• Starr Million Baker
  • Kari Hernandez
  • Blair Poloskey
  • Micaela Whalen
  • Helen Rodriguez
  • Allison Glass
  • Jennifer Sisk
  • Candice Eng
  • Jessica Warren
  • Rachael Genson
  • Adrienne Huebner

Want to get quoted? Get some balls

March 21st, 2012 by

Just saw this quote in an article on Mashable about start-up OneID:

“OneID is like what PayPal should have been when it comes to security,” Kirsch said. “We are going to leapfrog PayPal. We are PayPal 4.0.”

That, my friends, is a quote. It’s got an analogy to help people understand the start-up’s business model and key differentiators, putting it in perspective with a company the audience knows. It’s got conflict in terms of calling out a company on what it’s not doing right. It’s got visual words – when’s the last time you used “leapfrog” in a quote? Quite frankly, it’s got balls.

Clients: if you want to be quoted (which I know you do), you have to speak in real English (NO ONE actually says the word “robust”). You have to paint a picture with your words. You have to go out on a limb and provide the conflict the media and audience are looking for. And sometimes, you need to have balls.

Seen a good quote lately? Share in the comments. Corporate spokespeople need all the inspiration they can get!

He's got balls.

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SMILE, You’re at SXSW: Awards Edition

March 19th, 2012 by

Well, we did it. We made it through another SXSW—the whole shebang. Beyond the marathon of intellectual inspiration, music discovery and free food, I’d have to say my favorite part was the photo booth we put together for INK’s Green Room sponsorship.

Three criteria are crucial to the success of a photo booth

1. The camera. Smilebooth’s innovative technology produces high quality photos.

2. The props. Leslie Blevins contributed her craft, creativity and sleeping time to make our unbelievably spectacular props and backdrop.

3. The people. The heart of a photograph is the subject, so we thank all who participated.

We have closely analyzed each and every photo from the week, narrowing them down to a handful of favorites based on the following criteria: facial expression, body language, use of space, use of props and creativity and/or weirdness. We are pleased to present each of the following photos with a special recognition.

Award: Best Life Advice

Award: Best Advice

Award: Best Interpretation of Props

Award: Best Interpretation of Props

Award: Best Shameless Plug

Award: Best Shameless Plug

Award: Most Likely to be an INK Client (Gemalto)

Award: Most Likely to be INK' Client

Award: Most Adorable Nerd

Award: Cutest Nerd

Award: Best Representation of Austin

Award: Most Texan

Award: Most Air (we have a tie!)

Award (TIE): Best Jump

Award (TIE): Best Jump

Award: Best Unified Theme

Award: Most Unified Theme

Award: Best Interpretation of a Deer in Headlights

Award: Best Impression of a Deer in Headlights

Award: Best Accessorizing with Props (how well does that bow tie go with those glasses?)

Award: Best Matching of Prop to Existing Outfit (Bow Tie to Glasses)

See all the photos from the week on INK’s Facebook page. What do you think of the booth? Do you have a favorite photo or prop?

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Best New iPad Feature? Bluetooth 4.0

March 16th, 2012 by
  1. Last week, right before the world turned its attention to SXSW, it spent the better part of March 7 with its eyes on Cupertino and the “new iPad.” Retina display? Check. iPhoto for iPad? Double check. Bluetooth 4.0? Absolutely – though you wouldn’t have known it if not for quick work by INK.

     

    We recommended a “coat tails” media strategy: riding on the interest in and news around the new iPad, we pointed out - via media pitches and a fast turnaround press release, that the new iPad was the world’s first Bluetooth Smart Ready tablet. Over 40 original articles showed the media was getting the message – pull-through of our three main points (first Bluetooth Smart Ready tablet; benefit = low energy; benefit = expanding ecosystem) was extensive. Read for yourself:

  2. Brian Bennett’s tweet around his CNet story was retweeted over 50 times and reached 31,857 people. Nice.

  3. Share
    New iPad first tablet with Bluetooth 4.0: Should you care? cnet.co/zY6eCq via @CNET
    Mon, Mar 12 2012 20:38:53
  4. An added bonus was excitement created by the news in the healthcare space, a priority vertical for the Bluetooth message. One interview turned into one story, which turned into a multitude of tweets and a tweet reach of over 49K – very nice.

  5. Share
    The new iPad’s inclusion of Bluetooth 4.0 position it to be your mobile health hub imedicalapps.com/2012/03/n… by @healthgrid via @imedicalapps
    Mon, Mar 12 2012 20:02:56
  6. Our Bluetooth SIG client said “It was one of the most successful media campaigns I’ve been a part of in my career.” High praise – and we aspire to keep it up.

