Simon Wakeman - marketing, public relations and digital communications

RSS logo Blog RSS
RSS logo Comments RSS
Email icon Get blog by email
del.icio.us logo My bookmarks
Linked in logo LinkedIn profile
Facebook logo Facebook profile

Recent posts

Tags

Marketing social+media public+relations Public relations Blogging Social media statistics Branding RSS web+development CIPR Podcasting Events News Wordpress chartered+institute+of+public+relations -research-and-analysis General Advertising Web strategy

Archives

CIPR social media guidelines - my feedback

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008 at 9:20 pm

Hello - welcome to my website.

On my blog I write about marketing, public relations and digital communications. To keep up-to-date with my posts you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed or sign-up to receive blog posts by email.

Thanks for visiting and I hope you find my site useful.

Like Simon Collister, I’ve had a gentle and ever so polite reminder from Elizabeth at CIPR that I haven’t provided any feedback on the latest consultation on social media from the institute.

The proposed guidelines are an evolution of the previous set that were written in early 2007. It’s interesting to see how almost two years of progress has changed their relevance.

While social media and public relations have both moved on a lot in that time, much of the content of the previous document is as relevant (or irrelevant) as it was first time around.

There are a few new additions too. One of the most important is the Unfair Commercial Practices directive which contains a number of stipulations which can directly affect how social media (or indeed any other PR tool) is used.

My main nagging doubt with the guidelines is that I’m not sure I really see a role for them at all.

As I wrote in my email to Elizabeth:

Many of the ethical and practical issues around social media in PR are already covered by the institute’s existing Code of Conduct for members. Many of the examples given in the document relate to a practitioner having a reasonable level of professional competence in social media. While the CIPR has a role in guiding members, surely it’s the individual member’s responsibility to ensure they have the requisite level of competency to operate in the social media space?

I guess I’m still questioning the need for the institute to maintain a separate set of guidelines for social media. The mere existence of the guidelines suggests that social media is seen as distinct from “mainstream” public relations, when in fact social media is changing the practice of public relations fundamentally.

It feels like social media is still seen as needing to be positioned “at arm’s length” by the institute - rather than acknowledging the radical changes it’s making to communications and marketing practice.

I know the CIPR is a broad church and that I’m probably one of the earlier adopters of social media among CIPR members, but I genuinely believe that social media is changing the public relations game more than most members realise, and the institute’s position needs to reflect that - at the moment I’m not convinced that’s the case.

I’m a paid-up CIPR member and place a lot of value on professional associations and their role in public relations and marketing - particularly helping establish the disciplines as professions in their own right. I just hope CIPR can move with the times on this one.

Tags: , , ,

Leave your comment



Check out
my rules for posting comments on my website.

Latest links RSS logo

Links to interesting information I've spotted recently on the web:

Latest bookmarks RSS logo

My most recent bookmarks from del.icio.us:

  1. 33 Free Tools to Make Your Website Better | FutureNow's GrokDotCom / Marketing Optimization Blog
  2. MMA study finds increase in mobile marketing receptiveness
  3. If RSS Is Niche Media, Why Use It?
  4. New Media Knowledge - Rough Guide to: Social Media and the Law
  5. UK Kids and Teens Communicate Nonstop
  6. Understanding and Aligning the Value of Social Media | FutureNow's GrokDotCom / Marketing Optimization Blog
  7. weaverluke: Twitter.com
  8. The week that Britain's culture wars broke out | Media | The Observer
  9. Message in-a-Box
  10. Welcome to Where I Live | Where I Live
  11. Utilising Web 2.0 in local government
  12. MySpace and Facebook Fast Becoming the Leading Mobile Social Networks
  13. searching for the impact of empowerment report - MORI
  14. Demos | Publications | State of Trust
  15. Pew Internet: Teens, Video Games and Civics

Simon Wakeman

I've been on the web since 2001 and have been blogging about marketing and public relations since January 2006.

I'm currently Head of Marketing at Medway Council as well as a freelance marketing and PR consultant.

The content and opinions expressed on this website are not endorsed by nor reflect the views of any company or organisation I work with.

I would like to endorse Simon’s professional approach when working with us in a freelance position and would not hesitate in recommending him. He has proved his value in picking up concepts and ideas with very little briefing and has always delivered on time - and what we wanted. Nick Bentley, Ether-Ray

…I was very impressed with the forward thinking and attention to detail Simon displayed…he thinks projects through carefully but quickly and has a good rapport with a wide range of people, from senior politicians and officers through to colleagues and his own staff. Malcolm Triggs, Go4 Marketing and Public Relations

Keeping fit

I track my runs and bike rides using the superb RunningAHEAD website: