Ragan Recap: Communications, Chicago-style

chicagoI’m so exhausted after three days in Chicago that I can barely stay awake to write this post. I took in slightly more information than I did beer in the Windy City (but not by much) and want to share my impressions of the 2009 Ragan Corporate Communicators Conference and some of what I learned in the sessions.

A few of the sessions I attended were so outstanding that they warrant their own individual posts that will come later this week (stay tuned). The others were quite solid. I predominantly went to workshops on the PR/Marketing Communications track. Here’s a rundown of some of my favorites:

ComEd: Generating positive publicity when the lights are on

ComEd Communications Manager Jeff Burdick led this session and started with a slide that said: “99.95% of the time, you DO have power!” But of course, that’s not what customers want to hear during an outage. The average customer is only without power for a total of four hours in a given year. Obviously storm and outage communication is a major issue for utility companies, but during the rest of the time when everything’s buzzing along, how do they generate interest? ComEd focuses on pitching stories about reliability and infrastructure investments, its employees, environmental projects, and corporate citizenship. ComEd targets local TV news and smaller, community-based newspapers (many of which aren’t suffering and closing at the rate of large metropolitan dailies).
Key takeaway: Look for “Riches in the Niches” and leverage unique, local angles in stories. Don’t always focus on the largest media outlets

Wells Fargo: Flexible communications in the face of merging organizations

Presented by Kathleen Golden, VP of Public Relations for Wells Fargo Wealth Management Group, this session focused on the 2008 acquisition of Wachovia by Wells Fargo and the associated communications challenges. When merging the leadership of two organizations, speculation runs rampant among employees and the media. Who’s getting what job? Who’s leaving, who’s staying? Why are they structuring the new company this way? Communicators in this situation have to have the pulse of what’s being said and address any misinformation as soon as possible. But, it’s okay to tell stakeholders that you don’t have the answers yet.
Key takeaway: Establish a process for both sides of a merger to share, receive and distribute information. Address rumor and specualtion as much as possible with the information you have on hand to diffuse any issues. Involve communications early on in the merger process.

Word of Mouth Marketing – Get customers talking about you

I was a bit disappointed in Andy Sernovitz’s session, mostly because I felt he didn’t share anything beyond what you could get from his book or blog. All of the examples he used were primarily B2C companies (Skittles, Zappos, Duct Tape), which I think generally lend themselves to more viral, word-of-mouth activities and campaigns. It can be much harder to get a bunch of supply chain managers to become rabid fans of plastic fasteners or concrete forms or raw chemicals. While Andy had some good tidbits here and there, I was bummed that I skipped some of the other sessions going on at this time (including Katie Paine’s) to go to this one.
Key takeaway: Make it easy for customers to talk about your brand. Create content that they can participate in and make their own, then share with their friends.

Calculating the ROI of your communications – turning results into dollars

Angela Sinickas offered ways to measure communications efforts and show how communicators can take credit for behavior changes that earn or save money for a company. I’m not sure I fully understood her approach, as she seemed to advocate for continually adjusting either the costs incurred or the value derived to achieve the ROI result you wanted. In the corporate communications roles that I’ve held, the finance team would pretty quickly sniff out any data massaging like that. The other issue I had was that her approach relied on having good data available – which many communicators don’t always have at their disposal. But the basic concepts were intriguing and I think I’ll refer back to her slides and check her Web site out to learn more.
Key takeaway: Only behavior changes can have a dollar-value attached to them, so measure that. Calculate communications ROI on a project basis instead of trying to do it annually for an entire department.

chicagogangOverall

As is usually the case, the best part of the conference was getting to meet so many great people. It was fantastic to have lunch with Katie Paine and see Shonali Burke at the cocktail hour. I got to meet Amber Naslund, Rachel Esterline and Ari Adler at the unconference. I hit the town with Mike Pilarz, Allan Schoenberg and Amber Porter Cox. I had my first Bell’s Beer (and my second, and my third…) and took an extra day with my good friend and travel companion Christine Hartter (who also wrote a great conference recap) to check out The Bean and the Art Institute. Verdict: Chicago is my kinda town!

Image via Flickr user amymengel (thanks to the waiter who snapped the pic above!)

My Five Squared

Okay, first of all, I’d like to know why whoever started this increasingly popular meme chose the number 25. That’s a LOT of randomness to come up with! Especially for someone like me who’s not used to sharing. But since Arik Hanson tagged me, here goes:

1. I grew up in a REALLY small town. My high school graduating class was about 90, and we were abnormally large that year. I think my entire school district from K-12 only had about 1,100 kids in it. This is probably the main reason I went to a huge college 1,000 miles away.

2. On Saturdays in the fall, I wake up and start watching ESPN College GameDay at 10 a.m. and pretty much watch football all day long. My husband thinks this is bizarre and can only handle about 90 minutes of football on any given day. A bit of a role-reversal in our marriage.

3. I played Rosie Alvarez, the lead character in “Bye, Bye, Birdie”, in my high school’s musical when I was in 11th grade and I still remember most of my songs and lines.

4. I’m really close with my extended family on my mom’s side. This means not only my first cousins but also my mom’s cousins and their kids. We don’t really distinguish levels of cousin-hood and just refer to everyone as a cousin (which totally threw my husband for a loop when he first met everyone).

