Penny Haywood Calder set up PHPR in 1986, riding out booms, busts and bursting bubbles, to become stronger than ever.
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Friday, 23 April 2010
Blogging for Business

Did a presentation on Blogging for Business at the local Chamber of Commerce on why businesses need to engage with social media.
Showed how it all links-up: engaging with people in 1-to-1 conversations to create niche communities by posting and cross-posting between sites such as Twitter, Linked-In, Facebook and your blog.
Did you know that Facebook has so many members now, that if they were the population of a country, it would be the third largest country in the world! Can your business afford to ignore an audience like that? Especially when you can engage with it free of charge.
You can take that cross-linking a stage further and integrate your blog and website at your own domain name. This blog is integrated with the PHPR website to give me the best of both worlds thanks to Simon Allen here at Shopfitter.com.
Blogs are so much easier than websites to update, so they are a great way to add fresh content. Plus they give you the opportunity to demonstrate expertise and trustworthiness online.
As I ran down the benefits of blogging and gave some examples, you could see light bulb moments going on across the room. At the end, an accountant rushed off leaving me with the parting shot that he was off to "give it a go". Brilliant!
Labels: blogging, Edinburgh, online PR, PHPR, PR, technology PR agency
Tuesday, 30 March 2010
PHPR TV on YouTube
We've launched a PHPR video channel on YouTube with a short piece on clear messages in 'PR for Technology' by Penny at:
http://ping.fm/GCuofLabels: clear communications, online video, PHPR, PR for technology
Wednesday, 24 February 2010
How to be interesting in Social Media

Got some thought provoking tips on social media from Seth Liss, SunSentinel.com's news community manager. He's making the point that a lot more people are using social media now and it's harder to get noticed. But social media is still a better bet than advertising for driving business to ecommerce sites, so it's worth making the effort.
He kicks off with the obvious: drop the drab everyday stuff.
When you do post a newsworthy event, he points out that it's the details that make it more interesting. How did it happen? Where? How does that make you feel? Not easy in 140 characters, but when was really good communication ever easy?
He reminds us to avoid engaging in a 1-2-1 conversation on public sites - it's really boring for everyone else.
He also reminds us to place posts with links into context. We need to judge for ourselves whether the link is worth pursuing.
It looks as if people have had enough of blatent promotional messages from their friends. Edelman's Trust Barometer survey shows "the number of people who view their friends and peers as credible sources of information about a company has dropped from 45 percent to 25 percent since 2008." (Edelman's annual Trust Barometer survey is based on nearly 5,000 25-minute interviews with informed people aged 24-60 in 20 countries).
He suggests sharing good information is the key to being interesting. Develop interesting sidelights on your business sector to demonstrate your knowledge in action.
Plus timing is key. Most people dip into their social media accounts so they miss a lot: If you can spot patterns when key people are posting, you can predict when they are more likely to see your posts.
Finally advises: listen first, then comment. "If people know you are interested in what they have to say, they will most likely be curious about what you have to say as well."
I'd say: there's no quick fix. It's a case of listening well before you speak to have a better chance of engaging with well respected people with a good following. People who enhance your own line reputation, and in turn, that boosts your online business.
Labels: DIY PR, ecommerce, online PR, online PR and marketing, online sales, PHPR, PR, social media
Friday, 29 January 2010
Environmental Business is Good PR & Saves Money
There's no shortage of paid help and expensive subscriptions to keep you abreast of environmental legislation for business, but there are some great free resources. Use them to create an Environmental Management System (EMS) to demonstrate your serious commitment to the environment. And reduce the likelihood of expensive fines by keeping up to date with a number of recent changes that affect most businesses.
At a time when businesses need every edge they can get, being able to demonstrate credible green credentials is a real PR plus - a key business asset.
Log onto useful free resources at the
http://wwwnetregs.gov.uk/ site, which has been recently re-vamped. It includes a questionnaire
http://ping.fm/iaVafnetregs/links/97472.aspx)where you can get a bespoke answer as to your environmental compliance requirements.
That will give you a legislation list, which is the start of your EMS. You will find out how each individual piece of legislation impacts on your type of business using the search tools on www.netregs.gov.uk. Netregs will stream info according to business type and the regional variants for Scotland, England & Wales, plus Northern Ireland.
Environment legislation is driven by Europe and there are more changes in the pipeline. It's worth signing up for the Netregs updates to stay up-to-date.
Labels: DIY PR, environment, green car, Penny Haywood, PHPR, PR
Monday, 4 January 2010
DIY PR - no 6 - Referrals
Referrals are much more influential than your own sales spiel – they are credible because they are third party endorsements.
They are vital for B2B businesses and are the fastest way to boost any business. So why not have a Referrals Plan to maximise your referrals chances?
Roy Sheppherd’s book shows you how with over 100 non-cheesy ways to ramp up your referrals – it’s called Rapid Results Referrals. Nothing new. Only common sense. But how many referrals tactics are you currently using?
How often do you hear about Referrals Plans? … Exactly! You’ll be miles in front of the businesses that are not using a planned referrals campaign.
Just choose up to 10 referrals ideas from the book and work with them for 6 months, review, ditch what doesn’t work and top up with new ones. Repeat twice a year. Easy!
This is the sixth in a series of posts re-visiting some of the 30 low cost or free publicity techniques featured in PHPR's founder's best-selling book: DIYPR, the small business owner's guide to 'free' publicity by Penny Haywood.
The 30 techniques are a mix of digital and offline sales, marketing and PR tools because you need to work all three disciplines (sales, marketing and PR) to effectively boost a business.
That's because: PR raises awareness. Marketing describes the features and benefits of your offerings and decides how to position them in the market (positioning for price, gaps in the market, distribution etc versus your competitors). Sales matches the benefits to an individual buyer's particular needs and handles the mechanics of the sale and after sales service liaison.
As the series develops, choose a few ideas to trial for a few months.
The aim is to work up to 10 varied publicity techniques that work for you and your business to create a rolling PR/marketing/sales Plan for success.Your feedback is most welcome and may be included (with proper attribution) in the forthcoming revised edition of DIY PR.
Labels: DIY PR, PHPR, PR, referrals
Tuesday, 24 November 2009
Environment Award Generates Immediate Business Boost for PHPR
PHPR had a serious new biz approach at the VIBES awards - proof that VIBES (Scotland's top environmental award) is good for biz.
We were at the awards ceremony because we'd been shortlisted for the 2009 VIBES Scotland awards - Scotland's top environmental awards. Companies on the VIBES shortlist & the winners are recognised by multiple agencies and the Scottish Government for exceptional environmental performance.
We think that we are the 1st Scottish PR agency to reach the shortlist. The organisers have confirmed no PR agencies have been cited in the last 5 years (VIBES has been going for 10 years).
VIBES is a partnership between the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA), Environment Protection UK, Environwise & Netregs.
Labels: boosting your business, environmental award, PHPR, PR agencies, Scotland, VIBES
Monday, 26 October 2009
PHPR Shortlisted for VIBES
Just got invite to the VIBES awards ceremony (Scotland's top eco awards for biz) at the Scottish Parliament. We're short-listed!
Labels: boosting your business, PHPR, Scotland, top environmental awards, VIBES
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