When To Capitalize…


Know when to capitalize

Whenever I am training a client to use Blogger, so that they can self-manage their ORM, we have the same debate – without fail.  No matter what their online reputation management strategy may look like, here’s the questions that’s always posed, in some fashion or another…

“When creating a new post, do I capitalize the first letter, or all of them, or just some of them… and how do I know?”

Whilst much of this depends on personal taste and style, there are some rules to try and stick to.  For many of our clients, we advocate the headline kicker rule:  keep you blog titles, short, punchy and all caps.  But for some, they prefer to be more conversational.

For them, here are 10 great rules to remember!

1. Capitalize the first word in a sentence.
Yes, this is the most basic rule of capitalization – that too many forget…

2. Capitalize the pronoun “I.”
Another basic one, but in today’s information driven world, it bears mentioning, especially in the lazy age of fast-texting mobile communicators.

3. Capitalize proper nouns: the names of specific people, places, organizations, and sometimes things.
For instance, “Austin, Texas,” “Patrick O’Brian,”  “Supreme Court.”

This seems to be the rule that trips up many people because they don’t know whether a word is a proper noun. But as the AP Stylebook points out:

“Capitalize nouns that constitute the unique identification for a specific person, place, or thing: John, Mary, America, Boston, England. Some words, such as the examples given, are always proper nouns. Some common nouns receive proper noun status when they are used as the name of a particular entity: General Electric, Gulf Oil.”

There are also derivatives of proper nouns. Capitalize words that are derived from a proper noun and still depend on it for their meaning, such as “American,” “French,” and “Shakespearean.”

But lower case words that are derived from proper nouns that no longer depend on it for their meaning: “french fries,” “pasteurize,” “darwinian.”
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How does your timeline work?


One of the great mysteries of social media was revealed last Friday and shared on PR Daily:

The factors that determine what items appear in a Facebook user’s News Feed.

During a press event last week, Facebook News Feed Product Manager Will Cathcart explained these factors to a roomful of reporters.

TechCrunch’s Josh Constine was there to document the action and listed the four items:
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ORM Refresher


 

Online reputation management – or ORM as it’s now known, is essentially a Public Relations function.  It is not marketing or advertising.  It’s not a call-centre or technical support issue.  It’s a dynamic and changing management function that needs to be moving with the zeitgeist and enabling your organisation to remain authentic in the way that you communicate and do business.

As a management function, it’s an ongoing, daily, sustained function that needs to be strategised, managed and reviewed.  With this in mind we have sourced seven great points to refreshing your strategy – with indicators to whether or not you actually need a refresh…

<source article>

You’re relying on press releases. They still have their place, of course, but they shouldn’t be a crutch. Outreach to important constituents, including journalists, should go far beyond “broadcast news.” Of note, the rise of digital and social media and electronic news distribution has placed a higher premium on personal relationships and handcrafted outreach.
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