Automation in PR is available to all companies regardless of size, and the deployment of AI assisted content generation will allow content to be available at a rate to match the possibilities of the automation tools.
In this podcast I am going to talk about the McKinsey report on the first 90 Days of COVID-19 Recovery Plan, the impact of the Allen Curve on people working at home, and what my Shanghainese wife is listening to on her iPad in the countryside of England which speaks to the future impact of AI on us all.
McKinsey Report can be found here.
Read the article version of this episode - https://theunnoticed.cc/episode/why-the-biggest-threat-to-companies-is-the-remoteness-of-conversations-and-how-ai-may-solve-it
For a blog post which accompanies this please visit:
https://www.eastwestpr.com/blogs/
You can reach Jim James on Linkedin:
http://www.linkedin.com/in/jamesjim
I also talk about SPEAK|pr - our 5 Step Methodology for entrepreneurs to manage their own PR. Do please come and download a free copy
http://www.eastwestpr.com/speakpr
EASTWEST Public Relations Group was founded in Singapore in 1995 and has a company in China and the UK. Jim James is a British entrepreneur who has spent the past 25 years building businesses using PR, whilst running a multi office Agency serving over 500 clients.
If you want to know how to get noticed this show is for you. I have interviews, tools, tips, everything that an entrepreneur could need in order to help their organization to get noticed for free. Thank you for joining me on the unnoticed show.
Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched!
Start for FREE
Please rate the show here.
Thank you for listening to this episode of the unnoticed to show. I hope that you've enjoyed. If you have, please do rate it on any of the players. If you'd like more information, go over to EASTWEST PR and subscribe to our weekly newsletter. Or connect with me on Linkedin that's just Jim James. I'd be delighted to connect with you and let me know how i can help you to get noticed.
Support the show (https://lovethepodcast.com/Unnoticed)
The UnNoticed Entrepreneur is hosted & produced by Jim James.
Welcome to the speak PR podcast. My name is Jim James, and I am the Founder and Managing Director of East West PR. And during this podcast drily as always just trying to share some of the learnings that I've had today in the hope that it may help you as you're trying to do better PR for your company, or even for your clients. I had a fairly fun day and fairly trying day in equal measure, really. I'm doing this late at night because lockdown is wonderful, in that it gives us lots of time to be with our children. On the other hand, it means that we need to be with them when they're available, and then get our own work done. When they're hopefully going to bed. So, Sandy a little bit late in the night, so I apologise for that. But during the day I spoke With some, some bright people who are also talking to young people about work, one of my university friends runs a very established PR firm here in the UK, specialising in b2b work, and he's very busy. And he's saying that the corona viruses brought on good work for him and his agency. But he had furloughed to staff and has the remainder or working from home. And so the staff are young on the whole and my friend and I, we lived Richard, we lived through the recession. We graduated in 1990. into the long queues are three and 4 million unemployed. So we've seen unemployment before and ever since in varying degrees. But Richard was saying how one of the tasks Now is to manage the expectations and the anxiety of his young team. And it led me on to thinking about some research that I had done many years ago when I was doing communications training into Professor Thomas Allen. Now, Professor Allen wrote a book in 1977, called managing the flow of technology. And he, as a result of his work created the Allen curve. Now, the Allen curve displays an exponential drop in frequency of communication between people as the distance between them grows. In fact, in the original MIT study, they had people sitting in offices, effectively a basketball court away, and they found that if people were at either ends of the basketball court, the chances of them seeing each other even Just once a week, we're like less than 10% amazing reduction in the opportunity just to catch up if you're not really just in the vicinity. So Richard and I's conversation today reminded me that now we've got people working from home. And we've got the technology of zoom and loom and teams and all these other platforms. But Professor Allen actually updated his book in 2006, discussing the impact of technology. And they found that even with all the technologies available, then although admittedly, not as many as we have now, there was still a marked decay in the use of all communication with distance. So it does seem as though whilst the heart may grow fonder with distance, the understanding does not grow straight. longer. So we have a challenge as PR people within our own teams now, and certainly with our audiences, and as entrepreneurs who are trying to engage and bring our teams with us on the vision and on the journey, it's even more important that we're learning how to create alignment and create some visioning. But the other aspect of this is the amount of communication that needs to take place that's proactive. And we've coined a term called the active communications index. And the active communications index, the ACI is really all about getting some metrics into how often we communicate and through which channels. So quite often we find clients and even as an entrepreneur myself, I communicate sporadically or intermittently, especially internally. And that's, that's really an issue because we give people a message or a group of people a message, and then we move on to the next task. And as Allen's law would suggest, if people are at home, they're not experiencing the office or the showroom or the workshop or the factory floor. They're not getting validation from their peers, they're not kind of getting the shirt and tie or even the uniform on, which helps them to get their minds and their hearts back into the swing of the company. So as we run companies, we need to think about how we're communicating and how actively we're communicating. And the volume of that becomes quite hard to manage. So, Rob, and I have just implemented Zoho social, which is a platform much like HubSpot and buzzsprout and Hootsuite, which manages your social media messaging, because it's simply not possible to manage all the channels frequently enough. So in in Zoho, for example, we've added our five channels of LinkedIn and Facebook group, and Twitter, and also a Facebook company page. And we can schedule and we can automate those posts as well. So what's happening now is we're able to start to schedule these. And some of them, we can actually use the AI of the platform to do the scheduling. Now, the issue with that, of course, is that the technology is done to