PR Intelligence Report
Wednesday, April 28, 2004 VOLUME 3 ISSUE 3  
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In this Issue...
My Two Cents'
There’s more to messaging than meets the ear
Tech Marketing Efforts to Increase
In Messaging, Honesty Is Still the Best Policy
Sidebar: Three Ways to Communicate
by Mark D. Lutchen

Book (Excerpt)

Just as a company can have different key messages for different audiences, so too can those messages take different forms, depending on the venue used to deliver them. This article provides a good overview of the differences between using marketing, public relations, and other communications formats such as company meetings to deliver those messages. 
Click here for full story.
 
Gartner EXP Survey Shows CIOs Are Cautiously Optimistic Regarding Increased IT Spending in 2004
Global Survey Shows How CIOs are Preparing for the Upswing

CIOs look to be cautiously optimistic regarding the prospect of increased IT spending in 2004. Those are the results of a recent survey by Gartner EXP. While there's no sign of a return to the high flying days of 1999, the CIOs say an upturn in business could have a significant impact on spending, releasing a lot of pent-up demand.
[FULL STORY]
 
Wi-Fi/Wireless Statistics
More signs that technology is on the rise again. According to research by In-Stat/MDR, wireless hot spots are popping up all over like mushrooms. Soon it seems no matter where you are in the world, you’ll be able to pop in for a Quarter Pounder with Cheese and a quick review of your e-mail. Check out these stats.
[FULL STORY]
 
Partner Corner
Worldcom Public Relations Group Names New Group Board Chair
Names Asia/Pacific and European Chairs, and Welcomes New Partner


As many of you know, Tech Image is a member of the Worldcom Public Relations Group, the world’s largest network of independent public relations agencies. The Group recently announced some new chairs and inducted a new member at its worldwide meeting in Australia, which Tech Image’s Mike Nikolich attended.
[FULL STORY]
 
Survey Results

Last month we asked how important thought leadership is in your PR mix. Half of the respondents said it is a cornerstone of their programs, while the rest participate occasionally. No one said they didn’t do it at all. For those who answered that they should do it more, Tech Image’s award-winning thought leadership program might be just the thing. Contact Dennis Collins at dennis.collins@techimage.com.

 
Feedback
If you have questions or comments on this month's issue, send your feedback to ken.krause@techimage.com
My Two Cents'
No Monuments for Adams
by Michael Nikolich


The next time Tech Image updates the “Read Our Minds” section of our web site, I’ll provide a brief review of John Adams, the best-selling book by David McCullough. I bought the book a year ago but never felt compelled to open it. Once I finally did, I was absolutely astounded by the depth and breadth of the accomplishments of America’s second president.

Adams is one of the great unsung heroes of the American Revolution and the post-war framing of the U.S. Constitution. He developed many of the political philosophies that drove the Declaration of Independence and served the nascent country as a diplomat, promoter and visionary.

Yet many view Adams as a historical footnote – the guy who was President between George Washington and Thomas Jefferson. You won’t find a monument for John Adams in Washington, D.C., nor will you see his likeness on coins or currency. In fact, it took more than 200 years for him to receive the recognition he was due.

While Adams was a brilliant thinker and a prolific writer, he was regarded as a maverick by his political peers. His flabby physical demeanor and gruff personality were stark contrasts to Washington’s regal qualities and Jefferson’s aristocratic and refined persona.

Although Adams played a major role in developing the Declaration of Independence, he delegated the chore of writing the document to Jefferson. Talk about your bad career moves! Adams may have had the vision, but Jefferson had the command of the quill. Once the document was presented to the Continental Congress, it was Jefferson, not Adams, who received the acclaim, and Jefferson was only too happy to take the credit and bask in the limelight.
 
There is definitely a lesson to be learned here by technology marketers. How many companies with great product ideas have struggled to sell them simply because they couldn’t clearly articulate their products’ features and benefits? How many service providers get so caught up in talking about their methodologies that potential customers have no idea of what the company does or why they should hire them?

It’s not enough to have a vision. You have to be able to communicate that vision credibly to your audience in terms they can understand. This is especially important when you’re talking to a reporter or industry analyst.

Today Microsoft dominates the browser space. But do you remember the name of the company that commercialized the web browser?

Successful product launches aren’t something that happen by chance. I attended a seminar by nationally acclaimed speech coach Kevin Daley and I was facinated by the effect something as simple as hand gestures can have on an audience. While what you say is important, how you say it often is more important, and it takes coaching and practice to make yourself an effective communicator.

Because many technology companies are engineering-driven, there is a tendency to get caught up on product features and acronyms.

Unfortunately, reporters often could not care less and many have the attention spans of gnats. Reporters, readers and viewers want to know one thing – what’s in it for me? The more you obscure that message with techno-speak and details, the less likely you’ll turn readers and viewers into customers, regardless of how impressive your technology is.
 
Creating a clear, interesting and powerful message begins with a systematic approach. My partner, Dennis Collins, discusses in this newsletter how Tech Image works with clients to help them develop compelling market definitions, value propositions and messages for various audiences.

Although this will come across as shameless self-promotion, I’m positive John Adams would have benefited from a messaging session with Dennis. Despite his genius, Adams was vilified by the news media for his Federalist views. This was due in no small part to a whisper campaign that his former friend, Thomas Jefferson, launched against him. Adams tried to fight Jefferson by writing a three-year series of rambling and incoherent editorials for the Boston newspapers, but by this time, he was dismissed by the public as a doddering old fool.  He used his era's version of "technospeak" and wound up losing his audience and his credibility 

Fortunately, the story does have a happy ending. After Adams’ wife, Abigail, died, he patched things up with Jefferson and the two started writing a string of letters to set the record straight. Many of these letters are considered national treasures.

In a final twist of irony, Jefferson and Adams died hours apart on July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the American Revolution. John Adams’ final spoken words were:  “Thomas Jefferson Lives.” Jefferson, on the other hand, left no doubt of how he wanted to be viewed by future generations by insisting that his epitaph read:  “Author of the Declaration of Independence.” Even in death, Jefferson knew how to get in the last word.

Anyone who doubts that getting the message right is important need only search for the Adams Monument the next time they visit Washington, D.C.

Anyway, that’s my two cents’ worth.
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