Great Tool to Follow Journ Tweeps

 

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Image by The Next Web via Flickr

If you are a news junkie and a Twitter fan, you will want to check out this directory of journalists on Twitter, listed by their media outlet. It comes from Muck Rack, which follows what journalists are reporting and talking about on social media. It also ranks the most active journalists on social media on the Muck Rack Leaderboard, which is a great way to follow trends and developing news.

Muck Rack is a fantastic source for anyone interested in news and communications. It was started in 2009 with about 150 journalists on Twitter and now lists thousands of reporters and editors who are active on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Quora, Google+, LinkedIn and more. What’s best is that the list is actually fact-checked by a team of editors, so you know you’re getting great info.

If you want to get even closer to the action, subscribe to the Muck Rack Daily email to learn on a daily basis what journalists are saying. This is a great resource for anyone who is trying to promote their own business, or who is doing PR and Media Relations on a shoestring!  If you subscribe, let me know what you think.

 

 

 

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Farmers and Facebook – One Nudge at a Time!


For many farmers, the hardest part about social media is taking  the plunge. So maybe you just need a little shove, a few small steps to get you started? That was the topic we covered today on RFD Now, a program produced by the Illinois Farm Bureau and carried on 70 radio stations in the Midwest. I was joined by Chris Klein, the owner of Klein’s Farm and Market out of western Illinois. Chris’ farm has had a Facebook presence for about a month, and she launched it immediately following one of my social media workshops for farmers.  We talked with RFD Radio hosts Julie Root and Allan Jarand. (You can hear a recording of the segment at http://www.farmweeknow.com/radio.aspx).

If you’re not on Facebook and eventually hope to establish a business presence, here are a few things you should do now:

  1. Sign up and get a personal account so you can have access to Facebook and see what other farmers are doing.
  2. Go to other farms and businesses in your community and begin Liking them to see how they’re using Facebook.
  3. Find your friends and relatives and begin friending them. You’ll turn to those friends when you establish your Facebook business presence.
  4. After you see what others are doing, identify your own business goals for Facebook? Get 100 likers by Labor Day? Boost sales at your market or farm? Increase sales of a specific item?
  5. Identify how you’ll achieve that goal. Will you simply generate awareness about the farm? Promote special produce? Provide helpful growing tips for the back yard vegetable garden? Advice for how to prepare the produce you grow? Maybe you just want to establish a face on farming, so your customers understand the hard work involved in getting food to their tables?

As a newbie on Facebook, it can still be overwhelming. So make it easy to transition into social media:

  1. Your first month, just interact with other farms or businesses. See how they respond when you post items on their wall. You’ll find many businesses don’t reply at all. I call that anti-social media. If you are not going to have a dialogue on Facebook, why bother being on it at all? Your “Likers” don’t want to hear about your sales or promotions. They want to know who YOU ARE. Provide them with something valuable — your expertise. And have  a conversation. Take advantage of this marvelous network!
  2. Also, If you have a smart phone, download a free Facebook app and start taking photos and uploading them onto your Facebook page. It’s very easy once you try.
  3. Once you have a comfort level, you can use your existing account to set up a Facebook page for your business.
  4. Be sure you take advantage of the business info tab to give the fullest description about what you do and how you help your customers. Provide complete address and contact information. And be sure you use key words so if Facebook user are searching for a strawberry farmer in Udina Illinois, you’ll drive them directly to your Facebook page.

 

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Turning Heads: Farmers on Social Media

This week I was interviewed on Illinois Farm Bureau Radio, which to my surprise is carried on nearly two dozen radio stations in Illinois and Iowa. Host Julie Root of the program Farm Week Now, interviewed me along with Emily Webel, mother of four and co-operator (along with her husband) of a livestock and grain farm in central Illinois. Emily tells her story  through her blog Confessions of a Farm Wife.

We talked about why social media is gaining popularity among farmers and agri-businesses ranging from honey farmers, corn and grain producers, organic farmers and livestock producers.

 

You can listen to the radio interview AND read Julie Root’s blog post on our interview. The audio can be found in a radio box on the left side of Julie’s blog. You can also hear Julie’s entire radio interview at http://www.farmweeknow.com/radio.aspx by looking for the “Morning Programs” and click on the date March 23, 2011. Our segment ran started about 25 minutes into the program. It was a lot of fun!

Follow Julie Root on Twitter @Julie_RFDRadio

 

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Trying to Make Business News in the Political Clutter?

Campaign Signs on the Corner of 6th and Morton
Image by Indiana Public Media via Flickr

We’re heading into the final stretch for the mid-term elections, with just four full days before voting day November 2nd. If you think  the media won’t latch on to your non-political story idea, change your way of thinking. I just pitched two Illinois reporters on a business story and asked if they’d be interested at this time and they both said YES.

A general assignment reporter for public radio said she might use my item for Tuesday, because typically radio stations have an election-day blackout on campaign mudslinging and candidate positioning. She needs non-campaign pieces for her hourly newscasts. Another newspaper business reporter says he’s always looking for business items he can localize and is also considering a client interview.

The message here, as with all media relations: Don’t enter a PR assignment with your own preconceived notions. If you don’t think reporters will be interested, ask them what they’re covering and what they’ll be needing, based on the calendar or everyday circumstances. Don’t think your business message will get drowned out just because we’re in the midst of fiercely contested political races. In fact, don’t think too hard about it at all…just call and talk!

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