Friday, February 20, 2009

Pick Up The Phone And Share PR

Next time you need to communicate with a dispersed audience, don't forget the humble telephone.

A tele-conference call is a great way to pass highly relevant information to an individual or very specific group of people at the same time.

This past week, as part of a national PR campaign, we hosted PR teleconferences for not for profit groups around the country. We dealt with around 20 community groups around Australia that had recently received a Commonwealth Government grant for grass roots community relations programs.

The tele-workshops were set up to share thoughts on how these organisations could raise community awareness about the important work they plan to do.


The workshops covered media relations, social media and word of mouth marketing and explored how local not for profits could use these three strategies. People representing six to eight organisations took part in each 60 minute call. Keeping the numbers small made for an intimate atmosphere where people could raise issues and offer their thoughts on what works for volunteers and what doesn't.

To provide a focus for discussion we circulated a slide package highlighting key PR and marketing points before each tele-conference. People on the call either printed it off or followed it through their computer.

We conducted six sessions and received very positive feedback. We also found that after some minor technical problems (which Optus promptly fixed) the tele-conferences were easy to set up and manage.

In tight times when funds are limited, the telephone and speaker remain handy and cheap tools that people in different parts of the country can use to share thoughts on PR and marketing.


2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Couldn't agree more, Bob. I love teleseminars. I have wanted to do an "Ask the Maven" standing call once a month and may launch that soon. I'm also doing a teleseminar on March 12 called "When Bloggers Attack: How to Defend Your Company's Reputation Online" based on my experiences and the experiences of large companies. I love the phone. But maybe it's our ages, huh? I remember snatching the phone up in warp speed in the old days. Now it's like trying to write a novel in an email. At least the phone is still faster! keep up the awesome work, my Aussie buddy!

Unknown said...

I think an Ask the Maven session each month is a great idea