RIESTER

Archive for February, 2011

Jim Breitinger

Anne O’Brien and the Nonprofit Academy for Excellence.

Marketing for causes and ideas is a big part of what we do at RIESTER.

I heard about the new Nonprofit Academy for Excellence in Utah and was intrigued to learn more about what this organization is doing to help nonprofits become more effective. The Academy provides training and professional certificate programs to nonprofit professionals.

Anne O’Brien is the founder of the Academy. O’Brien left a secure job with a promising future in the high-paying technology sector to find a job closer to her home in Salt Lake City. She wanted to find work that would require less travel, allow her to grow her career, contribute to her community and make it easier to be a mother.

Rather than finding a job, she created one along with a brand new organization which is an invaluable resource for Utah and a model program for what’s possible anywhere. “Nonprofits see value in education and training and they make time for it. I love seeing the impact that the Academy is having on the community,” she said.

O’Brien is on the leading edge of learning about the latest communications platforms available through social media. The Academy offers courses and a certificate focused on mastering these new tools.

She finds Facebook fascinating. O’Brien says that Facebook is “really changing and it’s becoming an infrastructure, like Google. It’s not just some little thing that you’re using; it’s almost becoming how we communicate.” She mentioned the Utah Museum of Natural History, Make-A-Wish and Tree Utah as local leaders in using social media.

O’Brien commented on RIESTER’s social media and traditional work: “I’ve seen the work you’ve done for the Utah Symphony. I thought it was incredibly creative and fun. I also love the Alta ads. The ad with the bride is one I especially remember. I appreciate seeing that kind of quality creative work here in Utah because I think people in our state often seem to think they need to go to New York to get good stuff. Yet we have that talent right here. “

Thanks Anne. And thank you for the resource that you’ve created for nonprofits. The work they do is invaluable in promoting worthy causes, including: keeping our culture vibrant and alive, helping those in need, teaching about important topics and working to help people change behaviors in positive ways.

Learn more about the Nonprofit Academy for Excellence.

Anne O'Brien and her daughter, photographed at Alta.

Anne O'Brien and her daughter, photographed at Alta.

Jim Breitinger

Malcolm Gladwell, still down on social media, and still wrong.

Despite the embarrassing article Malcolm Gladwell wrote last fall, he remains adamantly opposed to the idea that there is much of interest in new social media platforms. The title of his piece: “Small Change: Why the revolution will not be tweeted,” was off in every respect.

The changes in how we communicate, because of social media are not small. And the revolution in Egypt was not only tweeted–Twitter and Facebook were important communications tools during the protests that brought down Hosni Mubarek.

This month as Mubarek’s rule was teetering on the precipice, Gladwell wrote that “people with a grievance will always find ways to communicate with each other. How they choose to do it is less interesting, in the end, than why they were driven to do it in the first place.”

As an agency devoted to finding better ways to communicate, this statement is of course objectionable. But on a broader scale, it’s simply a stubborn refusal to face reality.

Radio and television were hardly uninteresting innovations in communications–they changed the world. How much social media changes the world remains to be seen, but it is changing it. Egypt is one example, an important one, but one of many.

I have high regard for Malcolm Gladwell. He has written outstanding books including The Tipping Point, Blink and Outliers. His usually excellent articles in The New Yorker are additional examples of his proud body of work.

It’s precisely because he is such an innovative thinker and writer that his queasiness with social media is especially notable, and odd.

It’s time for a new article from Gladwell: “Big Change: Why more revolutions will be tweeted.”

Jim Breitinger

Where over the world is Commander Scott Kelly?

Commander Scott Kelly aboard the International Space Station. Photo via NASA.

Commander Scott Kelly aboard the International Space Station. Photo via NASA.

International Space Station Commander Scott Kelly is promoting geographic knowledge by leading a contest called: “Where Over the World is Commander Scott Kelly?”

Here is a short version of how to play, from NASA:

“Users follow @StationCDRKelly on Twitter. Kelly will tweet from space a photo during the Expedition 25/26 flight. The first person to reply to @StationCDRKelly on Twitter with the correct answer wins. Use the hashtag #spacegeo after your reply and to follow the geography game on Twitter from space.”

Find full details of the contest from NASA.

RIESTER is committed to education. A highly educated population is required for a healthy and sustainable future. We dedicate this post to our clients, past, present and future who are promoting science education, with an honorary mention to Clark Planetarium in Salt Lake City (follow Clark on Twitter).

Scott Kelly will remain on the International Space Station as commander through mid-March.

Follow Scott on Twitter and be the first to reply to him the next time he asks where over the world he is.

Kelly posted this photo on February 2,  2011. It's the 'Big Island' of Hawaii.

Kelly posted this photo on February 2, 2011. It's the 'Big Island' of Hawaii.

RIESTER

Advertising’s Super Bowl.

The Super Bowl is more important than ever for mass marketers. Could Super Bowl ads become part of a shift to a society that STANDs FOR LESS wasteful consumerism?

The Super Bowl is more important than ever for mass marketers. Could Super Bowl ads become part of a shift to a society that STANDs FOR LESS wasteful consumption?

February 4 update: Listen to our Chief Creative Officer Tom Ortega discuss this year’s ads with Dennis Lambert on Arizona’s largest NPR station, KJZZ.

American media habits have changed substantially. The media we consume is more fractured and the ways we get information and entertainment continues to evolve rapidly. Large events, with the Super Bowl at the top of the list, provide marketers an increasingly rare opportunity to communicate with a mass audience.

The creativity that goes into Super Bowl ads is part of the annual Super Bowl conversation and we are among those who watch closely to see the latest work from our industry.

Social media channels provide marketers new challenges and opportunities to give Super Bowl ads life beyond game time. This is the new wild west of the marketing world.

Read more about this year’s trends and analysis of the most noteworthy campaigns at:

Advertising Age’s Super Bowl coverage and Adweek’s “Super Commercials.”

In some regards the Super Bowl is an example of the pinnacle of our consumer culture. At RIESTER we believe that it’s vital for the sustainability of our way of life to change how and what we consume. Read more about this at the STAND FOR LESS website, one of the campaigns we are especially proud of.

Don’t miss Tom’s interview on KJZZ.

Laura Carlson

RIESTER client Rocky Mountain Power helps the Sundance Film Festival lower its carbon footprint.

Rocky Mountain Power reminds us why we love our clients!

Through the Blue Sky renewable energy program, Rocky Mountain Power powered the entire Sundance Film Festival with clean, renewable energy.

Rocky Mountain Power allowed Sundance to operate on clean, renewable energy.

Rocky Mountain Power helped Sundance operate on clean, renewable energy.

The program allowed Sundance to avoid 144 tons of carbon dioxide emissions, equivalent to taking 25 cars off the road for a year or protecting one acre of trees from deforestation.

“We are proud to be an in-kind supporter of the largest independent cinema festival in the United States, helping to reduce its environmental impact because of our Blue Sky customers,” said Lori Hansen, Rocky Mountain Power customer and community manager.

Many of us at RIESTER enjoyed Sundance again this year. Knowing that Rocky Mountain Power is working to reduce the carbon footprint of this large event is an extra bonus. It gives meaning and purpose to the work we do every day, including all that we do to help Rocky Mountain Power communicate to its customers.

Learn more about Rocky Mountain Power’s innovative Blue Sky program, which provides a way for customers to support wind-powered electric generation and other renewable energy facilities.

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