Strate named 2009 JacksonSpalding/PRSSA Outstanding Senior

26 04 2009

Katherine Strate was named the 2009 Jackson Spalding/PRSSA Outstanding Graduating Senior on Thursday, April 23. Strate, the daughter of Tom and Kelle Strate of Morristown, Tenn., will graduate on May 9, from The University of Georgia with a Bachelor of Journalism degree in public relations.strate-and-brodrick

The award, given by Jackson Spalding Athens and the Public Relations Student Society of America, each year recognizes a senior who has made outstanding contributions to the organization. Strate has served on the executive board for PRSSA for two years, as vice president of committees and membership, and as Webmaster.

“Katherine is the real face of PRSSA,” Dr. Betty Jones, faculty advisor, said. “She has represented us with professionalism and enthusiasm and has inspired younger members who are interested in careers in public relations with her creativity and innovation.

Brian Brodrick, who established the Athens office of Jackson Spalding, presented the award. Strate interned for him last summer.

“When we hire interns, we look for students with a force of personality and the talent to serve our clients,” Brodrick said.  ”Katherine had both. She was an incredible asset to our clients, the Athens community and our office in her time with us.  She raised the bar for all interns at Jackson Spalding in Athens.”

The award comes with $100 for the recipient to join a professional organization following graduation.

Two other students were recognized as PRSSA Members of the Year.

Kaitlyn Darr, a senior from Columbus, Ohio, has served this year as the director of Creative Consultants, PRSSA’s student-run PR firm. Creative Consultants provides free PR services to 23 clients in Athens-Clarke County. More than 100 PRSSA members are involved on Creative Consultants teams.

“Kaitlyn has worked tirelessly throughout the year to give Creative Consultants a much-needed face lift,” Dr. Jones said. “She values and respects the needs of the client while providing students with a good learning experience.”

Leslie Emanuele, a graduating senior from McDonough, Ga., has served this year as PRecedent editor, PRSSA’s monthly newsletter. “Leslie designed an impressive, informative newsletter for our organization this year. And she is always ready to help wherever we have needed her. Leslie has been a great team player for PRSSA.

With more than 230 members, PRSSA is the largest student organization in the Grady College at the university.





Help Out the Athens Convention and Visitors Bureau

3 04 2009

Our friends at the Athens Convention and Visitors Bureau are sending around a survey asking about internships we’ve held and our experiences with them. Please be a good citizen and fill out the survey for them.

It’s only eight questions and takes two minutes. Seriously, I’ve already done it.

Go here to see the survey: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=I_2bH_2bF9v_2bh9J4TWg7EFnj2A_3d_3d

Thanks for being great in general. I hope everyone has a fabulous weekend!





Whooda Thunk It? Twitter Analytics: 7 Ways to Analyze Twitter Streams

27 03 2009

In a blog post I read on Social Media Today, I found some extremely interesting information relating to how to analyze people’s Twitter accounts.

Haven’t you ever wondered how to compare people’s accounts? Who posts the most? Who has the most followers? Who’s a faithful Re-Tweeter? All of these programs help answer those questions.

As communicators, we want to reach those who will make recommendations to their friends about whatever we’re trying to promote: a band, a new drug, a Coke product, an anti-wrinkle cream…you get the picture. So, naturally, we want to find those influencers and see how we can persuade them to persuade others to use or buy our product (or support our company, or whatever).

Disclaimer: I usually don’t do this, but I’ve copied and pasted each description of the programs from the original blog post. I thought he could do a better job of explaining it than I could. Plus, it’s early in the morning, and I haven’t had my coffee yet.

#1: Twitalyzer

“provides activities analysis of any Twitter user, based on social media success yardsticks. Its metrics include (a) Influence score, which is basically your popularity score on Twitter (b) signal-to-noise ratio (c) one’s propensity to ‘retweet’ or pass along others’ tweets (d) velocity – the rate one’s updates on Twitter and (e) clout – based on how many times one is cited in tweets. Its Time-based Analysis of Twitter Usage produces graphical representation of progression on various measures. Using Twitalyzer is a easy; just enter your Twitter ID and that’s it! It doesn’t require any password to use its service. Speed of analysis is depending on the size of your Followed and Followers lists.”

