Arne Mårtensson steps down as Group CEO of Handelsbanken, one of Sweden’s largest banks, to go sailing round the world for three years. He also declines renominations to the boards of Handelsbanken (where he is chairman), Ericsson (vice chairman), Sandvik, Skanska, Industrivärden, Holmen and Vin&Sprit.; During his trip he will be writing a blog on http://www.yaghanvoyages.blogspot.com/.
Tag: blogs
PR knowledge for free
There is some truly great stuff being produced over at the Global PR Blog Week 2.0 event blog. Check out for example Tom Murphy’s article about pragmatic PR and Dee Rambeau & Chris Bechtel’s great piece about online media relations.
Progress in Swedish media’s blog approach
Swedish daily Norrbottens-Kuriren is doing something right. Today it launched a citizen journalism initiative called “Blog of the week”. A different blogger is invited to blog on the paper’s web site each week and the first blogger out is Lisen Ellard, dancer and radio journalist (how typical…).
Most previous blogging efforts from Swedish media so far has only been to add a blog to the arsenal of the paper’s regular staff of opinion makers. Or far worse, they add some sort of lame diary page without any basic blog functions (read permalinks, RSS, etc) and call it a blog. The most recent example is Dagens Nyheter’s editor in chief Jan Wifstrand’s “blog” about handball (!). I don’t want to be a blog fundamentalist, but dear Mr. Wifstrand, I hate to break this to you, but you don’t have a blog. Similarly, correspondent Thomas Hall at DN “blogs” in the same non-blog format from Germany.
But back to the positive initiative at Norrbottens-Kuriren, which makes it to #4 on the Outing-scale, i.e. Steve Outing’s 11 layers of citizen journalism. It is just one of a number of examples that show us that Swedish media are starting to grasp that citizen journalism can be more than just adding comments to online articles. For example:
– Aftonbladet is experimenting with blogs and apart from launching a series of own blogs, also interviewed a large number of bloggers during the summer, pointing to their blogs.
– SR (Swedish Radio) recently launched Bloggkrönikan, a blog review that comments on things written in the blogosphere, not by professional opinion makers but independent thinkers which make up the essence of the blogosphere.
Hopefully we will see even more advanced experiments with citizen journalism in the coming 12 months up to the next Swedish election.
Take off for Global PR Blog Week 2.0
Global PR Blog Week 2.0 started today and the fact that I declined to participate this year is absolutely not a reason not to tune in (I just couldn’t find the time to write a longer piece this year). This is the event where the creme of the crop of PR bloggers share their knowledge and expertise about the intersection of public relations and new technology like blogs and wikis. A wide range of topics will be covered during the five day event. Tune in, read, learn and comment.
Google launches blog search
Google has just launched a blog search tool and it seems very promising. After a few quick tries I found several interesting blogs I will start subscribing to. Like for example Swedish communications consultant Jan Sandred’s blog Innovation Journalism (in English).
Update: Ego-searching seems to be the spinal reaction to a new tool like Blogsearch. Chadie and Olav searched for their own blogs, with different levels of success. And yes, I did it too.
Expressen shuts down blogs
Swedish tabloid Expressen is closing down several of its blogs, reports Dagens Media. The political blog penned by Niklas Svensson and Cecilia Garme was shut down on Wednesday and Per Svensson decided to quit blogging because of lack of time. Expressen’s editor in chief Otto Sjöberg says that the paper has revised its blogging policy so that news reporters can’t blog.
– We want news reporters to focus on working with news, Sjöberg tells Dagens Media.
PM Nilsson hasn’t blogged since the end of July (due to a longer vacation). And since Ebba von Sydow will quit to take on a the role as editor in chief of Vecko-Revyn, her blog will not continue to be under the wings of Expressen.
Update: Niklas Svensson has already launched a new private blog about politics (looks a lot more like private stuff and gossip to me, but that may of course change). Via Nya Ordlekar. More at Dagens Media.
Footnote: The Swedish blogosphere invented the epithet “Expressen blogger” this summer and it represents a journalist that starts a blog to keep ut with things, but hasn’t grasped what it’s all about.