Category

Communications

“Coal Cares” Crisis: What Peabody Energy Should Do Now

By Crisis Communications, Media, Public Relations, Social Media

Today’s news includes the story of a hoax launched as an attack on coal company Peabody Energy. In short, an activist group calling itself Coal is Killing Kids developed a false campaign including a news release, a Coal Cares website and a Twitter account. The campaign positions itself as a Peabody Energy sponsored initiative (it’s not) to provide free inhalers and discounts for asthma medication for children living within 200 miles of a coal plant.

Close reading of the content on the site quickly reveals the true intent of the site’s creators. From the site:

Coal Cares™ is a brand-new initiative from Peabody Energy, the world’s largest private-sector coal company, to reach out to American youngsters with asthma and to help them keep their heads high in the face of those who would treat them with less than full dignity. For kids who have no choice but to use an inhaler, Coal Cares™ lets them inhale with pride.

Yikes. Peabody Energy should be in full crisis communication mode, prepared to react to this action. The company, however, seems to be under the impression that a social media-based initiative can be fought with traditional public relations. They’ve released a statement, and placed it on their website. The story has been picked up by CNN and Wired Science; CNN noted that “A Peabody Energy spokeswoman did not immediately return a call or an e-mail from CNN” and Wired Science mentions the company’s “immediate response” with the aforementioned statement released to the media.

Unfortunately, Peabody does not seem prepared to react and respond appropriately, using digital communications to combat a digital communications-based attack. Here are six things the company should do right now.

  1. Launch a website with a blog (I’d say launch a blog on their current site but it’s clear the Peabody Energy website needs a complete overhaul and there just isn’t time for that). The blog will provide a platform for the company to respond to questions and publish content correcting the misinformation the company says is being shared by the Coal Cares campaign.
  2. Appoint an active, visible spokesperson who will be accessible and is authorized to engage with the media and the public to address questions quickly.
  3. Create and post videos of the Peabody Energy team talking about the company’s efforts to run a safe and clean coal operation.
  4. Mobilize the coal community (employees, partners, political allies) and enlist their support in “liking” a multi-platform campaign and content designed to share positive stories about the company.
  5. Offer Vic Svec, the leadership team member with a Twitter account, counsel and coaching to leverage the effectiveness of that account and the ability to use Twitter to engage and share content that casts Peabody in a more positive light.
  6. Begin today working with the leadership team to help them understand the culture of transparency, the power of the social web and how they can use it in their own interests, and developing a social strategy that can be executed by members of the Peabody community so future attacks won’t have quite the same effect.

Coal is a difficult industry to defend, but it is not indefensible, nor is it an industry we can do without. Peabody deserves the chance to set the record straight and to have the tools to do so in the same platforms as their detractors. One thing social media makes available to all of us is a level playing field; you just need to know the rules of the game.

Social Media was Made for Weather Reporting: How the Newsplex CBS-19 Weather Team Rocks Twitter

By Communications

A couple of guys I consider good friends watch the weather in Central Virginia and make sure everyone knows it. Brantley Ussery and Travis Koshko lead the meteorology pack in social media and on TV (in my opinion — also, in full disclosure, I worked with the Newsplex a few years ago to help develop a social media plan and provided some training). The Klout score the team has earned is a respectable 47 — but what’s great about it is how the team engages with the local audience, sharing behind the scenes glimpses (tweeting about music and sometimes bacon!) as well as being there to support the community when weather turns dangerous or unpredictable.

Here’s proof of the impact the meteorology team of the Newsplex has in the community. The following is a great promotional spot the station created following a bout of thunderstorms and tornado warnings. I love the way comments from the Twitter and Facebook community are featured throughout the spot. It demonstrates that the Newsplex understands the relationship between on-air talent and viewers who are also online blends back and forth seamlessly and simultaneously.

Here’s the spot — what do you think?



