Media

The 3/50 Project on KLKN TV (ABC)

by Cinda Baxter on April 10, 2009

in Media, The 3/50 Project

Well folks, we’re on a roll. Major thanks to Four Star Drug in Lincoln, Nebraksa (my old stomping grounds, no less) for bringing The 3/50 Project to the attention of their local ABC affiliate. Terrific piece, top of the hour, complete with lots of heartfelt feedback from consumers.

Great job, Four Star!

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Next stop: KARE-TV, the NBC affiliate in Minneapolis.

The 3/50 Project has been hopping here in the Twin Cities. Yesterday started with a piece on the front page of the St. Paul Pioneer Press newspaper…then an interview with Minnesota Public Radio…immediately followed by taping the segment for KARE‘s 10:00 p.m. news (top of the hour, second story, thankyouverymuch).
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The 3/50 Project hits television

by Cinda Baxter on April 3, 2009

in Media, Real World, The 3/50 Project

Thanks to Bill Hudson, anchor and news reporter at WCCO TV (CBS) in Minneapolis, The 3/50 Project had its  television debut, airing on yesterday’s evening news. Gotta tell ya…the results have been pretty immediate, if the registrations count on the350project.org is any indication. In two words?

Welcome, Minnesota.

In the piece, Bill mentions the site only being up since Monday; for clarification, the full site went up that day, including the analytics code that tracks how many hits the site has had. From Monday morning through midnight Wednesday, more than 3,700 “absolute unique visitors” clocked in.

If we look at hits (ie, including repeat visits), well….let’s just say we were way past 4,200. Holy cow.

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todayOkay folks. Time to fire up the group engine and make something happen. It’s time to get The 3/50 Project on The Today Show.

And all it’s going to take is an envelope, a flyer, a post it note, and a stamp. [click here to continue…]

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3-50-project-logo_500px2Building on a great idea from Alison Heath at Hardwood Artisans, I’m going to be tying media pitches for outlets around the country to small business closings in their communities (think: the gift shop down the street “going dark” next weekend). Short of suddenly becoming all-seeing or finding ten more hours in the day to search community news nationwide, that means one thing.

I need to borrow your brain. [click here to continue…]

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Enough with the carnage

by Cinda Baxter on March 9, 2009

in Economy, Media

meet_the_pressForgive me for just now catching this one. Haven’t had time to dig through the plethora of stuff on my TiVo.

Yesterday morning, Erin Burnett shared more of her concerns about the impact psychology has on consumers right now. According to the CNBC business news anchor, what we’re facing is really a two-part problem: the complexity of the markets, and…the negativity of the media.

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Branding Blunder of the Day

by Cinda Baxter on January 7, 2009

in Marketing, Media, Real World

By Al Roker in this morning’s Today Show segment featuring the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas:

“This is called the Microsoft Surface…. It’s like having a giant iPod where you can play video and all kinds of stuff and get information on the side!”

That would be the iPod by Apple.

Pepcid, Bill Gates is calling.

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Torch song

by Cinda Baxter on October 11, 2008

in Business, Customer Service, Media

Retailers are stressed. Vendors are stressed. Reps are stressed.

And consumers are stressed. Think holiday seasons past were doozies to get through? Just imagine what a couple of months of purse string tightening will do to Patty Persnickety’s mood.

Used to be something you wrestled with in the store or on the phone. The cranky shopper would face off with you, providing an opportunity to turn things around and reclaim the relationship. Today, however, you might hear the grousing third person…or thirtieth person, depending on how web-savvy the cranky shopper is.

So what do you do if you suddenly becomes the target of flame throwing on a blog or consumer review site?

1. Read between the lines
Get to the post as fast as you can, then try to identify who the upset customer is. Most times, you’ll be able to figure it out fairly easily. Contact them directly, by phone to talk about the situation. Getting a human voice in the mix is critical to put out ongoing flames.

2. Post a comment with your (real) name signed to it
Be patient. Be calm. Validate their feelings (not the same as validating their complaint) by saying “I understand why this is frustrating to you,” or something along those lines. Then calmly deal with the issue. Apologize? Offer to discuss on the phone if they’d please call (assuming you don’t know their identity)? Explain why things went the way they did? Whatever is most appropriate, step up and do it.

3. If you have a blog of your own, include that address in your response
This gives you an opportunity to move the conversation onto familiar turf–yours. Create a blog post noting the complaint, then follow it with your response. Again, be calm and kind. End on an up note. You want to get ahead of this thing, not continue to chase it through someone else’s yard. With luck, the original poster will follow you there. (Note: If there are flames flying, might be wise to set your preferences to moderate posts before they appear.)

4. Google for spiders
Quite often, a blog post can show up in more than one place. Copy the first sentence of the angry post, then run it through Google, with quotation marks on either end. If it’s repeated somewhere else, this should find it. Be sure to repeat your signed response on any other blog that repeats the post. You want to put out all the fires, not just the first one.

5. Check the Terms of Use associated with the site
If the complaint is particularly viscious (ie, uses offensive language, is a personal attack, etc.), read the site’s Terms of Use to see if it crosses the line. If it does, contact the site owner immediately to bring their attention to the post. Could take a few weeks to get them to pull the thing, but the effort’s worth it for content that falls outside the lines.

6. Stay on top of the buzz
Google has a sweet little service called Google Alerts. Enter the name of your store, or your name, then sit back and wait. Whenever those names show up online, you get an email linking to the piece. Admittedly, this doesn’t troll all blogs-—but it does get some of them. And some is better than none.

Regardless of whether or not you find yourself in this kind of sticky spot, I strongly suggest enacting #6. It’s always good to know when your name shows up in print.

Photo credit: RozzleDozzle

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