News
PR 2.0 : New Media Methods for Promoting Online Webinar
Sunday, 01 June 2008 14:32

Online PR 2.0 Webinar where Social Networks, Traditional Media and Technology Come Together  

JUNE 20, 2008 10-12:00 (CHINA TIME) SIGN ON DETAILS MAILED SEPERATELY

Designed for Entrepreneurs, Advertising Professionals, News Distribution Specialists, Marketers, Human Resources Recruiters, Bloggers and Micro-Bloggers, PR and Media Managers, NGO/NPO Leaders

stone age computer

 

And anyone who wants or needs:

-Digital skills that will increase web presence,

-Enhanced reputation management tools,

-Increased ability to brand online

-Increased sales

-Increased Targeted Web Traffic

-Knowledge of New Platforms for News Distribution 

 

The workshop program includes classroom teaching and and active group participation. Resources willbe provided for follow-up study.

Workshop facilitators are:

■ Lonnie B. Hodge, MA, MFA (Writing), PhD; CEO, Culture Fish Media; Blogger; National Endowment for the Arts Fellow in Writing; Professor of English and Psychology; Author of numerous Books, Chapbooks, Produced Plays and hundred of Articles in Trade and Literary Publications; Task Force Delta Think Tank Member for Army War College; China Speakers Bureau Member; Asian Creative Skills Training Council Member; Consultant for Coleman Group and Standard and Poor....

■ Des Walsh, Social Media Consultant and CultureFish Media Associate; International Speaker and Social Media Consultant; CEO of the communications consultancy he founded, The Webarts Company; Director in the Policy Branch of the Australian Schools Commission, with specific responsibility as Executive office for national programs in Education and the Arts, Innovation Projects and Educational Evaluation; Assistant Director, Cultural Activities, New South Wales Premier’s Department; National Program Coordinator for the Australian Bicentenary; Executive Officer, New South Wales Bicentennial Program; Director, Information and Education for the Federal Government’s Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission; Foundation Member of the Asian Creative Skills Training Council...

OVERVIEW

In this intensive, one day workshop (2.0 hours), participants will be provided with an overview of current resources and opportunities for news dissemination and public relations campaigns, under the broad heading of "the digitial /social media release". for increasing traffic, selling services, building back links or increasing organic search authority on the Internet for your web properties.

The facilitators will provide a "helicopter view" of the terrain, both in China and internationally, and then lead the group in:

■ examination of current practice, available resources and opportunities for more effective use of the resources

■ an examination of an "ideal" digital/Social media release and how to create one

SUMMARY, PROGRAMME, CONTEX

Why relying just on 20th century, traditional media release needs 21st century, digitally networked alteration as the environment has changed expectations and processes for news and PR dissemination.

PARTICIPANTS' EXPECTATIONS

WHY DIGITAL MEDIA RELEASES?

Rich possibilities of a digital/social release for getting story out and found and the hidden power and value to your online properties.

■ more channels of distribution

■ consumers determining how they will access news

■ more findable via Baidu, Google etc-SEARCH AND FINDABILITY - some search wisdom from Professor HodgeYou may have a great story but if the netizens cannot find you, what use is that?SOCIAL MEDIA Social Media and the Social Media Release -

■ social media overview - Facebook, del.icio.us, Digg, Stumbleupon, MySpace, Xiaonei, Tao Tao and others■ social media enablers and risk factors

■ employing social media to expand your reach and get greater consumer buy-in

■ How to succeed as a player - social media not a spectator sport

■ Social Media Release, what is it and what does one look like?RESOURCES AVAILABLE

■ List resources 

■ Demonstration of how to create a digital/social media release 

■ List takeaway learnings

RESOURCES FOR FURTHER STUDY AND PRACTICE

This section will include a tour of helpful websites and blogs and a critique of selected sites

 

 Culture Fish Media will present LIVE workshops on Digital Media Releases at four locations in China:

■ Beijing ■ Shanghai ■ Guangzhou ■ Hong KongEach workshop will be for a full day. ■ Beijing ■ Shanghai ■ Guangzhou ■ Hong KongEach workshop will be for a full day.

