Another Obituary for the Press Release Written Too Soon

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August 1st, 2008

The chatter among public relations and investor relations practitioners this week is about pending (read that word again for emphasis, please) new guidelines from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regarding the notorious Reg-FD – the set of SEC rules guiding fair disclosure of material information to the public. On Wednesday this week, the SEC commissioners voted unanimously to “provide new guidance to public companies about how to comply with the securities laws while developing their Web sites to serve as an effective means for disseminating important information to investors.”

The reports of our deaths have been greatly exaggerated

While those of us with Reg-FD and Sarbanes Oxley publicity regulations battle scars are waiting to see the official guidelines, some people are couching this vote as the final nail in the press release coffin. Let’s not be too hasty.

Fundamentally, Reg-FD protects investors and prospective investors by making disclosure of material non-public information simultaneous and widespread. In other words, a company needs to broadcast the disclosure of material information – information that will affect a stock price once made public – so that all investors can have access to it at the same time. Traditionally, this has meant using a newswire for such disclosure so that the information can be seen far and wide, and be easily discoverable on the Internet.

The SEC’s vote will (may?) amend this practice to allow Reg-FD disclosure on company websites in, what one IR website refers to as “certain circumstances.” Some people have interpreted this decision to mean that blogs can now be used to disclose earnings information to investors and therefore the press release is dead.

That’s probably too overstated and certainly premature. The SEC guidelines are not yet public information. What is public, as of today, is the 120 page (excluding the appendix) “Final Report of the Advisory Committee on Improvements to Financial Reporting to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission,” which on page 108 states:

The SEC has issued a series of interpretive releases and rules addressing the use of electronic media to deliver or transmit information under the federal securities laws. The SEC issued its last comprehensive interpretive release on the use of electronic media, including corporate websites, in 2000. Since 2000, significant technological advances have increased both the market’s demand for more timely corporate disclosure and the ability of investors to capture, process, and disseminate this information. Recognizing this, the SEC has adopted a large number of rules that mandate, permit, or require disclosure of the use of corporate websites to provide important corporate information and developments. The SEC has voted to publish an interpretative release to provide guidance regarding the use of company websites under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws.

Nowhere in the 120 pages of the report or the 60 or so pages of appendix will you find the words “blog” or “social media.”

That’s not to say blogs, forums or social networks won’t be impacted. In fact, in the press release issued by the SEC, Chairman Christopher Cox says, “The last time the SEC issued guidance in this area, the idea of ’social networks’ hadn’t yet been developed, and creating a social network where shareholders could meet and exchange views was barely imaginable. Ongoing developments in technology have increased both the markets’ and investors’ demand for more timely company disclosure on the Web, and in turn, raised new securities law issues for public companies to consider.”

Cox’s tenure as chairman of the SEC has been regarded by many as leading the SEC to live in the modern world. No question there is more consumable, and therefore more valuable, information available on the web than in the lengthy tables and text contained in a form 10K – the legally required content of an annual report – for example. That’s really cool, and great news for investors. It may even be great news for web design firms and companies like Wordpress. Likely this does not spell disaster for Business Wire, PR Newswire or Marketwire, nor for the press releases they issue.

No one knows yet for sure, because as mentioned before, the “interpretive release” from the SEC is not yet available. TheMoPRBlog asked Business Wire, PR Newswire and Marketwire for their reaction to this news, and all three had no comment to make because there is in fact nothing official yet about which a comment can be made. Once the SEC issues its guidance, these newswires will issue their own.

What may be of more concern to the PR profession is the notion of “under certain circumstances” as raised in the first sentence of the IR Web Report’s article. By way of analogy, think of how another government institution uses this same notion: stuff you pay for is tax deductible… under certain circumstances.

