Wednesday, December 9, 2009
PR in action!!!
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Creating a Memory in PR
Last Tuesday my PR Admin. class created a beautiful and memorable night for the Relay For Life Kick-off. The theme for the event was 'Celebrate A Memory' which was based off of the American Cancer Society's theme for the year, 'Celebrating another Birthday.' The planning for the event was a long process that required attention to detail, meaning and creativity.
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
A Fighter for Now a Survivor in the Future
In this world there are fighters and destroyers. There are the people that lift you up and those that bring you down. There are survivors and those who all too easily admit defeat. From the first time I met April I knew that she was not later of those groups, she is the fighter, the lifter and most important of all the survivor.
“Right now I am a cancer fighter and in the future I will be a survivor,” said April McMillan. Last January, April found what all women hope to never find, a lump on her breast. When she first discovered it a million thoughts went through her mind of what it could be. Of course cancer was on the list, but at the time she convinced herself that it was a cystic fibrosis that is caused from drinking too much caffeine. “At that time in my life I was drinking three cups of coffee a day” said April “when you are a music major you tend to drink a lot of coffee.”
Finally in July, two weeks after two of her grandparents passed away (only 38 days apart from each other) she broke down and went to the doctor. “After my grandparents died I realized that I probably needed to get myself checked out to make sure everything was okay,” said April. The lump had grown significantly since her discovery in January and the week before the doctor’s appointment it was causing her great pain.
After the doctor took one look at the lump, she immediately referred her to a surgeon. The surgeon did a series of tests, commentating that he did not like the look of it. “I think he has seen this so many times that he knew what it was right there, but still he told me to wait for the results to be positive,” said April. After waiting two long days April received her test results back from the doctor, only to find out that it was what she had been fearing all along. “In the back of my mind I knew what is was, but being in that reality and hearing the doctor say it was shocking and scary,” said April.
April was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer. Since her diagnosis April has undergone chemo treatment and radiation that so far has worked successful in shrinking the tumor. “The cancer had spread to little parts all over body,” said April,“I only wish that I had gone to the doctor when I first felt the lump then this could have been caught earlier.”
Since the discovery of her cancer, April has made it a point to do everything in her power to influence women, especially young women the importance of getting a monthly exam. “I do not want anyone else to go through this,” said April, “I want people to learn from my mistakes.”
April is not the only person who has fought cancer in her family. Her grandmother, Jeneane Vinson also had breast cancer and has attended Relay For Life every year since. April’s great-grandmother also had ovarian cancer. Allow there is a history of cancer in her family, April’s cancer is not hereditary.
April is a senior Music Ed major at
“Cancer is one of those things that you never know what is going to happen or how you are going to come out of it,” said April, “Sometimes I think God puts you in certain situations in life so that you can have the chance to influence others.”
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
In the Eye of the Reporter
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
The Power of Relay For Life
Relay For Life has been around for 26 years. It spreads across small towns and big city in this nation. Although each event is united under the main theme for Relay each year, each individual event has made it their own and customized it to ‘tip’ in their area. How did they do this? And how can we as a class make our Relay For Life Kick-off ‘tip’ in a significant way?
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Climate Change from a PR perspective
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Go Team Cupcake!
My PR class this semester is responsible for the planning, promoting and running the Relay For Life kick-off. This kick-off happens in the fall and is the beginning of the fundraising for the big event in the spring. I am a huge supporter of the American Cancer Society and was extremely excited when I found out that we would be putting together one of their main events!
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Communication Breakdown
Why are some people afraid to communicate face to face? Why are some people more comfortable texting or emailing someone? Why are we more and more finding out what our friends are doing because of their statuses on Facebook and Twitter?
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
The Future of PR: Changes in Media Relations
The increase and improvement of technology over the last two decades has created an 'instant messaging' society. A society where patience is now considered a rare and valuable virtue. The waiting time for information is decreasing as technology improves. While this is a wonderful thing, it creates a problem or more like a challenge for those involved with media. For public relations it means thinking creativity, keeping up with the latest media trends and identifying the merging lines of social networking and news media sources.
In the recent article The Future of the Media Relations: Expect the Unexpected, Pr News interviewed three professionals about their thoughts on where public relations is headed toward in the not so distant future.
Steve Cody, Co-Founder and Managing Partner, predicts that companies like Apple, Google, Microsoft, and IBM will be in direct competition with major media networks like
Ronn Torossian, Founder and CEO, talks about how public relations agencies will have the power to shape the future of communications in social media. This would amazing if we had the ability to hold the strings of the social media in the future.
Steve Rubel, Senior Vice President/Director of Insight , explains how the line between media communications and social communications is slowly disappearing and morphing into one. Rublel suggests that PR professionals should rethink how they measure the media. I think it will be interesting to see in the future how will measure decide what is considered valuable media to the public.
It is hard to think of where the future of media will go. It is an important issue, especially for pr students to stay on top of, considering this will be the meat of our jobs. I believe that this is a very critical and essential issue that will always be around, but that we as ‘the communicators of the world’ should always be on the front line if not one step ahead of the change. One of the most important part of our jobs is media relations. How can we relate with the media if we stay in the dark about the changes in media? We can not predict the future, but we can prepare for it.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
My Melting Pot of Public Relation Attributes
Monday, August 31, 2009
How I FINALLY decided on PR
The majority of college students enroll in a school with an idea of what they want to do for the rest of their lives. They might change their mind once or twice, but basically they have a rough draft of what they want their future to be. They probably decided based on an experience, or the influence of someone important in their life. Not me.