Hong Kong: http://pr-20-hongkong.eventbrite.com

Shanghai: http://pr-20.eventbrite.com

Beijing:http://pr-20-BJ.eventbrite.com

Guangzhou: http://pr-20.gz.eventbrite.com 

ALL PROFITS BENEFIT CFM's CHARITY INITIATIVES: THE LIBRARY PROJECT EARTHQUAKE FUND, THE DREAMBLOGUE HANDICAPPED INTERN PROGRAM, AND THE READING TUB

 
Brand Management and Reputation Management in China
Saturday, 05 April 2008 21:25

I have been thinking a lot about brand and reputation management (Yes, really!) in light of events in China over the last few weeks that I addressed in an earlier Onemanbandwidth post. Companies in the west tend to overlook reputation management unless there is a crisis and then it can be incredibly costly and I guarantee time will stand still during the repair.

Reputation ManagementIt is especially hard on a multinational brand when negative publicity threatens them in a foreign country, like China. Suddenly every available bi-lingual marketer, search engine optimization specialist and online digital maketing company is called on to rebuild an image. A company should not have to ask, “Can we rebound from this?” Stock prices, and jobs will depend on the outcome.

Companies like CIC, the Internet Word of Mouth Research Company in Shanghai are called, after the fact, to assess damages and recommend strategies for leveling the Internet playing field again. If a brand’s good name is threatened a company should use (to exploit the metaphor) every play in the book to come from behind:

  • Online Videos posted on popular Chinese video sites like Tudou and Youku and 56.com which may already be more popular here than Youtube.
    For examples of success, look no further than the videos put out by Mattel and in America remember how Obama countered criticism of his pastor via Youtube and Facebook.
  • Buy Paid results in Chinese Search Engines. The first four search slots are for sale on Baidu and they have an incredible no-brainer tool I will mention later for branded terms and products. Partnering with Companies like Online Digital Marketing provider and Baidu partner Culture Fish Media, is a good idea. They will help you choose and translate, with help from CIC, the right keywords in the right local dialects. Armed with information and adwords they can then geographically target them for the right regions and toward the correct demographic profiles so you don’t waste advertising revenue with panic spending.
  • SEO interface: Start looking again at keywords and language interface pages again. And be sure to hire a company in China that gets reputation management and IWOM.
  • Ethical “Soft Seeding”: A native language team can place positive ads and commentary on powerful Bulletin Boards which is by far the most influential source of rumors/information/IWOM in China and has great authority in organic search results in China.
  • Continue to incorporate reputation monitoring as regular business strategies. This is best done before a crisis.

Here are some facts compiled by the marketing pilgrim:

  • 80% of adults are “very” or “somewhat” more likely to consider buying products recommended by real-world friends and family.
  • 78% of executive recruiters routinely use search engines to learn more about candidates, and 35% have eliminated candidates based on the information they found.
  • 52% of survey respondents from developed nations said they find “a person like yourself” to provide the most credible information.
  • 87% believe the CEO’s reputation is an important part of a company’s reputation.
  • 90% of consumers trust recommendations from others.
  • 83% of companies will face a crisis that will negatively impact their share price between 20 and 30%, during the next five years.
  • 100% of those reading this post have either a personal or corporate reputation to protect.

I would add that the stats for China, save the last one, are all higher. IWOM has far more impact here.
Some companies say full recovery from a PR trauma can take 4-41/2 years. That is a long time in the life of many stock portfolios. There is no need to get initial that situation in China in the first place. Baidu has a very inexpensive tool tailored for brands. It is called a power link:

Should your company have a trademarked name or branded service you can buy the entire first page of search results. On that page, a company can include up to 15 left-side links and a right hand display ad.

Think about that for a second: Owning your own page/keywords means a 100% click-through rate and 100% of the listings that are seen on the first page of results belong to you. It is the ultimate no-brainer for advertising.

Especially for a difficult to understand market like China it is important to begin SEM with a company, prior to an emergency, that can guide, nurture and maintain your online reputation.

