Unmanned Aircraft Systems Action Summit # 4 The Next Evolution of AviationMay 20-21, 2010
Alerus Center
Grand Forks, ND
For more information and to register : ResearchCorridorSummit.com U.S. AIR FORCE CHIEF OF STAFF TO KEYNOTE UNMANNED AIRCRAFT ACTION SUMMIT IN GRAND FORKS, N.D.U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton A. Schwartz, will deliver the keynote speech at the 2010 Red River Valley Research Corridor Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) Action Summit on May 20 and 21, 2010, at the Alerus Center in Grand Forks, N.D.“Our region has become a center of unmanned aviation activity with the Grand Forks Air Force Base, the Fargo Air National Guard, the Center for Aerospace Technology, and the Customs and Border Protection Service all operating unmanned aerial vehicles. The Grand Forks Air Force Base is also going to be home to both Predators and Global Hawks in the near future,” U.S. Senator Byron Dorgan said.“I am thrilled Gen. Schwartz is coming to Grand Forks, as we showcase the growing opportunities for UAS operations and education there,” Dorgan said. “Air Force innovations are driving the future of unmanned systems, and we’ve worked to lay the foundation for the Red River Valley to become a national hub for unmanned aircraft activity. It’s now time to build upon this foundation and expand these initiatives.
”Spotlight on Evolution of Research, Training, Deployment and employment at UAS Summit
Change is a constant on all sides of the UAS equation – whether for military, scientific, law enforcement or civilian applications. This year’s summit will focus on current initiatives and emerging trends in education, training, research, technology and business.
Special sessions will focus on the outlook for jobs and career opportunities.
Confirmed speakers include Peter La Franchi, Shepard Group Limited who will talk about Business Opportunities in North America and the World and then lead a discussion comprised of leaders in the industry.
Summit sessions will focus on the future of UAS in the 21s century, airspace integration and building a regional UAS industry.
Summit Sponsorship/Exhibitor Opportunities Put You on the Radar Screen
The UAS Action Summit in 2009 was a huge success with over 300 experts, policymakers, industry leaders, technology innovators, and regional business leaders from 21 states in attendance. This year’s summit is shaping up to be an even bigger, more exciting event as North Dakota is poised to become a leading hub of UAS activity in the United States.
Registration is available online at researchcorridorsummit.com. Early bird registration for the summit is $175, which includes meals, materials and the networking social. The registration fee goes to $225 on May 5th, so register early. Student registration is free.
The Alerus Center is connected to Canad Inns Destination Center. Call (701) 772-8404 to make your room reservation. You can also register online at canadinns.com/stay/grandforks.php .
Don’t Miss Thunder Over the Red River: 2010 Grand Forks Air Force Base Air Show Saturday May 22nd
The 391th Air Refueling Wing is hosting their first airshow since 2006 at the Grand Forks AFB. This event will feature unmanned aircraft demonstration flights along with the USAF Thunderbirds, the U.S. Army Black Daggers Parachute Team, the US Navy F/A -18C Hornet demo and many others. For more info go to grandforks.schultzairshows.com/
Register now for the Research Corridor’s UAS Action Summit at researchcorridorsummit.com. Registration is $175 until May 5th. Students are free.
Dr. Delore Zimmerman, President and CEO of Praxis Strategy Group in Grand Forks and Fargo, N.D. with affiliate offices in Los Angeles and Sacramento, California and Accra, Ghana, West Africa, has served as the Coordinator of the Red River Valley Research Corridor since 2004. Praxis has been awarded 9 Small Business Innovation Research Awards.
Everyone wants to come to your party, unless of course, you’re having a party to simply announce a new logo and tagline….
Events are an excellent opportunity to showcase your company and your brand in a fun way that stakeholders remember. But that doesn’t mean your event should be all about you. In fact, put your customers and stakeholders first and you are well on your way to throwing a party that will live on in guests’ memories long after the wine has been drunk and the balloons have lost their air!
Arctic Transportation Services is one of Alaska’s largest and oldest continuously operating Bush air carriers in Alaska. For the past 10 years, the company has operated as Arctic Transportation Services, but for more than four decades it ran the business under its family name Ryan Air. The company decided to honor its heritage by renaming itself Ryan Air.
Wil Ryan - President of Ryan Air, greets guests
The challenge: No one is going to come to a party that simply announces a company name change. How do we create an event so compelling, so exciting, that people will fly in from the Bush to attend?
By assembling a team of strategic, creative and public relation experts, we developed a concept for the event: The Alaska Bash: Celebrating the Toughest People on Earth.