determine where and when you were sending out content. But of course, there are even platforms now like content samurai, that are helping people to make content using AI So it's becoming possible to both automate and to auto generate content using technology. Now, this creates an amazing opportunity for people running small companies. Because if we can think of the stories and we can think of the messages, and we can create these as graphics, or as videos, infographics, text, podcasts like this, the technology now is enabling us to schedule and to reach out to share that information across time zones simultaneously in a timed and organised way. So part of speak PR, which we've developed, which is a five step methodology for entrepreneurs, include a story planner, a day by day step, where you can put in a store for the day. And within the planner, we have this concept of the active communications index. And we ask people to start to identify which channels they're putting their content through, and which content they're creating every day. And one, multiply by the other, gives you a frequency and gives you an overall index. So as we start to see the impact of COVID on our businesses, we're starting to see that we've got these workers like my friend, Richards workers, working from home, and some of them are a little bit scared, some of them certainly not understanding exactly what's going on. For many, it's even the first crisis they've lived through. So the importance becomes event maintaining an active communications index, for our team, as well as our allies and our clients and McKinsey have this week, just put out a report saying that the next 90 days post COVID-19 will be digital. And I think this is great. They've called out for particular aspects that they believe organisations should conform to, in order to fully take advantage and to survive. Now, they talk about the need for companies to refocus their digital efforts towards the changing customer expectations. The use of data and AI to improve business operations, selectively modernising technology capabilities and increasing the organisational drumbeat. Now these are all great and valid. But what's missing in my view in this document is the specific articulation expression that organisations will have to address their communication strategy Because of these, these sort of technology and business related initiatives within an organisation will fail. If the teams and the customers are not in alignment with these new visions, and as the Allen curve shows us, when are people are distributed, that curve is going to be accentuated. We saw that Twitter has said that its staff can continue to work from home permanently after the lockdown. Now, that's an amazing, an amazing opportunity. But it's also an amazing challenge, ironically enough for a company that's effectively a communications provider. JACK Dorsey and his team are going to have to engage both their customers with that who frankly probably won't notice any difference, but they're also going to have to engage their teams. This week. I've been doing my taxes. And I have a permanent residence in Singapore and I live in the UK. So I have a, you know, an interesting tax situation. And I ran the helpline and I went through to a lady who greeted me saying that I was the first caller that she'd had all day and she was delighted for the chance to have a chat. Now, that's the first time I've ever got through the tax office. Frankly, probably the first time I've ever got through, but certainly the first time I've ever had a welcome like that where we had a bit of a chat about the weather, and about homeschooling. And then we got on to my tax affairs. Now, it's a much more relaxed environment for that remote HMRC worker. But she was already saying she doesn't feel like going back on the commute, and she likes to have time at home with her children. So how are organisations like yours going to reengage those people? And I think they're going to do that. Through the belief in Division, in the purpose and in the leadership, because we're going to have a case in cases where people start to realise that they're working for the right or the wrong company, and are going to bind into it even more. So, we've got this wonderful situation now, where companies, small companies, like mine, or maybe like yours, have the opportunity to start to communicate using automation and artificial intelligence in order to compete with these larger companies, that ironically enough may start to suffer from the LM curve, the organisational challenge with time and distance impacting their communication. Now AI is coming whether we like it or not to our home With Alexa and Siri, and my wife, who's a Chinese lady just showed me how AI is already making a difference for us at home. I just bought her an iPad. And she received that we didn't see anybody because even the courier left at the door. Now, she has downloaded a new app, which is called. We read from Tencent, which is a WeChat app. And for 20 RMB a month, which is just you know, two pounds, she has access to literally thousands and thousands of audiobooks. Now, what's interesting with these audio books is that they're all read by AI. And having listened to them. My wife is now constantly listening to them. Is that They sound like a native speaker. And you can toggle between male or female reader. So Chinese companies have been involved in AI for a long time already. And they've already got significant apps that are leveraging this power to go to consumers and give them what they want when they wanted, without any human interaction whatsoever. Now, I was thinking, What if your press releases and your case studies and your articles and your interviews started to be formatted, but also to be delivered and read by AI? It's an opportunity really, for us to start to think about creating personalised messaging to those people that we want to receive our information using AI where we can't necessarily record each one of those and let's face it, our language may not be right for that. personalization at scale, using the AI technology that is residing in a platform like we read from 10 cent, is going to be transformative. So the Allen curve is going to mean that as we move further away from each other, the statistics show us that our propensity to communicate with those people far away will reduce. So the challenge for all of us now is to overcome that. And the technology exists. But in order to overcome it, it's not the technology that we need to be sharing. It's our mission. As founders and entrepreneurs. It's our passion for what we're trying to do with our businesses. And it's engagement for those people that we want to bring with us, be they employees or partners or customers. And that's really the opportunity and the challenge that I've learned about Today, and then I wanted to share with you. So I hope this is good for you. Wherever you are, whatever you're doing, I pray that you're well and safe and that you keep on communicating. Thanks for listening