—————–

Note:

Culturefish Media is currently working and with ad agencies, SEO firms and Independent marketing consultants to tailor solutions for online digital advertising and reputation management in China. Inquiries about partnerships and services can be made here: Culturefish

 
Baidu Basics Webinar
Sunday, 03 February 2008 19:00
Baidu Basics Webinar

When: March 10th, 11:30am-12:30pm, China Standard Time

Description: Lonnie Hodge, CEO of CultureFish Media; Grace Zhou, manager of Baidu's new International office; and Sam Flemming, CEO of the first and leading IWOM research and consulting firm in China, will present information about the newest strategies for successful marketing online in China. Areas addressed will be: Internet Word of Mouth, Research Methodologies, Organic and Paid Search, Chinese Consumer Search Behaviors, Geographically Targeted Language, PR Releases, Cultural SEM and more.

Baidu specific topics will include: how Baidu works, efforts Baidu is making to reach and connect with international clients, how to buy Baidu keyword campaigns, new products, how Baidu works with foreign and domestic SMEs, and best practices for keyword campaigns and search submission related to China's leading search engine.

A 45-minute discussion will be followed by a question-and-answer session. The presentation and Q and A session will be conducted in English. "Admission" is free.

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CultureFish speeds access to Chinese search engines
Sunday, 04 November 2007 23:16
CultureFish Media will personalize their China-US business partnerships with emerging and established companies to create recipes for growth in new market media using language and approaches sensitive to local tastes. CFM is a talent trust of friends dedicated to introducing ethical and passionate ideas effectively and sensitively into any cultural medium through Cultural SEO (CSEO) and SEM.

(PRWEB) November 13, 2007 -- A new standard in digital advertising in and from China has opened for business: CultureFish Media has joined together the world-class talents of an artistic and tech-savvy team to create culturally sensitive SEO (CSEO), SEM, Branding and Identity Management, Social Media Marketing & Tracking, Content Creation and Management in multiple languages, Ad Campaign Management: Print, Film, Digital,Interactive and Conventional (PPC, Banner, RSS, CPM) Marketing while providing cost saving analytic Reports and ROI Maximization for emerging and established companies.

CSO, a new approach in on line content management and advertising involves: Culturally Sensitive and Appropriate Keyword Programs for Countries and Targeted Regional Campaigns, language specific writing and editing, native translation and foreign language content management such as Web site translation services.

CultureFish, whose clients include pizza parlors, camera shops, vacation clubs, universities such as Cal Poly, and Fortune 500 concerns like Oracle, can: Design Logos, Banners, CSS, and Total Campaign Management including Web Design and other International Set-up, Email Campaigns, Feed Management, PR Releases and Optimization and Interface and partnerships with country portals and ISPs such as Baidu, Naver, Tencent, Alibaba, and Madhouse.

CultureFish (文化鱼), via its slogan, "如鱼得水" (Like a fish in water), implies skill and dexterity at a task. Our English slogan, "Making Digital Waves," speaks to our use of sophisticated content management, cutting edge networking, interactive and visual media, paid ad campaigns, organic search empowerment and public relations to pursue excellence through new media that will best reach consumers in their native tongues. The team, together fluent in more than 10 languages, offers world class services to bloggers, SMEs and multinationals in any geographical region.

Each member of our diverse team, hailing from America, Canada, China, Israel, and Singapore, is ethically and socially bound to best practices in SEO/SEM, and all aspects of business. Some profits are set aside for environmental and humanitarian causes: The Charity and Overseas Education site The Blog of Dreams, our digital internship program, the online Olympic Souvenir Store for shopping online in China are three such projects. CultureFish will always provide generous time and talent to nurture promise, especially in individuals or enterprises facing socially difficult challenges or, through our affiliation with the China Business Network, SMEs doing business in China and other important digital markets.

 


CFM News

PR 2.0 : New Media Methods for Promoting Online Webinar

Online PR 2.0 Webinar where Social Networks, Traditional Media and Technology Come Together   JUNE 20, 2008 10-12:00 (CHINA TIME) SIGN ON DETAILS MAILED SEPERATELY Designed for...
+ more

Brand Management and Reputation Management in China

I have been thinking a lot about brand and reputation management (Yes, really!) in light of events in China over the last few weeks that I addressed in an earlier Onemanbandwidth post. Companies in...
+ more