This Alaska Bash concept echoed Ryan Air’s mission to improve the quality of life in Bush Alaska by celebrating the people of Bush Alaska—the bold, the brave, the trailblazers of the Last Frontier—those who set out to make a difference when everyone else said it couldn’t be done.
Hardy Foster - honored among "The Toughest People on Earth."
The launch served as a platform for Ryan Air to take a step back and pay tribute to their customers as well as the event honorees. And culminated in the announcement of ATS’ new name, Ryan Air.
Some of the elements that made the Alaska Bash a success include:
A well-integrated public relations plan, including working with honoree families in the build up to the event and comprehensive media reach and engagement.
An invitation to the Alaska Bash designed with a strong Alaskan heritage feel
A smart venue that reflected strength and determination with large-scale vintage photographs and stories of the honorees around the room. Wooden air cargo crates filled with greenery (representing toughness) and three red roses (the tribute element) served as centerpieces.
An entertaining program.
An all-Alaskan fish and meat buffet and prizes that reflected the theme, including tough Ryan Air-branded outdoor apparel and an Alaska Airlines voucher to help put some luxury into tough living.
The event combined elements of a great party in a way that wasn’t self-serving to Ryan Air, it was all about the attendees. It provided a clever way for the company to reveal its new, “old” name, and a night to remember for the more than 200 guests who attended.
In the ever competitive world of business, companies are constantly seeking bigger, better, faster, more. Trouble is, many companies lose focus while trying to attract more business and more customers. You can see the evidence bleeding from marketing materials every day.
While clamoring for more customers, some marketers make the grave mistake of trying to appeal to a wider audience by broadening their marketing message rather than zeroing in on what truly differentiates their business from the competition – all the while diluting their message and brand perception along the way.
You’ve seen and heard it before, “For all your [so and so] needs,” or the exhaustive list of specifications or services. What do you suppose sticks in the mind of the consumer when they are exposed to such generalizations? Absolutely nothing.
So what do you need to do to get your marketing message to stick? Find the “one thing” that sets you apart from the competition, zero in on it and make it the absolute focus of every aspect of your business. If you are a low-cost supplier selling low price, completely own the “low price” category in everything you do. If you believe your service differentiates your company, let “service” prove itself by being at the center of everything you do. Own the category so hard that no one else can duplicate what you do.
The key here is brand differentiation. Do one thing and do it well. Take Bobcat Company for example. Focused on providing the toughest, most reliable compact equipment and tools, everything they communicate is “tough and agile.” You will never see Bobcat market a BIG piece of equipment. Or how about Disney theme parks? Completely focused on “family fun” (When was the last time you saw Disney LIST all their theme park rides vs. Six Flags? You won’t!) And there are local examples all around you – the furniture company that has touted “best selection” for the past 20 years, the restaurant that serves “open pit steaks,” the broadcast station that is the “region’s new source.”
As a marketer, if you want to truly grow your business, broaden your appeal by differentiating your brand CLEARLY in the marketplace. Choose what sets you apart, then live, breathe and communicate it through everything you do. Don’t muddy your marketing materials with a mix of messages. Say ONE thing, say it loud and clear and say it often. By giving customers fewer things to process you’ll be giving them more information than ever before.
What local brands can you point to as great examples of clear brand differentiation? Or others that you think might be failing at differentiation? It’s always great to learn by observing others.
Grand Forks, ND (Vocus/PRWEB ) March 16, 2010 — A public policy news and information website published by Praxis Strategy Group of Grand Forks, N.D., has been named as a top site for 2010.
Planetizen, recognized as one of the world’s most popular urban planning websites, included newgeography.com on its 2010 list of the best planning, design and development websites for 2010. The sites named to the annual list are said to represent some of the top online resources for those interested in planning, design and development.
Websites are nominated by Planetizen readers and staff and judged against a common set of criteria including content, design and usability.
In citing NewGeography.com, judges commended its fair and balanced content, even though it sometimes goes against the grain of popular thinking among planners: “It was inevitable that certain voices that reject the current belief system of urban planning – people like Wendell Cox, Joel Kotkin, and Michael Lind – would band together. What wasn’t inevitable is that their collaboration would be readable, fair, and dare we say, balanced. With a bent towards the libertarian, Kotkin and crew cover urban issues, housing, politics and the suburbs with a hefty dose of demographics and GIS maps.”
Launched in 2008, NewGeography.com includes analysis and commentary on economic development, demographics, economics, politics and other public policy issues. It features writing and research from authors across the U.S., Europe, China and New Zealand and publishes an annual “Best Cities for Job Growth” in partnership with Forbes.com.
Traditional evolution of business has lead to segmentation by department for many companies. Marketing, sales, customer service, human resources, finance and fulfillment are some of the most common. But digital communications is creating a virtualization and convergence that is dramatically changing the way businesses operate.
