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yMedia Workshop #08: A Room Full of Professionals

Venue: AUT Business School, Level 6

Date: Wednesday 28 July, 6pm – 8pm

As the close of the yMedia Challenge draws near, we invite all teams to join us for a working session at AUT Business School. 

The room will be full of professionals with technical skills, available to help resolve any difficulties you may be having with your project, the Judges will be represented to share with you what will be expected of you on judging day, and the yMedia Crew will also be on hand to help iron out any issues and to help ensure you’re ready for your final deadline.

This workshop is an opportunity not to be missed by the teams participating in the yMedia Challenge.

Workshop Report: What is News?

This workshop report comes from Alex, who is an account executive at Porter Novelli and one of the core yMedia crew.

For the seventh session in our series of yMedia workshops Helen Sissons from the AUT journalism department joined us at Media Design School to give us a presentation on the ever-relevant topic of ‘what is news?’

With over 10 years experience in the journalism field working for the likes of BBC and many other newspapers in America and the UK. Helen lives and breathes all that is news and was more than happy to share with us some of her key insights on what makes good news and what makes a news editor hit the delete button!

Drawing on this extensive experience, Helen’s presentation touched on all the factors that make a good news story; timing, significance, proximity, human interest and prominence.

Timing:

The word news means exactly that - things, which are new. Topics that are current are good news. Consumers are used to receiving the latest updates, and there is so much news around that old news is quickly discarded.

A story with only average interest needs to be told quickly if it is to be told at all. If it happened today, it’s news. If the same thing happened last week, it’s no longer interesting.

Significance:

The number of people affected by the story is important. For example a crash in which 4 people died will not rate as highly in the news agenda a plane crash killing hundreds.

Proximity:

Stories that happen near to us have more significance. The closer to home, the more newsworthy it is. For example what makes the front page in the Waikato may be very different to what makes the front page in Southland. Therefore it’s important to understand what media publications cover news in proximity to the community group you are working for and targeting them accordingly. 

Prominence:

Famous people get more coverage because they are famous. If you break your arm it won’t make the news, but if John Key breaks his arm it’s big news. This is why many campaigns employ the use a well-known personality to act as their media ambassador. Think Robyn Malcolm and the Greenpeace Sign On campaign.

Human Interest:

Last but not least is the human-interest story. These stores often disregard the main rules of newsworthiness; for example, they don’t date as quickly, they need not affect a large number of people, and it may not matter where in the world the story takes place.

Human interest stories appeal to emotion. They aim to evoke responses such as amusement or sadness. On a regular news day human interest stories usually feature within the body of the paper while on a slow news day a human interest story can make the front page.

A great blog to check out is www.badpitch.blogspot.com, which covers everything to do with pitching a story to a journalist. One point Helen reiterated was to give the reporter what they want by pushing their ‘hot buttons’. These ‘hot buttons’ include all of factors mentioned above while also listening to what reporters want, finding that point of difference and delivering what needs to be delivered.

Finally know what’s going on around you – whether it’s reading the paper, logging onto the Herald online or watching the news, to make news you have to know news! 

Report: Workshop #01: Brand Aid

Last Wednesday, yMedia had the privilege of having James Hurman speak at our first workshop for 2010: Brand Aid.

Planning director for Colenso BBDO, James has a huge amount of experience in the advertising industry and is a regular workshop presenter and guest speaker. Here are our favorite outtakes from his presentation. Thanks James!

James presents at MDS

Brand Aid with James Hurman

At first it seems that the branding strategies for organisations such as Air New Zealand may be too big and overwhelming. How could they relate to small community groups and not-for-profits? But the underlying fundamentals are the same. Be inspired, take that thinking, and use it in your world. Air New Zealand is one of the most well-managed brands in the country.

“They don’t have a mission statement, they keep it simple: “Who we are. What we do. How we do it”.

Its refreshing, and it helps their brand become more loved and more engaging.

What is a brand exactly?

We all know brands are critically important, but no-one can tell you what one is. You’ll find many definitions on Google, and you can get some very detailed descriptions. However, in the end a brand is “simply, clearly, why you exist”.

What is a brand good for anyway?

The capitalist view tells us that it adds financial value.”In 1988, Philip Morris purchased Kraft for six times what the company was worth on paper”. Effectively, he paid for the brand. The post-capitalist view sees people like David Packard (of HP) wanting ”to discuss why a company exists in the first place”.

The Harvard Business Review book ‘Built to Last’, contains studies of why some companies did better than others on the stock market. It becomes clear that those companies realised their purpose was more than making money.

Disney is not there to make cartoons, but “to make people happy”. 3M doesn’t just produce post-its, they’re there “to solve unsolved problems”. As Harvard Business professor Theodore Levitt states, “people don’t want a quarter inch drill bit, they want a quarter inch hole”. Forget about what you’re selling, and look at why you are there.

To give guys the edge in the mating game” - Lynx

Providing tools for creative minds” - Apple

To make women feel more beautiful everyday” - Dove

Simply, clearly, why you exist.

If you can get to the heart of that you’ve got a really strong brand platform.
What role does your organisation play in the lives of consumers or your community?
If you disappeared tomorrow, what would the world be deprived of?
What outcome do you create? What’s your “quarter inch hole”?
Who are you and who are you for?

Advertising is losing its major influence. People build brands from all the little things that organisation does, all their experiences with that brand, all the hear’say. All these things have to align under the brand. Brand communications are becoming less and less about ‘saying’ and more and more about ‘doing’. St Francis of Assisi once said “preach the gospel at all times, use words when necessary”.

Recent examples of this include the dissonance between what Telecom New Zealand has been saying about their products and services, and how the company acts and the service performs. Their advertising makes certain promises which have not been kept, and Telecom’s brand has been badly damaged as a result.

On the other hand, Meridian Energy has the most eco-friendly building in New Zealand. This aligns with their brand philosophy, and creates trust and believability.

Attendees discuss the application of James' theories to the NPO's purposes

Getting Practical

The room were asked to group together around the not-for-profit attendees to discuss their “quarter inch hole”, why they exist, and how that might be embodied by a brand.

Through the practical application, everyone in the room solidified their understanding of what a brand encompasses, and came away with a new found appreciation of how these theories affect their own operations.

How do you show support for the blind?

James’ Top Tips
To create a great brand:

  1. Clearly understand why you exist.
  2. Make sure that everything you do advances that purpose.