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October 2nd, 2009 by John Brown

Future graduates: your PR career has to start now!

Your career seems like a lifetime away and anyway, surely a 1st in some form of degree will be enough for you to waltz into a PR agency of your choice and demand a lucrative salary and expense account.

Future graduates, you are wrong.

Whether you are graduating in 2010 or 2013, you will be entering one of the most competitive job markets in recent years and you need to make damn sure that you have earnt some PR stripes well before you send through your CV.

So as a relatively recent graduate who managed to avoid the doll queue, I thought I would share with you my top ten tips.  No…..Scrap that.  I will share with you the top ten minimum criteria that you need to achieve in order to stand a good chance of getting that first PR role:

1.    Read: Industry press, newspapers (regional and national), trade magazines, influential bloggers; you need to be keeping up with the media and PR industry on a daily basis.  Read, absorb and read again.

2.    Get a PR client: You are at university and have access to a thousand and one different societies, clubs, sports teams etc. Approach these people and offer them your PR services.  There may even be a little (and I mean tiny) bit of budget there to do a PR campaign, but most of the time it would be your time spent for free

3.    Start pitching: The biggest fear a grad starter has is speaking with journalists.  Well as one of my MDs put it in his recent blog “That’s a big part of the job, dummy”.  The sooner you overcome this fear the better.  Develop a press release for your new penniless client and start pitching it to the local press.  Try and make sure it is at least vaguely interesting, it will help

4.    Blog: A blog is a fantastic way of honing your writing skills, commenting on industry issues and getting yourself noticed.  Write what you want but bear in mind who is going to read it, a blog can be the most important bit of writing you do before your first job.

5.    Tweet: If you haven’t been then you need to get a move on.  Twitter, despite its recent increase of spam, is still a great platform for developing a network, showcasing your activity, pitching to journalists and interacting with future peers and colleagues.  Ignore it at your peril

6.    Get LinkedIn: Develop your profile and add anyone and everyone you come across in a professional capacity.  Having a bank of contacts to bring to the table at interviews will impress and may make things easier once you start

7.    Experience Junkie: It doesn’t matter what your lecturers say, you cannot learn the trade with a hangover in a lecture theatre and agency owners know this.  I promise you, if you are eager, you won’t be a coffee monkey.  Work experience is gold dust to a new grad, start yours as soon as possible.

8.    Work at a publication: Maybe blurring the lines, but I think utterly valuable.  Spending a little time in a newsroom will give you a glimpse into how busy a journalist’s life is. It will make you appreciate their time, their working day and their editorial process.  You may even like a couple of them.

9.    Don’t be an arse: PR is still full of self righteous people who treat journalists as a nuisance and clients as a means to max out the company credit card.  These people are quickly being exposed as the industry gets tougher.  Start off well, understand that you are at the beginning of a very big learning cycle and always act professionally.

10.  Get in quick: Start applying for jobs at the beginning of your final year.  Hopefully, if you have followed the above, you will have relationships with a few agencies, be able to get some journalist references and have a portfolio of work.  Now all that is left is for you to do is get in there before anyone else. It’s never too early to apply.  Worst that can happen is that they advise you to apply later, they may even remember your name!

    July 28th, 2009 by admin

    Hot off the tech media

    CBR Online – Security warnings over iPhone’s enterprise credentials
    A well known security expert has posted clips to YouTube showing how easy it is to bypass iPhone passwords and encryption, effectively undermining the latest Apple smartphone as an enterprise-ready device that is comparable with the Blackberry.

    Computing – Clothing retailer irons out supply chain errors with new voice-based app
    The owner of clothing brand Bench is using a voice-based package to improve productivity and accuracy at its warehouse.

    FT Technology – Apple ties tablet release to music sales drive
    Apple is aiming to ship its oft-rumoured tablet-style touch-screen computer this fall, we reported over the weekend, combining a big screen with the functionality of an iPod Touch.

    Computing – Government CIO starts blogging
    Government CIO John Suffolk has started a blog outlining his views and ideas on IT in the public and private sectors.  Suffolk works in the Cabinet Office and is responsible for enabling public service transformation through the strategic deployment of technology, driving the development of shared services and implementing the cross-government green IT agenda.

    ITVT – Radio: The BBC’s Managing Editor of TV Platforms, John Denton, Discusses BBC Red Button

    The Guardian – Is Big Brother following you? Government’s guide to using Twitter
    The Government releases a 20-page guide to Twitter.