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SXSW – who did it best

March 15th, 2012 by

The last five days were a whirlwind of activity for INK and several of our clients participating in SXSW. Hats off to our amazing team who worked day and night to make the most out of the event and who still made time for panels and parties, tweeting all along the way! The amazing thing about SXSW is that even though you hardly sit down or sleep for five days, you somehow come out of the event with more energy than you arrived with. The show is undoubtedly a business event (what true consumers do you know that would spend $500-1000 on a show badge?) but it promotes and demonstrates a better side of business, a more human side of technology, and I find that motivating and invigorating. My biggest takeaways from the event and who did it best:

Don’t be afraid to be BOLD
Don’t be afraid to light up downtown, to inject personality and embrace conflict in your storytelling, or if you have the means, bring out Hova.

- To launch the new Fuelband device (with Bluetooth 4.0 I might add!) and API, Nike turned Austin’s tallest building into a mobile app to track the energy level of the crowd at its Diplo/Sleigh Bells party.

- American Express hosted an exclusive Jay-Z concert to promote its Sync service, which allows cardholders to link their cards to their Twitter accounts to earn discounts. The show took place at the Moody Theater, home of Austin City Limits. Granted, you had to get in line at the crack of dawn to get tickets but I hear it was worth it. Doesn’t get much bolder and got American Express a lot of buzz and good will.

- Kara Swisher rocked her Monday panel, “Anything You Can Do, I Can Do Backwards in Heels,” because she injected humor and her personality into her presentation, and she was speaking about a topic she’s passionate about. She does this every day in her writing as well.

Nike lights up Austin

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Be Human, Be Useful
Some of the most effective campaigns at SXSW were unselfish and helpful for people at the event, leaving a lasting and positive impression with show-goers.

- Instead of offering up music, booze or breakfast tacos (although, do not let me discourage anyone from offering up those wonderful things – very human, very useful ;-) , Nokia gave out Lumias to 50 Twitter users as part of its #ijustplantedatree campaign to help rebuild Central Texas after the devastating wildfires last year. The company donated money for 5 trees to be planted every time someone tweeted the hashtag #ijustplantedatree. Thank you Nokia!

- We loved that HBO sponsored a bike share, providing a necessity and, at the same time, moving billboards for its new show Girls (here’s the trailer).

- Mapquest got props for its “Colorado Ranch” offsite hang-out as a relaxed place to connect with Colorado start-ups from Erika Napoletano, author of The Power of Unpopular (which I just started reading, will let you know what I learn) in this Forbes interview.

Nokia's SXSW campaign

The biggest FAIL at SXSW this year? Homeless hotspots. Granted it was bold and arguably useful (depending which side of that hotspot you were on) but they overstepped into inhumane territory. I think Jon Stewart said it best last night.

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Identity Protection at #SXSW

March 13th, 2012 by

Identity and data protection seem to be odd topics to address at SXSW when it seems like the majority of festival-goers are over-sharing via Twitter, Facebook and the latest and greatest location-based social networking apps. Yet INK client, CSID is speaking on three panels over the course of the conference all dealing with how consumers and businesses can protect critical information like email addresses, passwords and credit card information.

It truly is an interesting topic that addresses an ever-growing problem (data breaches resulting in stolen customer info were at an all-time high last year) with no real solution. If a group with the right skill-set decides to hack your business, there is no stopping them. As a matter of fact, some businesses plan for and act like all their customer information has already been compromised and focus security efforts on confirming the right person is logging in.

The theme of CSID’s three panels is preparedness. As a consumer, preparedness means proactively monitoring your personal information for misuse, keeping an eye on your credit reports and billing statements and using common sense when creating passwords, sharing information and clicking on suspicious links. As a business, preparedness means, among other things, having a crisis communications plan in place that can be rolled out in the event of the breach.

Joe Ross, president of CSID, pontificates to the SXSW crowd

You can learn more about CSID’s three SXSW panels at www.CSID.com. Also, keep an eye on CSID’s blog for summaries of each panel. Lastly, be wary of what information you share during SXSW. You never know where it may end up!

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For Tech Start-Ups: Review of PR Session at SXSWi

March 12th, 2012 by

Saturday morning, day 2 (or the first full day 1) of SXSWi. Daughter 1 off to dance class, daughter 2 snuggled in with Dad, I headed downtown for a panel from four leaders of the PR agency world (one being my former boss, Gary Stockman, CEO of Porter Novelli). I was thinking I would hear something about “the changing world of PR” or some other battle lessons learned by the “big guys.” I did not think I would be third in a line of about 50 people waiting to get into an already packed room at 15 minutes till go-time. It became a one-in-one-out situation, but I made it in 5 minutes after start (apparently the guy at the door took pity on me – I *might* have looked ready to cry at the prep I had done to get there and the thought of missing my target). 