Victoria Harbor, Hong Kong

Victoria Harbor

5. I lived in Hong Kong for a summer and worked for a PR firm there as part of a scholarship grant I received. I was the only American in my office and picked up absolutely NO Cantonese the whole summer– not even the dirty words they tried to teach me!

6. Before college, I had never been on an airplane. My first flight was home to see my parents at Thanksgiving during my freshman year. I’ve made up for it since then!

7. I don’t eat seafood of any sort. If it lived in water, it doesn’t go in my mouth. I got sick from bad seafood when I was a kid and have never been able to work up the gumption to try it again.

Tonks and Figg

8. I have two kittens named after characters from Harry Potter (Tonks and Mrs. Figg).

9. I went to college with Ryan Seacrest’s sister. I didn’t really know her and didn’t have any classes with her, but he came to our journalism school graduation ceremony and I had my picture taken with him. It was the first or second season of American Idol so he wasn’t insanely famous yet, but he’s pretty much the only famous person I’ve ever met.

10. I hate cooking, and as a result I have a pretty poor diet. My husband and I are constantly saying we need to eat better and get into cooking, but then always end up nuking rice or making pasta.

11. I got my MBA from Drexel University, but did it through their distance learning program, so I never actually set foot on Drexel’s campus until the graduation banquet at the end of the program. It was a great (and hard!) program and all the classes were taught by full-time faculty from Drexel’s business school – but I still find myself trying to defend to people the fact that I did it online. I think some online institutions rightfully get a bad rap, but I was really pleased with Drexel’s program. Go Dragons!

12. I had to move every six months with my first job. I lived in three different places:  Albany/Capital Region of NY, where I ended up; Fort Worth, which is my favorite city I’ve ever lived in; and Orlando, which is my least favorite. It’s weird living in a place where everyone is on vacation.

13. Big Mark Knopfler fan. Saw him in Philly last summer and it was the best concert I’ve ever attended.

Rockin the Spandex at Montreal Bike Tour

14. My husband got me into cycling about four years ago and I’m obsessed now. Before that, I hadn’t really ridden a bike other than as a kid. This summer I rode about 1,600 miles, commuted 18 miles to work on my bike most days, and rode my first metric century (62 mile ride). I have no desire to competitively race, but I love riding for fitness and enjoyment (my ride of choice is currently a Jamis Coda Sport).

15. My husband and I both drive old cars. I have a 2000 Nissan Altima and he drives a 1993 Oldsmobile Cutlass Cruiser Wagon. We have no desire to have car payments and that big white station wagon comes in VERY handy for hauling around skis, bikes, etc. Plus I don’t have to worry about him picking up chicks because of his car.

16. I was on the Homecoming Court at UGA, so I got to have my dad escort me out onto the field at halftime of one of the football games and wave to everyone on the JumboTron. Then we had our picture taken with Uga VI. My dad also went to UGA, so being out on the field was heaven for him and I’ll never forget that moment!

17. I played the saxophone in elementary and junior high band. Poorly.

18. My wedding reception was in a car museum while a SuperCars exhibit was going on. So we cut the cake next to a Mercedes McLaren and had our first dance beside a Ferrari Enzo. I have brownie points for life with my husband and his pals.

19. My Myers-Briggs type is ISTJ, so apparently I should have been an engineer. I scored very, very strongly on the I. I’m not necessarily shy, but it does take me a while to open up to people and I’d rather have a smaller group of close friends than a whole lotta casual ones.

20. I have never been in the hospital, broken a bone, needed stitches, etc. As a result, I think I have an irrational fear of and intolerance for pain. I always think everything is going to hurt worse than it does!

Eww.

21. I’m a Gator Hater. Gators wear jean shorts. ‘Nuff said.

22. I was at the Georgia-Tennessee (hobnail boot!) game in 2000 when we came from behind in the last :25 seconds to beat Tennessee… but I was already walking to the parking lot when the final touchdown drive occurred because I thought we’d lost and didn’t want to get heckled to death by the Tennessee fans. Sometimes I omit that part when I tell people I was there.

23. We don’t have cable. We have the $9 “network plus” package that gives us the main networks plus (randomly) ESPN, NatGeo, Style Network, and Oxygen. I don’t think Time Warner knows that those last four channels come through. There are definitely shows that I miss, but my husband and I already feel like we watch way too much TV and having another 100 channels would make it all the worse.

24. Like Lauren, I’ve never smoked a cigarette. I’m not even sure if I’ve ever held one. I barely remember when smoking was even allowed anywhere. It’s just never held any appeal to me whatsoever.

25. Oh gosh, I’m really running out of randomness. Glad this is the last one. I’ve been out of college six years but have already worked at three different companies. I’ve had a good reason for leaving each time – I left my first job for a promotional opportunity and to move back near my husband, and I left my second job because I wanted to branch out from employee communications to a marcomm role. I want to be sure that I’m always growing and learning in my career. I’m always looking for new challenges!

So, there you have me. I’m struggling to think of anyone to tag who hasn’t already done this. I know KarenRussell (@KarenRussell) is avoiding it like the plague. I guess I’ll see if my good friend Christine Hartter (@CHComm) wants to give it a shot!