April 1, 2011 in Media, Media Orchard, PR and Pop Culture by Orchardo
CLIENT NEWS: GreyScale Is Color for the Rest of Us

Every once in a while, one of our clients issues an announcement so revolutionary, so innovative, so state-of-the-art, so cutting-edge, so world-class, so user-friendly, so next-gen, so groundbreaking, so unique, so dynamic — yes, so miraculous — that no cliche is too cliched to include in the press release.

This is one of those moments:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

GreyScale Reinvents Loneliness

Startup Raises $41 to Celebrate Isolation and Withdrawal in a World That’s Just Not That Interesting

DALLAS, April 1, 2011 — Introduced today, GreyScale™ is a miraculous, free application for iPhone and Android that allows people who spend most of their time alone to capture and have real-time access to monochromatic photos and videos of themselves — created by themselves, for themselves. GreyScale is the best way to experience life’s everyday moments without having to share them with people you barely know and could care less about – or anyone else, for that matter.

“GreyScale is the most advanced and intuitive way to enjoy your smartphone, even if you don’t have many friends and rarely get out of the house,” said Alexander Muse, GreyScale’s CEO. “While some high-profile apps, such as the recently announced Color, encourage users to share everything with everybody, we find this very annoying. We are happiest when we don’t have to pretend to lead exciting lives, since most people today actually lead lives of isolation and withdrawal.”

“Let’s face it: it’s not just losers who are alone a lot – it’s most of us. And most of us don’t look that great in color, either,” Muse added. “That’s why we like to say that GreyScale is ‘Color for the rest of us.’”

“Just as the iPhone changed everything about mobile phones, so GreyScale will transform the way people work and play with themselves,” said Jeff Clavier, Founder and Managing Partner, SoftTech VC. “Once or twice a decade a company emerges from Silicon Valley that can change everything. While not actually based in Silicon Valley, GreyScale is one of those companies.”

GreyScale has raised $41 in financing from an all-star cast of angel investors including Jeff Clavier, Mark Cuban, Dave McClure, David Cohen, Jay Adelson, Gabriella Draney and Aaron Patzer. Proceeds will be used to develop GreyScale’s pioneering technology and provide service on a global scale, particularly in Eastern Europe, where it is expected to be huge.

GreyScale is a Visual Diary

Every photo and video captured using GreyScale is stored on the Web for immediate enjoyment. Capture every experience without worrying about using up memory; GreyScale has infinite capacity to capture even the most mundane moments of the most monotonous lives. Each day is monochromatically displayed as a series of thumbnail images. Tap on any image to go back to the day when it was originally captured for full contextual information. You can see all your visits to the bathroom, living room couch or mailbox during the past day, week or month. Looking back has never been so detailed, easy or unsparingly honest.

Availability and Pricing

GreyScale is available from various places arguing over who owns the name “App Store.” It is free to download and use.

About GreyScale

GreyScale is advancing the Post-VC revolution by inventing new applications for about $41 each. Founded and led by a team of no-name engineers and entrepreneurs, GreyScale is based in Dallas but conveniently located in the area code of Palo Alto, California. To learn more about GreyScale, please visit http://www.shopsavvy.mobi.

Links to Graphics

GreyScale Logo

GreyScale Icon

Website Screenshot

iPhone Screenshot 1

iPhone Screenshot 2

Android Screenshot

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February 7, 2011 in B2B PR, Media Orchard, Media Relations by Orchardo
CLIENT NEWS: RiseSmart Scores with Super Bowl Release

Our Silicon Valley client RiseSmart, which provides outplacement and recruitment solutions, scored big with an analysis we did correlating Super Bowl winners with jobless rates. Here’s an excerpt from the Jan. 31 news release:

Could a city’s economic prosperity, as measured by employment level, make a difference in its team’s chances of winning the Super Bowl? Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics suggests that it does. According to a new analysis by RiseSmart, the team whose metropolitan area boasts the lower jobless rate has won 16 of the past 20 Super Bowls – an 80 percent success rate.

Based on this historical correlation, the Green Bay Packers should be the favorite to defeat the Pittsburgh Steelers in Super Bowl XLV.

Of course, the Pack won. And so did RiseSmart, with the study being covered from coast to coast in television newscasts, radio talk, in print and online. RiseSmart received TV coverage in markets like Chicago, Phoenix and Seattle — and of course, Pittsburgh and Milwaukee.

Here’s an article on the study that appeared in the Arizona Republic, one of the many newspapers that covered the story.

With Green Bay’s win, that means the correlation we identified has held true for 17 of the past 20 Super Bowls. I’m sure we’ll come up with some new wrinkles to explore this time next year.

