It’s long overdue, but here is my post about the PRinciples class session that was live-twittered.
I started class with these instructions for students:
Then I set them free and started lecturing about social media: What it is, and how it has changed power dynamics in society. I remember telling students that social media lets people inside the Golden Wall – telling them that as I was speaking, they could twitter what I said, and that was scary: What if I said something stupid? I also told them that social media makes it possible for individuals to have voices as loud as those of rich organizations.
Then Laura Fitton (@pistachio) joined us on Skype, and the live-twittering continued.
During that one hour, the conversation coming from our class was at the top of twitter conversation tracking boards twitscoop and current.fm.
The most powerful take-aways for me were:
You can read everything that was twittered during class, or just my favorites. Students still twitter during class, and I see and comment on their tweets afterwards – it’s allowed and encouraged, but not required – they should be free to take notes in whatever medium serves them best. I would like to experiment in the future with collective note taking (I’m looking into NoteMesh) and with CoverItLive.
I’m live-blogging EDB, look for several updates throughout the day.
Other EDB updates: twitter, EDB website & blog
Session 1 – Social Media 101
Erin Caldwell kicks off the day with her personal story. As an Auburn student, she became familiar with the PR blogosphere (see this blog’s blog roll for a start), she started the Forward Blog and built her reputation online. Edelman contacted her and by the time she interviewed, they pretty much knew they wanted to hire her. Being able to use social media & building your professional reputation online can help you get a job in public relations, whether you want to practice online or offline PR.
Team Edelman introductions and personal stories about social media a-ha moments. Different stories, different people, with technology backgrounds varying from tech guru to “barely able to turn on a computer” – but all share passion, curiosity, and love for their work [9:05 am].
Who’s here from Edelman: Chris Broomall, Erin Caldwell, Steven Field, Phil Gomes, Jena Kozel, Monte Lutz, Stephanie Wasilik. Bios here.
Educators’ track
Session 2: How PR practice uses social media
PR educators introduce themselves and talk about: helping students establish connections between social and professional uses of social media; motivating students to learn social media; disparity between expectations (students know all about social media) and reality (students are not familiar and even intimidated by new communication technologies – RSS what?!) [9:50].
Phil Gomes provides the big picture of current social media use in PR.
Phil saw blogging as the ultimate media relations tool – you can demonstrate journalists that you’ve read them, and have reacted to their work.
Don’t think of it as a technology problem; the technology in social media is easy to learn.
Phil describes his approach to teaching social media in the Chicago T4 lab. They spend one day immersed in online conversation analysis. Phil doesn’t believe in teaching products, so he teaches his students to use free tools to analyze existing conversations about a client. Tools you can use: bloglines, technorati, alexa, blogpulse, etc.
Job description for an entry PR job (assistant account executive):
Phil loves the advanced search in technorati that identifies all links to a specific URL. For example see who links to this blog.
What Phil looks for in a job candidate:
== Tired : Pitching :: Wired : Engagement ==
Don’t write self-referential posts (what I did/wore today) – be useful.
The ideal job candidate would have:
Session 3: Social Media Tools in the Classroom
Session 4: Social Media Assignments
Educators shared assignment ideas that make use of social media in various PR and communication courses. [4:15 pm]
Session 5: Wrap-Up – Best Practices
Students sum-up some of the lessons that stood out:
Edelman practitioners were impressed to see students taking time out of their weekend to learn these skills – there’s hope they’ll have new colleagues with the right skills set.
Phil Gomes wrapped-up the day.
Congratulations UGA students for organizing a great event! You’ve worked very hard and it definitely paid off, it was a very successful day!
[5:30 pm, signing off]