Hidden away like some Cinderella before the prince discovered her, online pressrooms do not often attract much attention, much less a second look.

But like the fairytale character, online media rooms can offer a striking example of the power of Internet to transform a humble servant into an essential information hub.

Indeed, the ability to harness the power of the Web to market and communicate in new ways is the new competitive advantage—and companies that ignore that fact do so at their own risk.

What has happened?

The Shift from Mass to Micro Marketing

Until very recently, most companies used corporate Web sites as a kind of warehouse for official company documentation, and pressrooms as the attic where old releases were stored. However, information dissemination is traditionally conducted by mass communication, over mass media (TV, radio, newspapers and magazines), to mass markets.

This conventional approach relies on "pushing" information out to the broadest segments of users through advertising, PR, telemarketing and direct mail. These promotional tools don't go away in a world increasingly defined by the Internet. But, they are profoundly affected by the Web and a welter of new digital technologies, which are changing how we market and communicate.

This new marketing and communications model has changed how companies deliver information to their constituencies, and it has made this information easier to find, access and use. It combines both old and new communications approaches, media and tools.

But, increasingly, the new model is shaped by the concept of "micro" over "mass" marketing. Micro marketing is the term used to connote the ability to target and reach increasingly narrow market segments through new digital media and new digital tools—including email, blogs, wikis, webcasting, podcasting and more. And with RSS, a specification that allows for the sharing of content over the Internet where users can select or "pull" in just the content they wish.

Online Media Rooms

Online media rooms sit right on the nexus of the transition between old and new ways of communication, and they provide a stunning example of the power of Internet to transform a humble servant into an information hub.

Let's take a closer look.

Today, most online pressrooms are used to archive releases and to provide contact information to the press. Press materials are optimized for print and broadcast media and used to reach the large segments of users, such as customers, investors, editors, analysts, partners and employees. Other company information is hidden away—far from the information user and typically in small pockets or "silos" of information—and hard to access, find and use. As a result, journalists are lucky to find the archived press release they need, and in many instances even luckier to find contact information for a real PR person.

But new digital technologies are quietly changing all that—and the transformation is providing competitive advantage to companies that apply these technologies strategically.

Powerful database technologies can now take what was once a mountain of data, hidden away throughout the corporation, and place it where it can be organized and searched. Moreover, the Internet has enabled communicators to provide information on demand, 24/7, coordinate and control it, and make it accessible to anyone, anywhere in the world.

Large companies—and small ones, too—can now communicate to an increasingly fragmented and diverse audience of customers, employees, partners, investors, analysts and reporters globally, speaking in a consistent voice—throughout the company and anywhere in the world. And they can do it faster and at far less a cost than with traditional methods.

Communications teams can now tailor information for a specific region, product or country and respond to breaking news directly affecting the company, its customers and partners. Press materials can be targeted to ever-more-narrow market segments, with information customized to meet specific needs.

For example, a wireless editor in Germany can now search for all the information related to products sold in that country, while a US financial analyst can find information relating to the sales to a specific industry—each using the same data base and pressroom.

From Pressroom to Media Portal

New online pressrooms can now distribute news through a much broader range of communications methods—from printable hardcopy materials to streaming media broadcasts—providing a richer, broader array of resources and services for editors, analysts and others. These can include streaming video and audio presentations, interviews, features, webcasts (Web broadcasts), webinars (Web seminars) and blogs (Web logs), along with more traditional printable materials such as press releases, white papers, backgrounders, articles and magazine coverage.

All of these can be accompanied by additional links, recommendations and suggested reading, enhancing the user's experience and knowledge base. In addition, all content can be optimized for search—not simply from the company's Web site or pressroom—but from any Web search engine.

In addition, a Media Resource Room in a company's news site can offer images, photos, company logo—and for broadcast media, b-roll and corporate videos.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Robin Stavisky has headed her own Silicon Valley firm, New Venture Marketing, and provided strategic counsel to over 70 high-growth technology companies.