Guidelines are better when the issues are both easily understood and the outcome is binary; you either can do something, or you can’t. Tax laws aren’t binary, and therefore a great many people are forced to rely on outside help when preparing their tax returns, whether that help comes from a tax accountant or from software. The implications of adding a swath of gray to what is now black and white is troubling. Not only does it mean confusion and the possibilities of making mistakes (mistakes made by public companies can result in fines or even jail time for CEOs), it also creates an environment for potential abuse.

When discussing this issue with a corporate counsel friend of mine, he said “adding a subjective element to this process will open the door for mischief.”

Those like Brian Solis, of whom we’re big fans, who think this is the death knell for the press release are focused on form and not substance. Maybe the social media press release will replace the old text-only press releases of years past. The wire services themselves now offer social media wires and XHTML-based content, and our agency has invested in the in-house development of our own social media newswire to issue these social media enhanced news releases, so it’s fair to say that the traditional release will evolve. But changes to the SEC guidelines are probably not going to eliminate the need to cast a wide net so that material non-public information can be made simultaneously available to all investors, nor should they. Not all investors use social media, despite Jonathan Schwartz’s – and quite frankly, Mobility PR’s – desire to make social media ubiquitous.

Instead of waiting for the SEC to catch up to technology advances, social media and blogging companies may want to drive technology advances to catch up with the appropriate need for fair disclosure. TheMoPRBlog guesses that the forthcoming guidelines from the SEC will create the environment where such advances will be both compelling and profitable.

We invite your comments.

John S

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Weekend reading - August 1

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August 1st, 2008

The coming text quake. We heard about the Los Angeles earthquake on Tuesday [the “little big one” as the wags are calling it] via Twitter first; not on the radio, 24-hour cable news, or even a news website. In fact, some of the bigger breaking news the past couple of months, such as the deaths of George Carlin and Tim Russert, have been relayed to us first via Twitter on our iPhone.

This means two things. One, that web users are getting their information and news from newer more untraditional sources. And two, we spend way too much time on Twitter.

A recent piece from the Los Angeles Daily News had an interesting take on how web and mobile phone users got their news during the earthquake’s aftermath.

Landline telephones were still a popular way of spreading the news and checking in with relatives; but unlike previous quakes, instant messaging, e-mail and even text messaging were used to get news and check in. According to the article, the LA mayor’s office couldn’t use its phones to contact the city’s emergency operations center and had to rely on trading instant messages via their BlackBerrys.

And, at the University of California, Los Angeles, 30,000 students and employees were sent a “Bruin Alert” text message on the quake.

Sure, the regular news outlets were still out in full force, but it’s an interesting trend and a sign that mainstream media need to think outside the box around how they can and should be delivering the news.

Women viewers turning to online network TV. According to a new report from Integrated Media Measurement Inc. (IMMI) more viewers are watching network TV shows online. The report revealed more than 20% of TV viewers watch some amount of primetime programming online. And the largest segment of online TV viewers? They’re white, affluent, well-educated, working women between the ages of 25-44.

Among online viewers, 50% are watching programming as it becomes available and appear to be beginning to use the computer as a substitute for television, IMMI said.

The other 50% are using the web to watch past programming they have missed:

•    Fill-in viewing: Either they are filling in an episode online when they have already seen the other episodes around it on TV (18.7%).
•    Catch-up viewing: Or they are catching up on an episode online after seeing the previous episodes on TV (31.3%).

The study also revealed that non-DVR owners are adopting the computer for time-shifting rather than buying a DVR. In some cases, online viewing of a particular program was higher than DVR viewing of that program, IMMI found. In general, online viewers are less likely to use a DVR.

Mobile and real-time Olympics. According to the longest press release ever (NBC internal PR, call us. We can help you) NBC is offering 2,200 hours of live streaming video of the 2008 Beijing Olympics on NBCOlympics.com.

According to the release, NBC Olympics Mobile will also present the most comprehensive sporting event coverage ever delivered on mobile phones - from live mobile TV broadcasts to breaking news and text and video alerts.

