July 18, 2011 in Media Orchard, Social Media Marketing, Web Design by Scott Baradell
IDEA GROVE NEWS: Photography and Design Blog Nears 1,000 Posts

We’ve been proud to call New York’s Black Star photographic agency an Idea Grove client for five years as of last month.

Founded in 1935, Black Star is one of American photojournalism’s historic institutions. The list of those who in the early years signed a contract with Black Star reads like a Who’s Who of photography in the following decades: Walter Bosshard, Robert Capa, Ralph Crane, Herbert Gehr, Fritz Goro, Andreas Feininger, Ernst Haas and Philippe Halsmann, to name but a few.

According to photo historian Marianne Fulton, Life magazine brought Black Star 30 to 40 percent of its business. Black Star, in turn, contributed to Life becoming the most popular magazine in America for nearly three decades, with tens of millions of readers.

Since its beginnings, Black Star has been committed to mentoring both its photographers and its clients. This is one reason the agency has been so respected — and so loved — by photographers for so many years.

Black Star Rising, the Idea Grove’s blog collaboration with the agency, is our way of extending Black Star’s ethos of teaching — and caring — to a broader audience. We started it in 2007 and are now close to publishing our 1,000th post.

Black Star and the Idea Grove are always looking for photographers, graphic designers, Web designers and other creative professionals who want to share their first-person experiences, views and advice. The content covers both the creative and business side of things.

If you’d like to contribute to the blog, either with an article or video post, please contact Stephanie Fedler at sfedler (at) ideagrove (dot) com.

 
0
November 2, 2007 in Celebrity, Web Design by Scott Baradell
Dennis Cole’s Web Site Needs a Redesign


Any of you old farts out there remember Dennis Cole? He was one of those John Tesh-handsome guys who cobbled together an acting career in the ’70s by appearing on shows like Love Boat, Fantasy Island and Charlie’s Angels. He was most famous for his brief marriage to Angel Jaclyn Smith.

Now he’s back in the news for getting busted in a domestic dispute in Fort Lauderdale Thursday.

Apparently he sells real estate these days. And plays the trumpet. And sells autographed photos of himself via PayPal.

He’s also had some real tragedy in his life — in particular, the unsolved murder of his son, Joey.

See for yourself at the decidedly Web 1.0 site, DennisCole.com.

 
0
January 24, 2007 in Media Orchard, Public Relations, Technology PR, Web Design by Scott Baradell
An Open Letter to Jimmy Wales: Your Conflict-of-Interest Policy Will Lead to More Corruption, Not Less

Dear Jimmy,

I see you’ve found yourself in a dust-up with Microsoft over its refusal to observe Wikipedia’s conflict-of-interest policy. As the AP reports:

Microsoft Corp. landed in the Wikipedia doghouse Tuesday after it offered to pay a blogger to change technical articles on the community-produced Web encyclopedia site … Microsoft acknowledged it had approached the writer and offered to pay him for the time it would take to correct what the company was sure were inaccuracies in Wikipedia articles on an open-source document standard and a rival format put forward by Microsoft.

Catherine Brooker, a spokeswoman for Microsoft, said she believed the articles were heavily written by people at IBM Corp., which is a big supporter of the open-source standard … Brooker said Microsoft had gotten nowhere in trying to flag the purported mistakes to Wikipedia’s volunteer editors, so it sought an independent expert who could determine whether changes were necessary and enter them on Wikipedia.

Jimmy, I don’t know whether Catherine is telling the truth or not — but I have no reason to doubt her, and I hope you’ll agree that her explanation is at least plausible. In fact, you’re probably surprised, as I was, that Catherine was willing to be so candid.

Jimmy, I love Wikipedia. It’s an amazing creation — one that I use every single day. Like you, I want it to be as accurate and objective as possible. I admire the fact that you strive tirelessly for these ideals.

But it’s time for a reality check. With your blanket policies against corporate contributors and others, you are digging yourself a hole — one that promises to get deeper for the foreseeable future, and damage your brand in the process.

Note this description of Wikipedia from the same AP article:

While Wikipedia is known as the encyclopedia that anyone can tweak, founder Jimmy Wales and his cadre of volunteer editors, writers and moderators have blocked public-relations firms, campaign workers and anyone else perceived as having a conflict of interest from posting fluff or slanting entries.

In one sentence, the article states the crux of your current dilemma: Is Wikipedia really “the encyclopedia that anyone can tweak” when you have rules that shut out so many interested — and yes, even self-interested — contributors? Doesn’t this create more problems than it solves?

Frankly, I’m afraid you’ve oversimplified the concept of “conflict of interest” — as well as the cure for it. Let me break down the problem, as I see it, in two parts:

1. Many Wikipedia contributors may be motivated by self-interest that is not as easy for you to identify (and thus eliminate).

How naive is it to operate under the assumption that Wikipedians have no point of view on the entries to which they contribute?

If I am an academic who, for example, is an ardent supporter (or ardent opponent) of President Bush, should I be allowed to contribute to the Bush entry on Wikipedia? Well, technically, I have a conflict of interest — so I shouldn’t.

I would guess, however, that for the great majority of Wikipedians, having a passion about various topics is what draws them to post or edit entries in the first place. If you remove the self-interest, you remove the passion. And passion is what drives people to contribute — for free — to an online resource.

2. With entire classes of contributors shut out, Wikipedia will be increasingly vulnerable to corrupting forces.

As the Wikipedia community increasingly resembles an insiders’ cabal, Wikipedia’s insiders will have more and more influence to peddle. And believe me — it will be peddled.

We live in a free market system. There are lots of unethical people out there. If you continue to define Wikipedia by the contributors rather than the contributions, “Wikipedia-approved” editors and contributors will inevitably succumb to corporate bribery, small-scale and large.

And unlike Rick Jelliffe, they’ll keep it on the down-low. Microsoft’s dalliance with pay-for-post is the tip of the iceberg.

This would ultimately undermine — if not destroy — Wikipedia’s credibility.

So, Jimmy, while it might seem the easier solution is to block corporate and other contributors, I’m confident you’ll find — over time — that policing the content, rather than the contributors, makes a lot more sense.

Good luck. I’m rooting for you.

Sincerely,

Scott

P.S. — here are some other points of view on the Microsoft thing:

What Is The Check On Wikipedia’s Power?
Wikipedia Watchdogs Need Their Own Doghouse
Why Microsoft PR got accused of cutting up the Bible
Battleground Wikipedia
When Wikipedia Gets It Wrong
Microsoft: If You’re Going to Game Wikipedia, Do It Right

 
9
January 24, 2007 in Content Marketing, Media Orchard, SEO, Web Design by Scott Baradell
Alexa Factiness

We noticed this week that Spin Thicket already has surpassed Media Orchard in the Alexa traffic rankings.

Now, of course, we love both our children equally, so we won’t take sides here. But … for those of you who like to put great stock in Alexa, we thought you might be interested to know that Media Orchard’s traffic is more than twice that of Spin Thicket.

I haven’t had the opportunity to try this experiment, but I’d wager that if you

– owned an online business with 500 employees,
– required them all to download the Alexa toolbar, and
– made your Web site their default homepage

you’d land in the top 5,000 sites on Alexa within six months.

Anybody want to give it a try?

 
2
January 12, 2007 in Media Orchard, Public Relations, SEO, Web Design by Scott Baradell
Five BlogTalkRadio Hacks for PR Practitioners

Happy Friday, everyone.

On the BTR blog, I just posted five hacks for PR practitioners who’d like to take advantage of the BlogTalkRadio platform.

Check it out.

 
0