2012 is Next: Legacy Year for Public Relations

Posted in Business Development, ePerini READVIEW, pclips on December 30th, 2011 by M.Perini

As we move into our third year of business – it’s not lost on me that our clients have made our company successful!  My associates and I deeply appreciate you trust and loyalty.  I have included the logos from our 2011 clients below.

For our supportive readers and those of you who summit comments to this blog — WOW! When I started blogging two years ago I could not have imagined that I would have grown such a super group of followers.  We have nearly 1000 of  you who follow us monthly and I have posted nearly 1,500 comments.  Again, thanks for your time and commitment.

As a result of the interest to our posts, we have started posting videos and other articles by industry experts.  You will find these items in pclips and ePeriniReadview.

I am very interested in hearing from you as to what you would like for me to discuss during 2012.  So, please share.  Tell others about the value of the blog(s) to your business, special event or issue.

For prospective clients, we ask that you check us out.  We are a full service public

relations firm ready to help business owners — small or large; event organizers; non-profits; local, state and federal agencies.  We have the experience. We are creative.  I promise that we will listen to you!

I believe that 2012 will continue a growing trend for faster and more value-added communications.  As a result, more specialized public relations and marketing methods are required to be successful in maintaining andenhancing relationships.  Public relations needs to be more personal.  Focused.  Cross integrated with traditional approaches.  We can successfully chart a course for you during this difficult time.

Let us take public relations to new levels in the New Year!

Sincerely,

Michael Perini, ABC
Perini & Associates

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e-Perini Readview: Think Before Turning On Electronics

Posted in ePerini READVIEW on December 22nd, 2011 by M.Perini

Worth reading or viewing

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Occasionally, I will recommend a  news article, book, blog post, research or a short video clip to view relating to public relations. This “eperini Readview” references a USA Today editorial about thinking twice before using electronic devices on airplanes. mbp

What do you think about using electronics aboard airplanes?

 

FROM USA TODAY, 22 DECEMBER 2011) “Many airline passengers using Kindles, iPhones and other portable electronic devices bristle at flight attendants’ orders to turn them all off before takeoff and landing. Why? What’s the harm? Fliers routinely leave devices on and the planes don’t crash, so the rule must be bogus, right?

That’s what we thought, too. Then we decided to take a close look at this question after actor Alec Baldwin was kicked off an American Airlines flight for refusing to stop playing Words with Friends on his cellphone. That research, coupled with Gary Stoller’s reporting in today’s USA TODAY, changed our view.

Plenty of scientific evidence shows that electronic devices can interfere with airliners’ radios, navigation units, collision avoidance boxes and even their fire detection systems. As an estimated 43 million people take to the skies this holiday season, many with new smart phones or tablets, that’s a finding worth heeding.

The case is even stronger when you combine the technological evidence with dozens of chilling circumstantial incidents in NASA’s Aviation Safety Reporting System, where pilots can anonymously report safety-related problems. Among the reports in NASA’s database:

•A regional jet was climbing 9,000 feet last May when the pilots’ directional indicators suddenly went haywire, leading the airliner 4 miles off course. After the confused pilots asked passengers to make sure their electronics were off, the cockpit instruments returned to normal.

•As a flight was climbing out of Charlotte-Douglas airport in North Carolina, there was such a loud buzzing on the pilots’ radios that they could barely hear controllers. The captain warned passengers that if they didn’t turn off all devices, the plane would have to return to the airport. After “nearly the entire plane” checked their electronics, the noise stopped and the flight continued.

•The pilots of an airliner flying at nearly 300 mph toward Philadelphia suddenly got a warning on the instrument panel that they were about to collide with a plane a mile ahead of them. They made an emergency climb before controllers said their radar showed no plane there. A flight attendant later told the pilots she had caught a woman making a cellphone call to her daughter during the approach.

•Pilots descending to land in Baltimore watched their instruments swinging oddly until they broke out of the clouds at 1,800 feet almost a mile off course. They concluded that numerous passengers using their cellphones had caused the error.

Not every device in every seat on every plane is a problem. Incidents seem to depend on which devices passengers use and where they sit, which could be near an antenna outside the fuselage or an electronics bay hidden away inside the plane. On one long over-water flight, for example, pilots began having trouble with their instruments and asked flight attendants to check the cabin. The attendants asked passengers to turn off their laptops one by one until they found the one that was causing the problem.

Some fliers have protested that pilots can now use iPads in the cockpit, so why not in the cabin? Simple: If pilots noticed problems, they could quickly switch their iPads off. And they’re required to use them in “airplane mode,” which shuts off all transmissions and makes them unlikely to cause problems.

OK, then why not let passengers use their devices in airplane mode, too? That would only work if everyone knew how to operate airplane mode (a surprising number do not), and if it didn’t mean flight attendants would have to police each passenger’s device.

Soon after Baldwin got the boot, he appeared on Saturday Night Live dressed as an American pilot. He called the rules about electronic devices “just a cruel joke perpetrated by the airline industry.” The bit was funny, but the rules are no joke. Given the evidence, everyone from the Federal Aviation Administration to flight attendants should have “words with friends” about the need to turn devices off. It shouldn’t take a crash to make the point.”