Instead of your basic “lessons learned” the panelists critiqued the handling of PR by companies American Airlines, Lowes and Netflix. An interesting approach that kept the audience engaged due to a common experience with each brand, this allowed the panelists to share some broadbased insight. I do believe there was a frustration among the crowd though who thought these brand critiques had nothing at all to do with their business, their start-up. After all, small companies looking to use PR to advance their own brands WAY out number the big brands of the world doing their thing with PR as one tool in their toolbox. 

PR leaders talk comms

For those tech start-ups, entreprenuers, and small company owners in the crowd, this is what I heard that can also apply to you: 

- Incorporate communications FROM THE BEGINNING. We are communicating in real time these days – we don’t have the opportunity to react in days or weeks, but rather must do so in minutes or hours. If you know your communication plan, messages, objectives from the start, you’ll be able to move as fast as any news cycle, any crisis, any opportunity that comes your way.

- Talk like humans. This cannot be overstated. Get out of your own head, out of your own bubble, and speak English. This will serve you will no matter your company size, no matter your business. “Tech talk” is REALLY old and overdone. 

- Don’t rely just on mainstream media to tell your story. Find those online influencers (and those real-life influencers in the communities you serve) that will be brand advocates for you. These are people that are passionate about the problem you’re solving, and even if you’re figuring out a bigger badder SQL database, there is a DBA somewhere that is going to be PSYCHED about that. Find him. 

- Integrate your communications. Even for a one-product start-up, this is a necessity. When you launch, you’ll have the press release and the mainstream media coverage, but don’t forget to update your website, email your customers (or potential customers) – hit all of your audiences where they live, all at the same time. 

- Listen, listen, listen. This goes back to getting out of your own bubble a bit, but if you aren’t listening you are not only going to hurt yourself on the communication front, but you might even miss that you’re creating a solution for a problem people don’t think is that big of a deal. Listening will serve you well in all aspects of your business, and communications professionals can help you figure out the best tools. 

- Lastly, be consistent with what you say AND what you do, over time. Perhaps you’ll have an awesome launch with excellent media coverage, but you’ve got to keep up the communication and the engagement on a daily basis to be successful and build a brand that anyone cares about.

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Gemalto Takes on SXSWi – Rain or Shine, in Full Force

March 11th, 2012 by

You would have to live in a cave to miss the buzz surrounding Austin’s largest social innovation event – SXSW Interactive, currently underway and occupying all of downtown. Gemalto, recognized as a global leader in digital security, is taking on the show for the first time – and definitely making an impact.

Gemalto is hosting the Idea/Next lounge (check out http://www.ideanext-gemalto.com/home for all the details) located in the Hilton, Room 602 for the entirety of the show. Created with the intention to recharge, relax and connect with some of the best and brightest in all things digital security, this lounge has been a hotspot of activity from “coffee with the experts” sessions to Happy hour panels, and even a partnership with local location-based guru Aaron Strout and his Live from Stubbs podcast series (shooting live the next two days in the lounge from 4-5PM).

Nan Edwards, ISIS, on Live from Stubbs podcast

Along with the lounge, Gemalto also sponsored the Big Data track that took place yesterday in the Hilton, and hosted sessions focusing on mobile payments, cloud computing security, enterprise privacy and social networks.  Gemalto expert Jack Jania and Gordon Beatty participated in a panel (to a full house) on what’s next in mobile payments with Chief Marketing Officer Ryan Hughes of ISIS. Gemalto recently a partnership with ISIS, and continues to promote the security behind this launch taking place in Austin this summer. (ISIS is also rocking the house, for lack of a better phrase, at SXSW showcasing their mobile wallet through a cyber illusionist – this guy is amazing!)

Panel room during Gemalto's session.

Even with extremely unpleasant weather the first few days, the Idea/Next lounge continues to be a hotbed of activity and a premiere place where ideas, innovations, and relationships are coming together.  We’re expecting to hear from the best and brightest minds in startup and emerging technologies, and learn about the newest innovations. If you’re attending SXSW – come by and connect (or Kinect, we do have Just Dance available to unwind).

Idea/Next Lounge in full-swing.

Happy South-By from the Gemalto team.

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Can You Tell Me a Story? SXSWi Day 1 Retrospect

March 10th, 2012 by

We’ve talked quite a bit about storytelling lately. It’s always been something we pride ourselves on doing well, it’s the essence of what our business is about (“we are professional storytellers in search of the right words and the right audience for your tale of success”), and it’s hard to do well. At SXSW yesterday, it was the topic of a panel attended by INK’s Jessica Warren. One of her tweets from the mouth’s of one of the panelists stuck in my head – “if it doesn’t offend anyone, it’s not going to excite anyone.”

