Posts Tagged ‘mass media’

The new mass media: certainly massive, not always media.

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

massmediaYou’ll have to get through the name-dropping and the fawning, and - admittedly - that may be more aggravating than navigating the Bourne Bridge on a summer Friday. But tucked inside this recent New York Times piece is an insightful look at how communication, and the subsequent role of public relations, forever has changed.

At its core, the piece (penned, ironically, by an old media flagship) reinforces the reduced role that traditional media plays in connecting brands with their target audiences. Consumers have access to information and thought leaders so many ways that it has transformed the definition of “mass media” from delivering information to the masses into the delivering of that information by the masses.

Key influencers no longer fit into a neat and well-defined group of news outlets and reporters. While those still play roles, they are not necessarily more important than a mushrooming collection of executives, analysts, observers and independent thinkers with no traditional media ties but powerful social media platforms to opine and inform directly with loyal audiences. These individuals can sway constituencies in as few as 140 characters and have significant appeal among consumers who have the choice to hear what they want to hear, when they want to hear and how they want to hear.

The challenge, as always, is identifying and engaging these influencers in a way that inspires a brand’s target audience. That said, “influencer relations” may just become a better fit than “media relations.”

What if the N.Y. Times Opened a PR Shop?

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Vice Magazine

People who worry that lines are being crossed in the rapidly evolving media world should take note – there are no more lines. They’ve been erased.  According to a story in The New York Times, the publishers of youth niche Vice magazine are not resting on their multimedia empire that includes a free glossy publication with a reported million readers, website and video offerings that target a largely male target audience of 18-to-30 year olds. The company has now launched an advertising agency called Virtue. Certainly an uncoventional approach to ensuring revenue and relevance.Imagine the Times starting a PR agency. What will be interesting is to see how Vice’s loyal readers react. If there is too much cross-over between a Virtue client and Vice content you may see reader push-back. Tricky times in the media world, for sure.

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