 

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What Are The Best Commercials of 2011

Posted in PR-Marketing Technology, Research on December 11th, 2011 by M.Perini

by Michael Perini, ABC
perini & associates

We all watch commercials, right?  Yes, if you have a digital recorder you might be able to skip through them occasionally, but why would you want to? Commercials are as American as apple pie and as ubiquitous.

Remember, commercials good or bad drive us to action as they seek to inform us of new products and advancements of products.

Also, let’s not forget that commercials pay for the programs we see on television. They help pay salaries and the production costs of those programs. For as long as television has been around, it has depended on advertising as a way to make a profit and to cover the cost of the shows being aired.

Conversely, television has been and is now a good medium for letting advertisers reach a large audience to promote and raise awareness of their products. With the ever-expanding number of media options available, television remains one of the most popular and cost-effective avenues for reaching the advertisers’ goals.

Here are the 10 best commercials of 2011 as reported in AdWeek. You will find three car commercials, candy, zombies, cats with thumbs, bears and hand-crafted characters.

I would like to hear from you. Do you agree with the list? What commercials would you have added? Deleted? My favorites are shown with the embed video.

10. Snickers Peanut Butter Squared – “Focus Group”
Agency: BBDO, New York • Director: Jim Jenkins, O Positive
Editing: Number 6 • Effects: Framestore
View commercial

9. Nissan Leaf – “Gas Powered Everything”
Agency: TBWA\Chiat\Day, Los Angeles • Director: Dante Ariola, MJZ
Editing: Mackenzie Cutler • Effects: The Mill
View commercial

8. Cravendale – “Cats With Thumbs”
Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, London • Director: Ulf Johansson, Smith and Jones Films
Editing: The Whitehouse • Effects: MPC

7. Deep Silver — “Dead Island Trailer”
Agency: Deep Silver Planegg, Munich, Germany • Director: Stuart Aitken, Axis Animation
Editing: Stuart Aitken (Axis), Anton Borkel (Deep Silver) • Effects: Axis Animation
View commercial

6. Canal+ — “The Bear”
Agency: BETC Euro RSCG, Paris • Director: Matthijs Van Heijningen, Soixante Quinze
Editing: Jono Griffiths
Effects: Mikros Image

5.  TalkTalk — “Homes Within Homes
Agency: CHI & Partners, London • Director: Adam Berg, Stink
Editing: Trim Editing • Effects: Glassworks
View commercial

4. Google Chrome — “Dear Sophie”
Agency: Google Creative Lab • Agency: Bartle Bogle Hegarty,
New York • Editing: Lost Planet • Effects: Black Hole
View commercial

3. Chrysler — “Born of Fire”
Agency: Wieden + Kennedy, Portland, Ore. • Director: Samuel Bayer, Serial Pictures
Editing: Joint • Effects: Method
View commerical

2. Chipotle — “Back to the Start”
Agency: Chipotle and CAA • Director: Johnny Kelly, Nexus • Models: Bob @ Artem • Music: Willie Nelson

1. Volkswagen — “The Force” View commercial below:
Agency: Deutsch, Los Angeles • Director: Lance Acord, Park Pictures
Editing: Union • Effects: CO3

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YouGov: Stockings, Unstuffed and Must Have Brands

Posted in Research on December 4th, 2011 by M.Perini

Consumers will continue to be frugal this holiday, according to a new survey by YouGov.

75% Expect to buy their holiday purchases at discount prices.

63% Have stated that their purchases could be swayed by direct marketing offers, coupons or daily deals.

31% Expect to spend less on credit this holiday.  Only 2% expect to spend more.

47% Adults (18+) planned to start their holiday shopping before Thanksgiving.

42% Are expecting to cut back on holiday spending.

Top mentioned “‘must have” brands:  1. iPad; 2. Kindle; 3. iPod; 4. Xbox; 5 iPhone.

Expected spending for the holidays in November and December:  $521 in 2010.  $451 in 2011.

Top mentioned “must have” categories:  Clothing.  Gift cards.  Toys. Books.  Money.

Source: YouGov Holiday Shopping Survey 2011 as reported in AdWeek.

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Well, You Can Still Use It When Shipping Holiday Gifts

Posted in PR-Marketing Technology on December 3rd, 2011 by M.Perini

Tablets and e-readers are magazine friendly

by Michael Perini, ABC
perini & associates

When the iPad first arrived on the scene, there was concern that magazines would have a hard time breaking through all the video games, movies, countless apps and all the other media available to consumers.

Turns out people are spending more time and ever reading on tablets and e-readers. And, the good news: Consumers want MORE magazine content.

We would like to hear from you about your magazine experiences, so please comment below.

Other key findings:

89% want magazine apps to have standardized functions and navigational features.
70% are interested in the ability to buy products and services straight from digital magazine editorial.
59% said they are spending more time reading digital magazines since getting a mobile device.
55% said they sometimes tap on ads in electronic magazines.

– source: The Association of Magazine Media-Commissioned Study by Affinty as reported in Adweek.

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