Stay tuned for an announcement from smartphone users’ favorite mobile content provider Viigo (and MoPR client!) which has some big news to share in the coming weeks around mobile coverage of this year’s Olympic games.

Mobile viruses a reality? AdaptiveMobile, a provider of mobile security solutions for enterprises and individuals, is seeing a sharp rise in the volume of mobile network virus attacks. Recent analysis of the data from the company’s mobile operator customers suggests that two virus variants - CommWarrior and Beselo – are causing particular damage on web phones.

While CommWarrior only affects Nokia Series 60 phones, Beselo attacks all smartphones, spreading via Bluetooth and MMS as a Symbian SIS installation file. Beselo is growing at four times the rate of CommWarrior.

The bottom line from AdaptiveMobile is that:

As infection rates continue to rise and higher proportions of customers are left at risk, mobile phone security will become a key differentiator for customer creation and retention – particularly among large organizations keen to ensure their staff are properly protected. The battle is heating up – and mobile operators have to make sure they are competing effectively.

Hat tip to Read Write Web’s article.

Sprint gets fee smackdown. A California court ruled this week that Sprint Nextel was wrong to charge its customers penalty fees for early termination of cell phone contracts, according to an article from the Washington Post.

According to the article:

Sprint must pay $18.3 million in cash to users who paid early-termination fees; another $54.8 million must be credited to users who were charged but didn’t pay the fees, which is open to comment until Aug. 5, when the final ruling will be made.

The decision only affects California customers, yet Sprint, T-Mobile and other wireless carriers are covering their bases from suits not only in California but in other states by “lobbying the Federal Communications Commission to adopt new federal rules governing such penalties, removing them from state jurisdiction.”

The press release: Its death greatly exaggerated. Last Wednesday the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)’ recommended that rules be set to govern how “corporations disclose their earnings and other information on their Web sites.”  This ruling could drastically impact the newswire business and shift the way IR and financial PR pros execute their communications.

Some in our industry have interpreted this decision to mean that blogs can now be used to disclose earnings information to investors and the press release is now dead.

Not so fast. Read more what we think, here.

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Deadliest Job in America May Comes as a Surprise

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July 30th, 2008


Yahoo! recently posted a teaser line in the featured section revealing “The Deadliest Job in America.”

I was curious so I clicked the link.  As I was waiting for the page to load, I was thinking of all the possibilities:  Alaskan crab fisherman, construction workers, high-rise window cleaners or even firefighters. I was surprised to find out that the deadliest job in America:  working on cell phone towers.

The numbers don’t lie.  RCR Wireless quoted in their article (the original piece that Yahoo! quoted from) the fatality rate at currently 183.6 deaths per 100,000 workers.  Stating that “because of the relatively small number of employees in the business compared to other industry sectors, tower climbing — which suffered five fatalities during a 12-day span this spring and seven deaths overall this year so far — may also be the most overlooked, deadliest job in the country.”

RCR Wireless also noted that National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) “estimated at that time the risk for fatal injuries among telecom tower workers ranges from 49 to 468 injury-related deaths per 100,000 employees, compared with about five deaths per 100,000 employees in all other U.S. industries.”  It’s hard to imagine going to work every day with numbers like that haunting you.

The problem?  Most blame the lack of safe anchorage as well as relying on faulty personal protection equipment.  To put it quite simply: careless working practices.  And the reason for such careless work? The rush to get expanding networks raised and updated.  And while it’s understandable that networks want to continue rapid growth, it shouldn’t be at the cost of a human life.

Currently OSHA  is working to improve workplace safety and keep awareness of the increasing death toll among wireless providers, while workers and their unions are also pushing for passage of federal regulations.  And since President Bush has even gone as far as to publicly recognize the problem, I’m anxious to see what new regulations come out in the near future.  One thing is for sure:  they need to come out sooner than later before more tower casualties occur.

So the next time you have to ask “Can you hear me NOW?” try not to get too miffed.  There are folks out there risking their lives (literally) to make that possible for you.

Tamara

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