    Computer Weekly – UK IT industry will lose out in era of ‘deglobalisation’

    Britain’s technology industry stands to lose out in the aftermath of the financial crisis as countries reject globalisation to help get their economies back on their feet.

    BBC News – Broadband rates ‘not up to speed’
    Broadband users are not getting the speeds they are paying for, according to the largest survey of its kind ever undertaken by telecoms regulator Ofcom.

    July 15th, 2009 by Claire Jones

    Speed date with… Adrian Bridgwater, columnist, ZDNet

    Do you feel threatened by blogs & their capacity to break news stories?

    As a blogger myself my answer has to be no. I also write news, features and other content for online and print only magazines – and I still feel comfortable with blogs. I think the difference lies in ‘free’ blogs that you can sign yourself up for via Blogger.com or other similar sites and those that are branded as part of an established publishing organisation. If someone beats you to a story with an unknown blog then it’s not a big deal. If someone beats you via a recognised media channel then it should be a wake up call.

    How much do you use blogs to source news stories verses PRs?

    That’s a tough question. I might guess at it and say it’s 50:50. But there are other factors to consider too. There are personal interest areas, there’s contact from people that you know and then there’s a variety of other social networks that also carry news ideas.

    Have you ever sourced a news story via Twitter?

    I don’t know if ‘sourced’ is the right word. I have researched, discussed, been inspired by and finally promoted my own stories on Twitter. Put simply, Twitter is the best thing since sliced bread, but I think it’s more important for freelancers like myself than staffers.

    Do you prefer Twitter for personal or professional communications?

    I never use Twitter for personal communication. For me it is a hard-core communication tool for professional use only. I don’t swear either.

    Did you have a favourite tech story in 2008?

    That’s just too hard to pin down. I would probably say that anything by Adobe ranks fairly high on my scale. The release of Creative Suite 4 made my life so much easier, it’s a superb product.

    What do you think will be the hottest tech issue in 2009?

    Delivery of optimised virtually hosted desktop application infrastructure. Well, you did ask – so I thought I’d be specific.

    What is the worst PR pitch you have ever had?

    I actually used to be in PR and I am quite open about that. So I may be slightly more sympathetic to the idiocy of putting a junior on the phone to ‘sell in’ stories by reading a script out over the phone. My favourite howlers mostly lie in the construction and holiday homes field when people pitch me their ‘developer’ stories and haven’t taken the trouble to work out that I cover ‘software developer’ issues.

    April 22nd, 2009 by Claire Jones

    Speed Date: Up close and personal with… CBR's Jason Stamper

    Do you feel threatened by blogs & their capacity to break news stories?

    Blogs are just another publishing medium. They are no faster than most modern websites in terms of the publication process, so the question is whether some bloggers are better news hounds than more traditional journalists, to which the answer is of course, yes some are. As both news reporter and blogger myself, I don’t feel threatened by bloggers any more than any other journalists. Sometimes they’ll scoop us, and sometimes we’ll scoop them.

    How much do you use blogs to source news stories versus PRs?

    I rarely use blogs as news sources, but I do use them regularly as sources of informed opinion.

    Have you ever sourced a news story via Twitter?

    No, not yet, but I am quite new to Twitter and can see that it has potential – again, it’s just another publishing medium.

    Do you prefer Twitter for personal or professional communications?

    I only use it today to spread the word about a blog or another piece we’ve written, so today, it’s exclusively for professional use.

    Did you have a favourite tech story in 2008?

    I think the way that Obama’s campaign team used social networking to gather donations from over three million people – twice as many as any presidential candidate in the past – was the most iconic tech-related story of 2009. Biggest bandwagon jumper? Microsoft unveils its cloud strategy, Azure.

    What do you think will be the hottest tech issue in 2009?

    I’d have to name a few: desktop virtualisation, green/sustainable IT, open source on the rise, social networking, doing more with less and Sun Microsystems getting bought.

    What is the worst PR pitch you have ever had?

    I received an email mistakenly addressed to an editor on a rival magazine – a good start – saying that although they were aware I don’t like football, was I interested in going to see Southampton versus Derby County, with the chance to catch up on a recent news announcement with the vendor’s regional sales manager in the hospitality suite, during the game.