#2: Microplaza

“offers an interesting way to make sense of your Twitter streams. Called itself “your personal micro-news agency,” it aggregates and organizes links shared by those you follow on Twitter and display them as newstream. Status updates that contain similar web links are aggregated into ’tiles.’ Within a tile, you can see updates from those you follow and also those you don’t. Another interesting feature is ‘Being Someone’, which you can peek into someone’s world and see their ’tiles’; designed to facilitate information discovery. You can also organize those you follow into groups or ‘tribes’. You can create, for example, a knitting ‘tribe’ to easily what URLs your knitting friends are tweeting. In addition, you can bookmark ’tiles’ for future reference. Its yet-to-be-released feature, Mosaic, allows users to group together the bookmarked ’tiles’ and turn them into social objects – for sharing and discussion. At the time of this posting, MicroPlaza is still in private beta.”

#3: Twist

“offers trends of keywords or product name, based what Twitter users are tweeting about. You can see frequency of a keyword or product name being mentioned over a period a week or a month and display them on a graph. Select an area on the graph to zoom into trend for specific time range. Click on any point on the graph to see all tweets posted during a specific time. One can also see the latest tweets on the topic. Twist also allows you do a trend comparison of two (or more) keywords. Its graphs are embeddable on any website. A simple but effective tool for trending, similar to what Google Trends is doing for search queries.”

#4: Twitturly

“tracks popular URLs tracker on Twitter. With Digg-style interface, it displays 100 most popular URLs shared on Twitter over the last 24 hours. On Digg, people vote for a particular web content, whereas on Twitterurly, each time a user share a link, it is counted as 1 vote. This is a good tool to see what people are ‘talking’ about in Twitterville and see total tweets that carry the links. Its URL stats provides information on number of tweets in last 24 hrs, last 1 week and last 1 month. It also calculates total estimated reach of the tweets. Another interesting site is Tweetmeme, which can filter popular URLs into blogs, images, videos and audios.”

#5: Tweetstats

“is useful to reveal tweeting behavior of any Twitter users. It consolidates and collates Twitter activity data and present them in colorful graphs. Its Tweet Timeline is probably the most interesting, as it shows month-by-month total tweets since your joined Twitter (TweetStats showed Evan Williams, co-founder of Twitter, started tweeting since March 2006; 80 tweets during that month). Twitterholic can also show when a person joined Twitter but not in graphical format. Other metrics include (a) Aggregate Daily Tweets – total tweets, by day (c) Aggregate Hourly Tweets – total tweets, by hour (d) Tweet Density: hourly Twitter activities over 7 days period (e) Replies to: top 10 persons you’ve replied and (f) Interfaces Used: top 10 clients used to access Twitter. In addition, its Tweet Cloud allows you to see the popular words you used in your tweets.”

#6: Twitterfriends

“focuses on conversation and information aspects of Twitter users’ behaviors. Two key metrics are Conversational Quotient (CQ) and Links Quotient (LQ). CQ measures how many tweets were replied whereas LQ measures how many tweets contained links. Its TwitGraph displays six metrics – Twitter rank, CQ, LQ, Retweet Quotient, Follow cost, Fans and @replies. Its interactive graph (using Google Visualization API) can displays relationships between two variables. In addition, you can search for conversations between two Twitter users. This app seems to slice-and-dice data in more ways compared to other applications listed here.”

#7: Thummit Quickrate

“offers sentiments analysis, based on conversations on Twitter. This web application identifies latest buzzwords, actors, movies, brands, products, etc. (called ‘topics’) and combines them with conversations from Twitter. It does sentiment analysis to determine whether each Twitter update is Thumms up (positive), neutral or Thumms down (negative). Click on any topic to display opinions on the topic found on Twitter. In addition, it allows people to vote on topics via its website or mobile phones. The idea behind this app is good but still has some kinks to work out.”

