optimization efforts. We will spin the interviews into newsletter articles, we’ll combine content, so we get a lot of mileage around all of those things. You have to figure out how this initiative is going to integrate itself into the broader communication strategy that you have. Again, that’s a lot of upfront thinking.

Chris Koch: You have integrated advertisements for Cognos into your podcasts. What has been the listener reaction?

Delaney: We haven’t heard anything form listeners about it. But we did change the placement of the ads over time. We decided we needed to move the ads after the segments as opposed to selling upfront.

Derek: My thing was just not losing anybody from the outset. So we always put very strong material right up front. We don’t put an ad in front of it. We don’t put a lead form in front of it.

Kelsey: I think it’s because it is a slick show, it’s very professional, there is great value, so I don’t think people hesitate when we throw in 30 seconds of that Cognos message.

Chris Koch: Do you think that a podcasts are a sort of first step on the way to offering video content ultimately, or is that a different path?

Derek: My background is in audio and that’s a personal bias, but there are dozens of reasons I could give why audio is just better than video. It may be that when you measure it, they do not stand up in the final analysis—people just may prefer to watch something, no matter what.

But if you were to take one of our podcasts and turn it into video, it would be talking heads, which to me isn’t interesting.

Then there’s the complexity issue. The file size is much bigger, the download time is much longer, and it isn’t portable—you can’t just listen to it anywhere or anytime like you can with a podcast.

Chris Koch: What trends do you see in the ways your audience consumes the podcasts?

Delaney: We provide individual feeds for the packaged show and for the individual segments which lets people pick and choose which ones they want to hear, but we have been watching the numbers for a year and people overwhelmingly favor downloading the whole show.

Derek: It’s hard to tell why people do that. It may be the convenience of making one download and then getting everything in one go. Or they may prefer that the package is tied together with a theme and there’s a host and more music. But that packaged format has definitely been much more popular.

Chris Koch: Can you describe your process for determining what subjects to cover in a podcast and how you set up your editorial schedule?

Kelsey: I think sometimes there are some themes that we are thinking about, and some of them just percolate up from the things we have going on in the organization. For example, we have Cognos Forum coming up, which is a very large event of ours. Don Tapscott is a keynote speaker. So we have interviewed him about his latest book, Wikinomics, and he will be on the next show. We will do a show that fits with the theme of the conference. But sometimes we pursue things that we are just generally interested in, that we think our listeners would really see value in.

Delaney: We have a mandate to support our core product marketing themes and the overall Cognos story, so that provides a good context. We also have our big wall of ideas where we put all our ideas and then we move them around based on the theme or the date. Sometimes we’ll come in with a theme and develop around it and other times we sort of move stuff around and say that could be a theme. That’s what I enjoy most. Suddenly we spot a thought line to connect three disparate things and suddenly we realize, hey, this is all about mobility, or hey, this is all about conservation and green, or whatever.

Chris Koch: Why do you think it is so important to have a theme and group podcasts together under the theme? What should marketers take from that?

Delaney: I think it just makes for better storytelling. There are so many ways to explore the Cognos story. We can take a theme and then have multiple angles on it. And as the one who writes the script, it’s a lot easier and more fun to write when I know what the show is about. It’s also easier to present a package on iTunes. It pulls everything together and gives it a unity that again is served by the production values.

Chris Koch: Do you think there is a right or wrong length for a podcast and how should marketers think about that?

Derek: I think that it should be shorter rather than longer. Early on, I said to anyone who wanted to do a segment: Make it a pop song. If it’s not a pop song, then we are going to lose people. More recently, I softened my stance and now we try to keep it to eight-and-a-half minutes per segment.

Chris Koch: So, make it a ‘Hey Jude’ pop song?

Derek: Yeah, absolutely. The other issue is that I think pacing is very, very important. When I look at the audiowave forms in my audio editing software, if I do not see peaks every-once-in-a-while, or too much of a certain tone or style, I start cutting, because I have this real thing about variety. I really want the listener to keep hearing something different, fairly frequently. Whether it’s mixing up male and female voices, music versus voice, or bringing in different speakers, I really feel there’s kind of innate need to keep things changing.

Listeners may not have these expectations in their conscious mind, but they know instinctively when something is wrong or not working. For example, when speakers hear their own voice they can become self conscious and they want it cleaned up and made perfect—every extra breath taken out. I very strongly try to discourage that, because if you pull everything out of it—every breath, every little break or flaw in their voice—it becomes too perfect and it’s uncomfortable to listen to. When I was in school they would say, “If you have no breathing in your voice, people will lose their breath as they listen.”

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