Audio comment: Owen Lystrup on IPR #15

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Owen Lystrup has called in with an answer for Chris Clarke’s iPod/iTunes frustrations. (By the way, there is a great site for iPod junkies that has answers, reviews, etc. for just about everything you can imagine related to iPod. Check out www.ilounge.com.)

Owen also notes that you have to be knowledgeable about a whole lot of things in the agency business. Ain’t that the truth!

Audio comment: Mitch Joel on IPR #15

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Mitch Joel drops in with a “car-cast” for a couple of thoughts on his co-hosting gig on IPR #15.

Mitch and I broke the time record with our free-form discussion and I had to leave two meaty segments on the cutting room floor to keep the podcast a respectable length. One interesting segment covered Mitch’s dabbling in Second Life and where he sees possibilities for an interesting business/communications tool. The other segment was about educating the next generation of communicators in the world of social media.
Mitch has offered to resurrect them for a segment on his podcast and I’ve been toying with the idea of packaging them up as special editions of IPR.

We’re number 1 on Pubsub

I’ve never really understood how the PubSub PR list actually works/worked, but I did know that it felt better to be higher up the list than lower.
Now, there has been lots of talk of PubSub’s financial problems lately and there is the fact the list hasn’t been updated since June 20th, but none of that negates the fact that for a brief, shining moment the Inside PR blog was at the top of the list.

We’re proud to be number 1…whatever it means. (If anyone knows, please tell us!)

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Audio comment: Eric Schwartzman on IPR #13

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The Spinfluencer, Eric Schwartzman, weighs in on the discussion we had about the branding of social media expertise within agencies.

If you haven’t checked out Eric’s “On the Record…Online” podcast, you don’t know what you’re missing. He has had some amazing interviews with some very interesting media and PR people.

Inside PR audio comment: Joe Thornley on Crispy News

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Joe Thornley has dropped in with an audio comment to give us his take on Constantin Basturea‘s latest initiative, Crispy News.
I had a look at the site recently and thought it was another interesting way to skim through the latest and greatest new posts in the PR blogosphere.

If you don’t know Constantin, he’s the volunteer behind The New PR Wiki and the Pub Sub PR Community list and now this. Does he ever sleep?

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More audio comments for IPR 11

Mitch Joel and his thoughts on educating PR students on social media

Tac Anderson on our challenges with the comment line and his feelings that all PR pros should be blogging

David Phillips on the evolution of the Web and its impact on communications
(Select which comment you want to play from the links below by hitting “Play Now” and then hit play on the flash player.)

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Audio comments: IPR 11

Thought I’d do a little forward-thinking test using the podPress plug-in on our WordPress blog. I figured there is no good reason that we should hold on to our audio comments that come in via Waxmail or through our comment line for the podcast. Why not post them as they come in?

So here’s one from Joe Thornley received following IPR 11:
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The question then becomes do we still include them as part of the show for our listener community, or do we just point people to the blog to hear the comments they feel like listening to?

I’m trying to force myself to think about podcasts differently from weekly radio programs. Is it a show? Is it a program? Are Terry and I co-hosts with listeners, or are we co-facilitators to a community (a fantastic Holzism)? Does the date matter? Should we even discuss time-bound news given that the podcast lives forever and the story has already been told in real time in the blogosphere?

What do you, the listeners, er…, community think?

Inside PR #10 – Monday, June 5, 2006

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Welcome to show #10. And they said we’d never make it past nine!

This episode featues a discussion about two new Corporate Social Responsibility research studies that have been released recently in the U.S. and.Canada respectively. Let us know what you think about the topic, us or life in general. Leave a comment on the blog, drop us a Waxmail or regular e-mail to [email protected], or call our new comment line: 206-600-4741.

You can listen to the show with the player above or download or subscribe with the links in the show blog’s sidebar.

Show Notes

00:28 Terry opens the show and reminds listeners about the new comment line. 206-600-4741.

01:20. Terry reads a comment from Owen Lystrup, a student at California State University regarding PR/Communciations schools that teach social media as part of the curriculum. Terry and Dave discuss and suggest that the Inside PR listenership let us know of any PR schools are teaching or exploring social media.

06:40 Terry and Dave discuss a comment from Luke Armour regarding a New York Times article that details Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper‘s approach to controlling the Parliament Hill press gallery.

13:53 Dave notes that Mitch Joel of Twist Image (a Canadian version of Joe Jaffe) has launched a new podcast called Six Pixels of Separation.

15:45 Dave notes that Esther Buschbaum of Communications Meca will chair the next Counsellor’s Academy conference in Mexico..

17:30 Dave and Terry discuss a new U.S. CSR study released by Fleishman-Hillard and the National Consumers League and contrast the results with recent Canadian research by Leger Marketing, Ipsos and an article in Marketing Magazine. Dave notes that Shel Holz blogged about the U.S. study.

32:40 Terry thanks the listeners and closes out the show with a reminder that comments are encouraged and can be left on the blog at www.insidepr.ca or e-mailed to [email protected].

Intro/extro music: Our theme music is Streetwalker by CJacks and is from the Podsafe Music Network; Roger Dey is our announcer.

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