#8: Tweeteffect

“matches your tweets timeline with your gain/lose followers timeline to determine which tweet makes you lost or gain followers. It analyze the latest 200 tweets and highlights tweets that coincides with you losing or gaining two (or more) followers in less than 5 minutes. This application simplistically assumed that your tweet is the sole factor affecting your gain/lose followers pattern. But, in reality, there are many other factors involved. Nevertheless, TweetEffect is still a fun tool to use; just don’t take the results too seriously.”





…and this time, we’re taking orders!

18 03 2009

That’s right, everyone!

The Great PRSSA Biscuit Sale is once more coming to a campus near you.

…and this time, we’re taking orders!

From 8:30-11 a.m. this Friday, March 20, we’ll be at the Arch once more selling plain and chicken biscuits from Chick-fil-A to passerbys and offices on campus.

If you’d like to place an order for your office, please e-mail prssabiscuits@gmail.com and include the following information:

  • number of biscuits (plain= $2, chicken= $2.50)
  • liaison’s name
  • office name (where you are on campus, so we can find you)
  • delivery time (between 8:30 and 11 a.m.)

Sound good? If you have any questions about it, just include it in your e-mail.

For all you on-the-fly buyers, we SOLD OUT last time, so hurry and get them while they’re hot!

We hope this chicken biscuit sale will be even more successful than the last one, but it’s up to you to make it happen! All the proceeds go towards our professional in residence program that will help compensate a public relations professional to come speak and hang out with us for a week…a different kind of learning!

We hope all of you will turn out for the GREAT PRSSA BISCUIT SALE!!

P.S. If you’re wondering about the picture of Donkey, the phrase “and this time, we’re taking orders” reminds me of Donkey’s line, “and in the mo’nin, I’m makin’ WAFFLES!” Thought you’d find it funny. :)





18 Georgia Desperados On Our D.C. Journey

27 02 2009

Well, we just finished the second day of our D.C. journey, and I’m just now mustering up enough energy to write a post about it!

So far, we’ve visited Valerie Elston at Levick Strategic Communications, Carolyn Tieger at Porter Novelli, Senator Johnny Isackson at the Capitol and Erin Caldwell at Edelman. Our schedule has been super busy, but we’ve been loving every minute of it!

Washington D.C. is a city you can easily fall in love with. I’ve never been in a place where I feel a part of something so much bigger than myself. Everyone’s dressed to the nines; the streets are clean; important conversations are going on EVERYWHERE, and everyone is always talking about politics.

Now, I like to consider myself a concerned citizen of America, but I am by no means a self-proclaimed politics lover. I was worried about not being obsessed with politics if I moved to D.C., but Mrs. Tieger told me not to fear. I figured it was something you’d learn more and more about the longer you lived here, but she helped calm my fears about it.

Ah, yes. What have we learned so far?

After consulting with my roommates, @mturner21 and @carlyed, these are the lessons we feel we’ve learned from each place we visited:

  • Levick: “Ask stupid questions intelligently.” Gene Grabowski, Senior Vice President, told us this, and we all enjoyed the breath of fresh air. He said that sometimes interns are afraid to ask questions, but if you ask all your questions intelligently (even if they are a little stupid), people will be glad to help you. We were so excited to have Gene grace us with his presence. Britney Watson had even listened to a podcast he recorded about A-Rod earlier in the week and told him he was like a celebrity to her. So cute!
  • Porter Novelli: “Not every blog is influential, but every influential person has a blog.” YES! All of us wanted to stand up and say, “Amen, brother!” when Eddie Garrett, SVP of Digital Marketing at Porter Novelli’s D.C. office, told this to us yesterday. It’s so true, though! We were talking about how to reach people through social media, and he connected it just like that for us. Eddie is a “Double Dawg.” He has an ABJ from Grady and an MBA from Terry. Needless to say, Georgia people are SMART!
  • Senator Isackson: Success is about relationships. Senator Isackson told us that if you care about a person for who he or she really is, despite race, color, ethnicity, background, or whatever you can come up with, you’ll be truly successful in life, and people will trust you.
  • Edelman: As an intern, it’s SUPER important for you to always ask your superior what the “next step” is after you’ve completed a task. Normal people do only what’s required, but Edelman interns (and Grady students) are expected to go beyond the call of duty. After all, if you are hired full time as an account coordinator and don’t know what to do after writing a press release, you’re not going to get anywhere. Common sense, y’all.

