The press release 100 years old

Via the India PR Blog I notice that the press release supposedly turned 100-years-old on October 28.

“On October 28, 1906, at least 50 people lost their lives when a three-car train of the Pennsylvania Railroad’s newly equipped electric service jumped a trestle at Atlantic City, NJ, and plunged into the Thoroughfare creek. 

That afternoon, Ivy Lee, who some consider to be the father of modern PR, created the first press release. The Pennsylvania Railroad was one of his clients. Following the accident, Lee not only convinced the railroad to distribute a public statement, he also convinced them to provide a special train to get reporters to the scene of the accident.”

About time then that this communications channel evolved a bit. The PR agency SHIFT Communications initiated a discussion around the development of a “social media press release” this summer. The thought was that the press release should be re-designed to fit the new social media/web 2.0 environment. I am sure we will continue to see interesting developments regarding press releases and other PR tactics. For PR practitioners, these are exiting times.

Birro blogs

Writer, poet etcetera Marcus Birro has just launched his own blog. His comment describes very well how many feel when they get access to their own instant publishing platform.

“Det här är en jävligt rolig grej. Nu när jag läser något som jag reagerar på, så tänker jag på en gång att jag ska blogga om det.”

“This is damn fun. Now when I read something that I react to, I immediately think that I will blog about it.”

But it’s a bit odd that Norrköping’s Folkbladet can write an article about his blog and not give out the web address to it. The blog can be found here.

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Just drop it, Expressen

Bloglines is expected to have about a third of the RSS reader market and a guess is that the service is used by at least 2 million people. None (zero, zip, zilch) of them find it worthwhile to subscribe to Expressen’s columnist Lars Lindström’s blog. And he is not expected to get any more friends in the blogosphere after today’s bizarre attack on blogger Magnus Ljungkvist regarding his scoop on Swedish Minister for Trade, Maria Borelius.

Update: For some strange reason Bloglines only found one of Lindström’s feeds this morning. A new search revealed that his blog has three feeds with an impressive total of four subscribers. Sorry ’bout that.

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