How customers engage with companies has changed with the explosion of digital and social networking tools. Customers have wrested power to engage with companies on their own terms and in a fully visible environment. One-to-one conversations have now become open forum, placing greater pressure on companies to be well organized and prompt in response.
Customers can choose to engage on your company website using Google Sidewiki or your own message boards. They can also engage via social media outposts should you have a presence there. And if you don’t have social media outposts, they can still engage your brand in discussion whether you are present or not!
A service question, warranty question, sales question, human resources question, finance question or shipping question or concern can all be directed to the same place in the digital environment. Customers look at your company as one entity, not as a network of departments, and they expect your company to respond as one entity. The lines blur, the departments converge and at the end of the cycle only one thing matters – have you answered the customer’s question?
Your company’s success is based on the brand promise that you communicate to your customers. How well you manage customer expectations through their engagement with your brand, your company, ultimately determines your long-term viability and growth.
Step back and have a look at your organizational structure. Now look at all your customer touch points. Are you prepared to respond to your customers in an efficient, timely manner regardless of question? Do you have a strategy for managing customer interaction in a digital open-forum environment? Are your departments prepared and trained to work cross-functionally?
If not, it is time for digital strategy and social media strategy to integrate with your company’s management and planning process. Your customers are already converging. Are you prepared?
After the holiday hiatus, we are back with another “5 Question Friday”. John Hyduke, President of WestmorelandFlint and Business Development Director for the Flint Group, sits down to discuss what goes into opening up a new location and the growth of Flint Direct. We also manage to sneak in a conversation about hockey and his four lovely daughters.
The appropriate starting point in any social media strategy is to establish a managed listening program where a brand or company can monitor what is being said about them. Blogs, message boards, comments sections and the myriad of social networking tools all hold potential for word of mouth harm (and good).
In a recent post I discussed the importance of managing misinformation in the digital realm, and I’ve found a wonderful example of effective “listening” to share.
In the post AOL’s SEO “Strategery,” blogger Frank Reed makes the case for why he feels the new AOL strategy will not succeed. He refers to AOL’s intentions for unique content generation and gaining ground through search engine results. Reed recalls this type of approach as creating “craptent” and cites the company Associated Content as “the master of ‘craptent’ generation for search engine gain.”
This is where the value of a “listening” program comes to bear and a perfect case for effective listening. Associated Content President Luke Beatty reviewed the blog and commented the same day, likely within hours (or minutes?) of the post going live. Beatty’s comment appears within the first 3 comments and provides an effective clarification of the Associated Content model and respectful rebuttal to the ‘craptent’ tag. And as any blogger worth his salt should do, author Frank Reed acknowledges Beatty’s comment with a respectful tip of the hat (Read the blog article and related comments here).
The point is not whether the AOL blog article is right or wrong. This point here is that Associated Content was called out in a blog and they felt was it was a misrepresentation of their brand. Quickly and efficiently, Associated Content made their counter-argument for all the world to see – and it was done in a tactful and respectful manner.
Associated Content perfectly demonstrated the importance and value of an effective listening program and the efficiency of an organized and planned approach for response. A case of social media strategy, implemented and executed perfectly.
So, if faced with a similar situation, could your business respond the same way?
I recently attended the Resource Development Council of Alaska’s annual conference in Anchorage. The conference is always a great opportunity to gauge the pulse of Alaska’s economy and get a sense for the year ahead. I attended every session over the course of two days and was struck with a recurring theme. When dealing with resource development issues, managing misinformation holds great importance.
At the conference a number of different industries shared their challenges with managing misinformation as they sought to proceed with resource development projects. Examples from tourism, fisheries, mining, oil and gas exploration and timber were all shared. All industries critical to the economic health of the state, and all industries facing challenges in managing misinformation in their development efforts.
In recent years misinformation management could be handled through traditional public relations means – a fact-correction press release, a media announcement, an on-air interview or even through paid advertising. But as our digital world has been expanding the power of traditional media has been waning. As a result, the means by which misinformation is being generated and shared has changed greatly. Blogs, message boards, opinion sites, comments sections and all related means of social media have completely changed the way audiences consume information.
So what steps should industries take to manage misinformation in this new, open-source environment?
1) Develop a formalized, managed “listening program.” You can do it on your own through a combination of Google Reader, Google Blogsearch, Twitter Search and Technorati, but plan on investing time on a daily basis to manage your searches. An alternative, you can engage an organization that can establish, monitor and analyze mentions through use of professional tools that provide dashboarding and reporting functions. If you cannot invest the time on your own or not sure where to begin, consider seeking out the help of a digital strategy firm to get you started.