That’s pretty much it for our adventure so far! D.C. is amazing. Grady is awesome. Weather is cold. Sleep is lacking…but we’re learning so much.

Go dawgs!





Love you some biscuits.

11 02 2009

Come one, come all, to the greatest biscuit sale Athens has ever seen!

This Friday, Feb. 13 from 8:30 to 11 a.m. your PRSSA friends will be at The Arch selling Chick-fil-A biscuits.

We’ll have BOTH plain and chicken biscuits, so bring your vegetarian friends, too.

The chicken biscuits will be going for $2.50, and the plain biscuits will be $2.

Who can think of a better way to start off your Friday?

There isn’t one.

So, come see us and get a biscuit! The funds we raise are going to the professional in residence fund, so we can pay a public relations professional to take off work for a week and come hang out with us. If we sell a lot of biscuits, maybe we can rope in Richard Edelman. Who knows??

The possibilities are endless, and so is the hunger in your stomach.

biscuits





From a Strate: You Are What You Tweet

3 02 2009

Even though (to my knowledge) I am in no way related to Professor Lance Strate at Fordham University in New York, there’s something about the Strate name that brings us Strates together.

I have been following Prof. Strate on Twitter for a while, and, as coincidence goes, he is a professor of communication. In his latest post, “You Are What You Tweet,” he brought up an interesting subject that, I believe, helps bridge the gap between “old” communication and “new” communication.

People say that communication has “changed soooo much” since the 1940s or whatever, and it has. However, I still think the basic principles remain, and it is our job as communication professionals to help our clients understand that. In this age of new media and social media, we tend to lose sight of the roots and reasons behind what we do.

Prof. Strate describes a discussion he had with another person on Twitter. Here’s part of what Prof. Strate wrote:

“This person started posting news items about a political controversy via Twitter, and all of the items had a very strong slant, or shall we say bias, one that went counter to my own leanings. Now, I am all for people being free to express their opinions. And of course, that includes having the right to respond to people expressing their opinions with your own opinions and counterarguments. So I started to respond to this person’s tweets.

This individual did respond to me indicating that he was posting this material because American media is one-sided, and he wanted to see what the other side had to say. This sounded strange to me, since there’s a difference between looking at items and posting the links on Twitter. Just to reinforce that point, here are some of the specific replies I sent as this exchange continued. While I’m only giving you my side of the story, my intent is not to win an argument, just to make a point about the medium:

if you’re posting one side of a controversy, you’re doing more than peeking at the other side, you are advocating for them.”

I’ve never heard it put that way before, but I think the Strate is right.

While Twitter is known as a microblogging site, it does not serve the same purpose as a blog.

“…In this medium there is nothing else apart from what you put out there. There is your profile, and there’s whatever URL you include, and there’s your little icon. Apart from those items, you yourself are constituted, in this medium, by and through the messages you send–they create your persona, your self. In face-to-face interaction, nonverbal cues are very powerful and meaningful, and I can remain silent and communicate a great deal, especially on the relationship level. On Twitter, there is almost no nonverbal communication, it’s all in what you say.”

Do you get what he’s saying? Because you’re limited to 140 characters on Twitter, you’re not supposed to ramble on about the fact that you posted something but you don’t really agree with it…yadda, yadda, yadda. As Prof. Strate says, when you Tweet, your Tweets inherently have YOUR stamp of approval, your advocacy behind them. If you want to argue with someone, go to a discussion forum or something (That’s K. Strate’s opinion.).

As Prof. Strate was closing, these were some of his final Tweets:

“When you tweet, you are not just transmitting information, you are establishing an identity, constructing a persona or self

When you tweet, you are projecting a definition of who you are, and your relationship to your “followers” and readers

Your followers and readers in turn take part in defining who you are, based on what you tweet

In other words, you are what you tweet!”

