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Co-authored by Sara Giles

This is what happens when you unleash SNL’s Seth Meyers on social media: “Facebook is the only place where a 12 year old stranger can call my vacation photos gay.”

seth

Meyers hit the nail on the head during his set at Buddy Media’s party Social Marketing Is No Laughing Matter, which Sara Giles and I attended on Tuesday at New York’s Hiro Ballroom. If you’re a PR looking to make more fun of yourself, PRNewser has a good recap of the other Meyers highlights.

Now let’s back up.  A few things hit me when I walked in the door:

A) Apparently writers from the Huffington Post and New York Times are VIP and Account Coordinators from Bite are not.

B) I vaguely recognized at least 50% of the people in the room from their avatars.

C) Letter B was a little creepy.

Aside from my apparent stalkerish tendencies, Buddy definitely knows how to throw a good party. Sara and I found it surprisingly refreshing that aside from a short and sweet video on the power of social marketing, the event was all about having fun and meeting interesting people.

The event circuit in the PR/social media/tech world can be too focused on driving home a key point about the industry. Sometimes it’s best to just give guests a few free drinks, some food and let them at it. Funny how in a room full of people with iPhones, Blackberrys, Droids, etc., wearing the “Hi My Name Is” nametag is still very effective – no Twitter handle introduction required.

Not that this is news to anyone reading this blog, but the sheer variety of people attending on Tuesday only reinforces how ubiquitous social media has become. In a little over two hours, we’d chatted with creatives, developers, PR pros,  monitoring experts, venture capitalists, investment bankers and real estate managers looking to market over social media channels – basically if you think about it, the perfect blend of folks needed to fully furnish any brand’s social marketing needs.  And this diverse crowd all care about social media and find it relevant to their line of work, which is proof in and of itself that we’re far, far beyond a fad. 

A final more sentimental takeaway after meeting the folks at the Buddy Media event: nothing compares to the dynamism of New York’s media scene. As the New York Times’ David Carr would have it in his November 2009 piece “The Fall and Rise of Media,” New York’s media landscape “is not an island sinking, but one that is rising on a fresh, ferocious wave.” Happily I can’t help but agree –the people we met on Tuesday are the future of the city’s media landscape, and the future, well, it doesn’t look so bad.

Hot or Not? 2010 Technology Trends

December 8, 2009

Last week Bite sponsored the PRSA “Media Predicts: 2010″ event at the Computer History Museum in San Francisco and a few of us Biters were joined by our clients for cocktails and dinner. Check out these 10 key predictions raised at the event.

Read the full article »

The Twilight Movies: PR vs. Advertising

November 25, 2009

Post co-authored by Sara Giles
Judge us all you want. We (Kelley and Sara Giles) went to see New Moon last Friday and we’re not afraid to tell the whole world in a corporate blog post. Yes, we are also a little bit obsessed.
Exhibit A

Exhibit B

Now that we have zero dignity left, let’s get down [...]

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A New Role For Advertising?

September 25, 2009

Recently I couldn’t help but notice a couple of adverts that got me thinking about the role of advertising. If brands are now defined by the conversation happening around them (which I believe is the case) then what is the role of brand advertising?
The first thing that got me thinking along these lines was reading [...]

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Making ourselves useful

September 24, 2009

Yesterday, I attended the Publicity Club of New York’s “new” media beat lunch, which featured journalists from Business Insider, Huffington Post, The New York Times, Mediaite and PaidContent discussing the business of covering the media beat today. Given that the room was full of PR people, the discussion inevitably turned to each journalist’s preference for [...]

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NFL, U.S. Open Get on the Ball with Twitter

September 3, 2009

Today I came across two articles on professional sports and Twitter (apparently, the media’s insatiable appetite for Twitter stories never dies).  The New York Times blogged that tennis star Andy Roddick is unhappy with rules banning players’ use of Twitter during the U.S. Open, which started in New York City this week. The rules state [...]

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Data visualization: a key element to digital storytelling

March 23, 2009

All you online junkies out there have likely stumbled upon cool data visualization projects that reside on the internet.  Whether it’s watching the growth of Wal-Mart over time, or visualizing conversations and connections on Twitter, the concept is catching fire as the volume of data grows almost exponentially by the day, the availability of that [...]

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