Let that sink in for a second. It’s not saying “if it doesn’t offend anyone, it’s not a good story.” (That was actually what I thought for quite awhile till I read it again.) Stories aren’t stories without confict. The protagonist needs the atagonist, reporters need the good and the bad, no one writes a 100% glowing story on a company. But is conflict offensive? Does the negative always offend someone? And if a creation story (like how Tabbedout was born from the idea that people like founder Rick Orr shoudn’t have to wait an hour for his tab) doensn’t offend someone is it not exciting? I’m sure Tabbedout’s investors would beg to differ.

So perhaps we don’t need to get offensive to tell a good story, but we do need to start doing a better job of telling engaging stories – those that are interesting for both company and customer, that acknowledge the bad just as they herald the good, those that are INTERESTING. From Jessica’s notes of the panel she attended: “I learned that anyone can tell a great and interesting story – even the ‘most boring’ company or topic. It’s just a matter of finding the right audience, the right message, and the right means to tell it.” That’s what we love to do, and are good at doing – lucky for us, and our clients. More on storytelling as it relates to PR – and as it relates to transparency (storytelling ≠ not telling the truth) – tomorrow.

Other stuff we loved (or not) from SXSWi Day One:

- Um, didn’t love the rain. And the cold. And the rain. WTF, it was 80 last week!?! Did love that everyone seemed to bond over how crappy the weather is.

- Loved David Eagleman’s panel The Secret Lives of the Brain. Learned tha almost everything we attribute to cognition is running under the hood, incognito.

- Happy that the green room looks awesome and is so much fun (see Micaela, Allison and Adrienne hamming it up below), and the Gemalto lounge is rocking.

- Who doesn’t love the people watching? And the running into people you never see in Austin? (Hello Walt Mossberg, middle of the hall, and thanks for the big ol’ hug. :-) )

More to come…

Micaela, Allison and Adrienne ham it up in INK green room at SXSWi

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Smile, you’re at SXSW!

March 9th, 2012 by

After months of brainstorming, planning and endless logistics, SXSW is finally here! As Starr highlighted last night, our clients have a lot going on down here – make sure to check them out – but we’ve also got something pretty darn cool cooking up ourselves. For the second year, INK is sponsoring the speaker-ready room at the Austin Convention Center where THREE THOUSAND SPEAKERS will filter through over the next five days. We turned some heads in 2011 with our thINK yarn bombing exhibit and the fan-favorite bouncy balls, so we had to come out big to top that. This year for a little added speaker fun, INK teamed with Smilebooth, a little company out of Houston turning heads across the country for its innovative approach to photo booths. For the sensational backdrop and hilarious props (“Call me Big Data” is my fave), we turned to my favorite blogger and crafting genius Leslie Blevins of FeltandHoney.com. Everything came together beautifully and here we are, about to welcome our first speakers. Up first, an all-INK picture. You can see more where this came from by following the hashtag #speaksxsw.

INK takes SXSW!

Friends and enemies do not fret, we also have another round of speaker tips cards this year. If you’re going for BOLD and maybe a little kookie, these tips are a SXSW must-have (kudos to the clever and random @jessicanwarren).

INK's speaker tip cards, circa 2012

Have fun at SXSW, people! Be bold, be social, be just a little bit weird – because remember, you’re in Austin! Enjoy!

The wold comes to Austin - SXSW 2012

 

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It’s here! INK at SXSWi 2012

March 8th, 2012 by

It’s SXSW eve. For some, that means prep for parties, travel, anticipation of who they’ll see and what they’ll do. For INK, it means prep for clients, travel (of the 15-30 minute variety – gotta love it when the best thing happening is in your own backyard), and anticipation of what we’ll learn and how our clients will do. We’ve got a lot going on this year, for our clients and the SXSWi speaker pool at large. For the second year running we’re hosting a fun and stress-free getaway in the speaker ready room (more on that tomorrow from @karihernandez). And as if calming down thousands of stressed out speakers wasn’t enough, we’re also excited for the many ways three of our clients are making their own bold statements throughout the show:

@CSID: this team owns SXSW panels on Monday. If you want to know about voice verification, cloud security and breach preparedness, these are your panels.

@Gemalto_NA: stop by the lounge for coffee, happy hour, and a few podcasts in between; panels on Sat will tune you in to mobile payment and digital security.

@Tabbedout: party much? Pay with Tabbedout at the Interactive Opening Party at the Belmont Friday night. Then go check out more on mobile payment at founder Rick Orr’s panel on Tuesday.

The INK team will be taking this opportunity to soak up as much of the SXSWi experience as possible. Beyond supporting our clients’ events, you can find us listening and learning at sessions throughout the show, and mingling at parties and events throughout the week. If you see one of us, be bold and say hi – let’s have a beer, and share a story or two.

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