I know a lot of us have talked about building “our own brand” by our presence on social media applications. To me, Twitter is a huge part of that brand-building process, but you need to be careful about what you say. If someone is looking at your public profile and can only see your updates and NO replies from anyone else, what is he or she going to think about your brand if you’re trying to be a rebel rouser and play The Devil’s Advocate?

Prof. Strate talks in the next paragraph about the basics of communication and why we do what we do.

“Having said that, I do think that this all relates to the seminal work of Paul Watzlawick, as presented in the book he co-authored with Janet Beavin Bavelas and Donald D. Jackson, entitled The Pragmatics of Communication. This was one of the key works for the discipline of communication back when I was a student…That’s where Watzlawick and his colleagues presented their first axiom of communication, One cannot not communicate.

The point of that is simply that everything you say or do, or don’t say or do, has message value, says something one way or another, especially about yourself and your feelings. They also note that communication always functions on two different levels, one being the content level we are always aware of. The other is the relationship level, where we communicate about how to relate to one another and how to interpret the content we are sending–in fact, it is difficult to know what to make of the content unless we first have established a relationship. The relationship level is always present, but we may not be aware of it most of the time. But it is much more powerful than the content level–relationship overwhelms content…Bring Erving Goffman into the mix, based on his well known book, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, and it also follows that along with establishing and maintaining relationships, we are projecting our own definitions of the situation to others, and hoping that they accept those definitions. And we are putting on a performance, playing a role, and in doing so, creating a persona or sense of self.”

This is where I think he bridges the gap between old and new communication. Think about the persona you’re creating when you’re on Twitter. “One cannot not communicate.” Like he said before, there aren’t any nonverbals on Twitter, so it’s all about what you say. It’s about what you’re communicating.

I guess it’s just something to think about, but I’d love to hear what you have to say.








Yeah, we’re blogger-ific.

19 01 2009

If you’ll look at the top of the homepage under the PRecedent tab, you’ll see a list of all our PRSSA student bloggers who want YOU to follow them, comment and interact.

If your name isn’t on there, please e-mail me at strate87@gmail.com, and I’ll put you on there! This is a great opportunity for you to start one, and we got over 2,000 hits on the PRSSA blog last WEEK. That means a lot of people could potentially check out your blog.

To those who have started, congratulations! I hope we’ll get some good readership out of this.

Here’s the list anyway:

Lauren Groblewski: www.lifeonland.wordpress.com

Stekki Mazo: http://stekkimazo.blogspot.com

Jessica Slevin: www.jessicaslevin.blogspot.com

Cameron King: http://www.cameronaking.blogspot.com/

Katherine Strate: www.dawg-food.com

Kristen Fraser: http://klfrasernmi.wordpress.com/





Build your Portfolio over the Holidays!

2 12 2008

Deck the halls, everyone! The holidays are almost here, and we’re entering the home stretch of this wintery, frigid end to the semester.

I am definitely looking forward to laying on my couch, watching TCM (commercial free), putting up decorations, and sleeping, but after the first week or so, I begin to get REALLY bored. Come to Morristown, and you’ll see what I mean.

My home newspaper, The Citizen Tribune, is a local publication that mostly talks about politics, new roads, ribbon cuttings, and loving cats.  Yes, it’s true.

So, last Christmas break, I decided to ask the editor of our paper if I could write a couple of articles about social media. As it turns out, he had been wanting some articles like that published, so I came at a good time!

The articles were well received, and the three of them were published throughout the Christmas break.  They were kind of themed like, “Don’t be scared of social media. It’s fun!”  Of course, I worded it better than that, but you get the point.

Anyways, I want to encourage you to contact the editor of your hometown newspaper to see if you’d be able to do some writing while you’re home!  Most of you have probably had newswriting by now, and I’m sure you’ll impress them with your awesome use of AP Style and professional writing skills.

You can also get paid!  If that doesn’t rope you in, I don’t know what will.

Then, when you go to your internship interviews, your potential employer will love the fact that you donated some of your time over the break. :)

Over the break, you should also watch A Christmas Story.  It’s one of my favorite movies, and I decided to share a little clip with you.