Five Actions to Take on your Facebook Business Page Right Now

By Communications
  1. Grab your vanity URL by going to www.facebook.com/username (you must have 25+ fans to qualify) so your URL will look something like this: http://www.facebook.com/JaggersCommunications
  2. Go to Edit Page and Manage Permissions — at the bottom, choose Strong if you don’t want any profanity on your page, medium if you don’t mind a little, or none if you’re a member of the George Carlin club (link NSFW if you read it out loud).
  3. Go to Edit Page (again) and click on Featured. Manage the links to page you like that show up in the sidebar on YOUR page. (Consider featuring clients, partners, top customers, etc.)
  4. On the same section as #3, select a featured page owner or owners. This helps people see who the humans are behind your business to know with whom they’re interacting on the page.
  5. This is the badge for CHOAirport

    Back on Edit Page under Marketing, select create a badge and then, well, create a badge and put that on your website.

Stay tuned for future posts featuring more smart ideas for your Facebook Business page.

The Difference One Can Make in Social Media: the Abolish Cancer Story

By Communications

In 2009, My friend Darah Bonham had a nugget of an idea — how could a platform like Twitter be used to connect people and make a difference? Could Twitter somehow be used to abolish cancer?

That idea took off with a feed began and updated by Darah in October of that year. www.twitter.com/abolishcancer is the first Twitter feed solely founded to generate donations to cancer-battling charities. It works by engaging sponsors who pledge to donate $1 for each new Twitter follower for the @abolishcancer feed on a given day. Celebrities and consumer brands have gotten into the act, re-tweeting to help generate followers (thus bumping up the pledge).

Darah recently announced his resignation from his day job to focus on Abolish Cancer as a full-time venture. He’ll be working to share the story of the organization, to continue to generate interest in the cause, sponsors and donations to help fight the battle against cancer.

I’m eager to see Darah succeed and hope you’ll lend your support by following and re-tweeting @abolishcancer

Visit http://www.abolishcancer.com/ to see more than 100 celebrities supporting the cause and to find out more about the organization.

 

10 Reasons I Like Working at OpenSpace, A Collaborative Work Space

By Communications

Photo credit: Todd Wickersty

I am a huge fan of OpenSpace, the collaborative workspace that opened in downtown Charlottesville a couple of years ago. You can find me there pretty often and when I host workshops or large client meetings, it is my location of choice.

Here are 10 reasons I like it, and I think you will too:

  1. I get to be around other smart people like John Feminella or Cathy Pales; people who give off energy and creativity like sparks and who are just pleasant to be with, in the same room. It is certainly nice to network with people in person once in awhile rather than solely online.
  2. OpenSpace is clean, well-lit and consistently maintained, which is more than I can say for my home office.
  3. There are always drinks and snacks, in case I’m in hard-core deadline mode and can barely stop long enough for a decent break.

    I took this with my phone!

  4. It’s perfectly situated and set up for the many workshops I deliver to small (20 or fewer participants) groups; the conference rooms I use are always comfortable, set up perfectly and ready to provide a professional backdrop to my content.
  5. The chairs are green, super cool and comfortable to sit in for hours at a time.
  6. OpenSpace is a stone’s throw from the downtown mall, making it a convenient landing space for me to work in between meetings.
  7. It’s not my house! For someone who works independently from home, it is a relief to be able to get out among other working people in a focused environment where there are no a) dogs b) kids c) Jehovah’s Witnesses at the door.
  8. Photo credit: www.cramerphoto.com

    It’s not a coffee shop! Don’t get me wrong — I love coffee and the places where I buy it, but those places are not always ideal environments for getting serious work done. Often, there’s a lack of seating, outlets or space to spread out. You never have that at OpenSpace.

  9. OpenSpace is right next to the gym. Excuses just fly out the window!
  10. The culture fostered by working in a collaborative environment is interesting, friendly and kinda (dare I use this word) intellectual. I love looking at the faces of my “coworkers” deep in concentration or at the moment they find a solution. And because I don’t actually work with any of them, it’s the first zero-politics work environment I’ve ever had.

Try OpenSpace for free, and tell them I sent you!

If you are not in Charlottesville, and the idea of a collaborative workspace appeals to you, keep talking about it; every market should have a space like this one — if you’re in Charlottesville and have only heard of the space, check it out.