 
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December 20, 2010 in Media Orchard, Media Relations by Orchardo
CLIENT NEWS: ShopSavvy on Fox, CNN and Bloomberg

Our Dallas public relations client ShopSavvy hit the trifecta over the past couple of weeks, earning live interviews on Fox Business Network and Bloomberg TV and appearing in a CNN segment this morning. ShopSavvy’s Alexander Muse kicked butt in his Fox and Bloomberg appearances.

Here’s the CNN segment:

Here’s the Fox interview:

Watch Alex on Bloomberg here.

 
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December 1, 2010 in Media Orchard, Public Relations by Orchardo
CLIENT NEWS: ShopSavvy Scores 543 TV Hits in One Week

Our client Big in Japan scored big during Black Friday week when its flagship mobile app, ShopSavvy, was featured in 543 TV newscasts.

ShopSavvy has gotten lots of media attention from the time the Idea Grove began working with Big in Japan in September 2008, but in recent months, the proliferation of shopping apps has made for a noisier media marketplace. Our challenge was to ensure that the ShopSavvy message penetrated the din of PR pitches and got its fair share of coverage.

So we created a digital newsroom and blasted the ShopSavvy pitch, along with newscast-friendly b-roll, to 15,000 broadcast outlets nationwide on the morning of Nov. 23. The results show that the story was gobbled up like Thanksgiving turkey.

 
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November 3, 2010 in Brand Strategy, Content Marketing, Media Orchard, Public Relations, Social Media Marketing by Orchardo
RANT: On Thought Leaders, Market Followers and Stories That Stick

I’ve finally cleared off my desk (that’s the loud crash you heard earlier this morning) and have begun to focus on getting my book finished so we can roll the presses and start trying to sell the darn thing. We’ll begin running excerpts here sometime soon, so you can decide for yourself whether it’s worth the 20 bucks on Amazon.

People familiar with Media Orchard — generally, if you were blogging about PR in the 2005-2007 timeframe, you know about us — understand that I’ve always seen social media and online marketing through an old-school lens.

While some have attempted to come up with shiny new names for what we do, cool-looking press release templates and so forth, and others have hit the speaking circuit to pronounce press releases dead or PR fundamentally, like, changed, like, forever, I’ve always pinned my sails to the truism that the more things change, the more they stay the same.

I know, it’s not sexy. But it does have the virtue of being true.

Calling BS

PR, and marketing communications generally, have always been about telling stories. Stories still need a beginning, a middle and an end. They still need a purpose and a message. All that’s really changed is the variety of media we use, the complexities in identifying our audiences, and the tools at our disposal to measure success or failure.

I won’t name names, but back in 2006, many of the so-called top influencers in social media were spouting a lot of nonsense about how PR would be rocked to its core. For example, most declared that CEOs who weren’t good writers shouldn’t have blogs — because ghost-blogging was verboten as “inauthentic.”

I always knew this to be BS. It was inevitable how things would evolve — our economy dictates it, not the so-called “thought leaders.”

As I told my friend Geoff Livingston when he interviewed me back in March 2007:

When you think about it, Web 2.0 started the way Web 1.0 started. That is, you had a bunch of techies and academics and anti-corporate types running everything and thinking they could make the rules for everybody else. But guess what? They can’t. We live in a deregulated market economy, and ultimately, where there is money to be made, the market will make the rules.

I’m not saying that this is a good thing or a bad thing; I’m just saying it’s inevitable. It’s inevitable in the same way that cable news stations will cover Anna Nicole Smith 24/7, no matter what is going on in Africa. All this social media stuff is going mainstream; it’s all going to be owned and operated by companies that are trying to wring every dollar they can out of it.

And, of course, that’s exactly what happened. Look around.

Stories That Stick

Meanwhile, a lot of gurus who are making big bucks from the speaking circuit today are saying very different things from what they said in 2006. Truth is, they’re not “thought leaders” — they’re “market followers.” They come up with new “leading thoughts” based on realities that are very different from what they previously projected.

It’s like listening to sports talk, where the radio host says the team sucks and the coach should be fired the day after a loss — but that the coach is a genius after the team wins the following week.

Guess what: the coach didn’t get better. The radio host’s job is to come up with something to say every day, to get people to pay attention and respond. No one pays much attention to what he said the day before.

And so it is with too many of the social media gurus.

There’s only one problem: while this “guru” model works for self-promotion, it doesn’t work as well for brands. In fact, the techniques that get some gurus attention are often the very same techniques that companies should avoid like the plague in their own communications plans.

You see, companies aren’t like sports radio hosts. And they aren’t like speaking-circuit gurus. Companies can’t hold their finger in the air every day to decide which way the wind’s blowing, and then sell something different, the way a guru can spout new opinions.

The best companies invest in their products, services and brand identity for the long term. This requires a consistency in storytelling — across all media, and to all relevant audiences. It requires creating stories with staying power.

Or as I put it in my book’s title, “Stories That Stick.”

More later…

 
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