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Google Not Talking To CNET - A PR Lesson

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This was bouncing around in the blogs last week, but now it's in the New York Times. Google PR is not talking to CNET until July 2006 ... ... because News.com published "Sometimes a company is ticked off and won't talk to a reporter for a bit," he said, "but I've never seen a company not talk to a whole news organization." Don't believe this for a second. Maybe it's true for Jay personally, but not the rest of us. For years companies, particularly in the Valley and even elsewhere, have had "do not call" lists of reporters and even news outlets they won't talk to. I even learned long ago to let calls from certain reporters go to voicemail if necessary. This forces journalists to write such-and-such "didn't return calls" as opposed to "didn't comment." (It's subtle, but it sounds better.) In the wrote on Friday about the new pressures bloggers have put on him and his difficulties in getting PR people to respond - and he's ZDNet. If I represented Continental Airlines, I wouldn't wait around to contact him. But I would have applied this equally to any blogger. Now imagine you have a blogger at your doorstep with a similar request. All of us in PR need take this person seriously and respond. Yes, it means our jobs will get harder, but there's no escape in this new age. What's worse, it may strain the talent shortage that the PR community is already suffering. Steve Rubel is a PR strategist with nearly 16 years of public relations, marketing, journalism and communications experience. He currently serves as a Edelman, the largest independent global PR firm.

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