When Life Hands You a Hardhat, Do the YMCA

If there is one thing that any PR person must know from the get-go, it is this:  in work, as in life (and especially in travel), something will always go wrong.  No matter how meticulously you plan, sometimes situations arise that are beyond your control – what will make or break a situation is the way you handle it.

A couple of weeks ago I brought a handful of journalists down to Cancun to check out a couple client resorts. The morning I left on the trip, the weather report said a storm was heading for Mexico.  I braced myself, but we had perfect weather.  The next day, we headed out on a very small boat in search of whale sharks.  Sometimes you see them, sometimes you don’t.  We lucked out, finding a huge pod of massive 45-foot long whale sharks.  Our group not only swam alongside dozens of these Jurassic creatures, but a National Geographic photographer just so happened to join our group at the last minute, and he captured our entire adventure. On the way home we spotted beautiful wild dolphins jumping through the ocean, and when we arrived back to the hotel we were told that a nest of baby turtles had hatched and we’d be able to release them into the Caribbean Sea the next evening.  Which we did.  It was magical.

The journalists got along like old friends!  They were professional, polite, on time. No one got motion sick, anaphylaxis, Hepatitis A, sunburned, or too drunk at our tequila tasting.  No one’s luggage got lost, no one got sucked up by a whale shark.

Nothing went wrong at all.  The press trip gods were smiling!  It was at this point I really braced myself.

Just a few days later I left for my next press trip, this time headed for Panama.  It was our client’s  “spa debut” press trip – the one I’d pitched and planned for months, promising journalists cutting-edge holistic spa rituals in a “prepare to have your minds blown” kind of way.  The night before our trip my client calls to let me know that the inspector cancelled and the spa would not ready for its big debut.

Also, the hardhat tour of a big new design project we’d planned had to be rescheduled last minute because of unforeseen “dress code issues.” When we arrived at the jazz lounge we’d planned one night, it was closed. Our flights home were cancelled because there was a hurricane in Miami.  No sooner did I wrap up a 3-hour rebooking-over-the-phone session with American Airlines did CNN announce there’s a Tsunami warning for Panama.

My boss once offered some sage advice, “as you go, so goes the group,” i.e. remain calm, get creative and think on your feet.  What could have become a “Bad Days Happen, Even in Panama”- type scenario turned out to be one of the best press trips yet.

No spa?  No problem.  We created our own private spa on the terrace of the Presidential Suite, which was a hit with the journalists.  We replaced pre-planned live jazz with panoramic city views from an incredible rooftop lounge, and we toasted our impromptu extra night “stuck” in Panama with a great bottle of Rioja at a local gem of a restaurant.

Luckily, the tsunami warning turned out to be just that.  And as for the hardhat tour?

When life hands you hardhats… do the YMCA!

A Mid-Summer Getaway Through CyberSpace

Summertime, and the living is…busy! Between strategy meetings, creating PR plans, back-to-back press trips, radio promos, TV spots and social media campaigns, summer here at the agency has nearly come and gone faster than Texts from Hilary.

Luckily, we’ve still got August, and we’re weaving in summer perks wherever we can.  So for the next few minutes, turn off your email, close out that report, and join us on a mini summer vacation – where fabulous little “getaway spots” take the shape of funny Tumblrs and YouTube videos.  (You can go back to being an overachiever later.)

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Letting Freedom Ring On Independence Day And Beyond

This year, I celebrated Independence Day at a friend’s barbeque.  As I sat with my feet dangling in the pool, a bottle of Dos Equis in one hand and a watermelon slice in the other, my mind should have been on light matters, like do I need to reapply sunscreen? or who’s up next for beer pong?

Instead, I was mentally rehashing a CNN article I’d read the day before; a Syrian refugee’s personal account of the ongoing mass murder, torture and corruption in his home country.  Similar world issues began rolling around in my head, and soon I was deep in thought about extreme violence and famine in Somalia, slavery in Mauritania, female infanticide in India.

I don’t (always) go around bumming people out at pool parties. But the contrast was too glaring not to notice; as we were celebrating our country’s freedom (and all its implications) with cookouts and fireworks, billions of people around the world woke up facing horrors we cannot even imagine.  As I contemplated how fortunate I was to live not only in a free country, but in a safe apartment where I have running water, electricity and a refrigerator full of food – basics that so many people live without – a tidal wave of gratitude washed over me. Continue reading

The Zen Office: Decrease Stress & Maximize Productivity

Managing dozens of moving parts, filling last minute requests and meeting urgent deadlines are par for the course in PR.  Most of us thrive in this fast-paced work climate, but even PR black belts – multitasking masters – can occasionally find themselves frazzled and overwhelmed.

This anxiety, of course, zaps all the fun out of a career in PR, so we’ve compiled a list of simple tips, from “Zen-ing” your office space to adjusting your email management style, which can help eliminate distractions, increase focus, decrease stress and ultimately maximize productivity.

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PR Professionals: Guilty Until Proven Awesome

As publicists, we’re groomed to expect a certain level of resistance from journalists. Our industry’s reputation for off-pitching and “spray-and-pray” press release spamming precedes us, after all.

The good “flacks” discover early on that in this industry, time, attention and respect aren’t just doled out, but earned on a case-by-case basis.  It requires doing your homework, treating each journalist as an individual with specific interests, and possessing the talent to create a compelling and relevant story angle.  While anything “custom” takes extra time, if it’s done right, the rewards can be bountiful.

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Madonna: Coming Down After “Molly?”

Despite Frenzy Surrounding Twitter Cat Mouse Mau5 Fight, Madonna’s MDNA Album Posts Biggest Sales Drop In History

A couple of weeks ago, The Material Girl found herself in a very public Twitter feud with one of the biggest electronic DJs in the world. The spat ignited after her performance at Ultra Music Festival in Miami – a massive electronic music gathering that draws more than 100,000 attendees each year.

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