2) Leverage the transparency of social media. Assuming your organization has nothing to hide, be proactive in citing research, objectives, permitting processes, progress and delays. Transparency is key to managing misinformation. If you’ve got nothing to hide, prove it by sharing everything and do so in a very public environment. Post updates, blog entries, wins and losses to your web site or blog site. Include presentations and videos, photos and supporting research. Leverage YouTube, Flickr, Slideshare, Twitter, Facebook, Ning and other sites to share your information. In a battle of misinformation make sure your information is through, detailed and accessible through multiple sources across the web.
3) Have a social media crisis plan. In the world of social media you cannot affort to wait to respond to an inflammatory situation. Waiting the weekend for Monday to arrive or even waiting 24 hours to respond to a situation released via the web can be too late. In the case of resource development industries there are often millions at stake with every project. A runaway topic, comment or posting against your project can happen in a matter of hours. Your organization must have a plan in place to monitor, assess, and if necessary, react in 24 hours or less. For those who may have seen the Domino’s Pizza YouTube crisis earlier in the year, this reponse was released by Domino’s corporate within 24 hours. Their crisis plan was implemented quickly and without hesitation.
Managing misinformation has always been a challenge in resource development industries. There are organizations bent on stifling progress of any sort and their greatest source of power is through public confusion and misinformation. With the expansion of digital communications tools and the unprecendented potential reach of social media networks, organizations are better suited than ever before to provide clear, relevant information before a maliciously intented group has any opportunity to mislead or misinform. Listen, be transparent and be prepared. Use today’s digital tools to your advantage in the battle against misinformation.
When the Resource Development Council (RDC) of Alaska holds its Annual Conference November 18-19, they expect to draw a record number of participants. Why? Because the conference is introducing new micro-blogging technology that will track each speaker session with live updates posted directly to the RDC’s website.
Micro-blogging can be described as posting short messages, in real-time, to the web. For the RDC’s 5,000 members Statewide, this means they can still participate in the two-day event even if they cannot attend in person.
AadlandFlint, the digital communications agency behind bringing the technology to Alaska, sees the application as a natural progression from instant messaging and live-streaming. As Colin Clarke, AadlandFlint’s senior strategist explains, the micro-blogging tool means that key points from each speaker will be blogged in real-time directly to the RDC’s website, allowing anyone with an internet connection to join in and follow along with each session – in real-time – from wherever they are.
However as Clarke points out, the application is not simply about providing information for otherwise absent participants. It also provides a way to enhance the interactiveness of the conference. Participants both at the conference venue and those connected virtually to it can post comments live as the speaker is presenting. This is achieved through clever use of Twitter, where by using a special hash tag code followers can ‘tweet’ about proceedings and their tweets will instantaneously appear on the conference feed.
This is the first time that micro-blogging has been used in the State as a conference tool and overcomes many of the difficulties that some of the alternatives, such as live-streaming, can run up against. Live-streaming involves recording a presentation and feeding the recording directly to the website allowing viewers to follow along in real time. But a major problem with live-streaming is that it requires high bandwidth for it to work smoothly and also requires a follower to be watching constantly to keep up with proceedings. With micro-blogging a participant can leave the room, return, scroll back over the micro-blog updates and catch up very quickly. And with the Twitter feed they can also review the responses that the presenter got.
“We’re not talking about trawling back through verbatim transcripts, the micro-blogs will summarize key points quickly and succinctly,” says Clarke.
A micro-blog record from each session will also be saved on the RDC website post-conference so both attendees and non-attendees can go back and review the discussions and comments from every session at their own convenience.
Clarke says that the level of ‘connectivity’ in Alaska is amazing. WIFI access, web enabled handhelds, digital mobile service and more. The most recent census stats for connectivity found that Alaska is the second most connected State in the US by household. “So it’s extremely forward thinking of the RDC to take advantage of that connection and make the most of it,” he said.
RDC executive director Jason Brune said the RDC is excited to provide the new technology to its members. “It’s a great opportunity to extend the reach of our annual conference and we thank AadlandFlint for their digital expertise in providing this tool for us.”
About AadlandFlint
AadlandFlint is a leader in digital strategy providing the best in social media strategy, online training tools, web architecture, email marketing and more. Here are some places where you can follow along with the latest information on marketing communications with a digital edge.
Colin Clarke sits down with me to discuss communications strategy, social media, hockey and work/family balance. He shares his insight on how he keeps up with the new developments, technologies and advancements in marketing and applying them to client work.
The professionals at HatlingFlint are always hungry for new marketing trends, techniques or hot topics that we can share with friends and clients. Watch for a regular stream of insightful information – or join in the conversation.