David Petherick — May 9, 2007, 11:00 am

Leith Win Major Russian Advertising Account

We are delighted to announce that Clarocada customer The Leith Agency, just voted Marketing Services Agency of the Year, has pulled off one of the major coups of the year by beating four Russian advertising agencies to the prestigious SladCo Chocolate account.

The pitch, carried out in Moscow, invited agencies to present their ideas for a television-led campaign to relaunch their flagship boxed chocolate brand – SladCo – in Russia. The campaign, backed by a multi-million pound media budget, will break in August of this year and will run across all major Russian cities.

Marinela Simon, Marketing Manager for SladCo, said:

“We all got an excellent impression of The Leith Agency’s work. It was strategically well-grounded, creatively very good and well thought-through in terms of tone and manner. It also showed a remarkable understanding of Russian culture.”

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David Petherick — May 8, 2007, 2:30 pm

You’re a Nobody unless your name Googles well – Wall Street Journal

It’s official – well, it is if you rate the Wall Street Journal’s front page as authoritative – if your name doesn’t Google well, you can have problems with your credibility – and not just with prospective employers.

You’re a Nobody Unless your Name Googles Well published on the 8th of May 2007, cites the example of  Abigail Garvey, who, when she adopted the married name of Wilson, began to be questioned on publications she listed on her CV (résumé) because they weren’t finding the publications in online searches.

In the age of Google, being special increasingly requires standing out from the crowd online. Many people aspire for themselves — or their offspring — to command prominent placement in the top few links on search engines or social networking sites’ member lookup functions. But, as more people flood the Web, that’s becoming an especially tall order for those with common names. Type “John Smith” into Google’s search engine and it estimates it has 158 million results. (See search results.)

Ask.com estimates about 7% of all searches are for a person’s name, and more than 80% of executive recruiters said they routinely use search engines to learn more about candidates, according to a recent survey by ExecuNet.  ExecuNet published “Growing Number Of Job Searches Disrupted By Digital Dirt” in June of 2006,  which  found that “35% (of executive recruiters) have eliminated a candidate from consideration based on the information uncovered online – up significantly from 26% just one year ago.
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David Petherick — January 27, 2007, 12:00 pm

Inside Ecademy BlackStar: Belonging, Sharing, Winning (25 days of Attitude)

Why do people stop reading your Ecademy Profile? | Complete Certainty: Reliable Business Hosting | Do you Speaka Plain English? | Seats at David Petherick’s Barcelona Masterclass: 12-Feb-07


1: Act 1 Scene 1

On the 28th of January 2006, I joined Ecademy, having come across it as part of my ongoing research and investigation into blogging, social networks, and ‘web 2.0′ in general. Within ten minutes, I knew that PowerNetworker status was the only sensible starting point, and I also recognised that Ecademy had something that an Israeli company I’d been working with needed – and vice versa. I wrote to, and had a response from, Thomas and Penny Power, the very next day.

By February, Ecademy had a deal on the table with Conduit to create the Ecademy Toolbar, and I was beginning to recognise that by sharing ideas and contacts, I might not be getting paid for “the deal” in cash, but I was earning goodwill from all the parties I brought together. Goodwill, in my years of building businesses, I consider is more valuable than money – because you can’t buy it – you have to earn it – and when you need to spend it – it’s inflation-proof.

I started to recognise that my skills could be used in Ecademy in a very specific way: to rewrite profiles, and market place adverts. After all I am a journalist, copy writer, photographer, designer, can code HTML and tell a story. So the “profile makeover” service was created. After honing my talents on a few willing friends and volunteers at Ecademy, I finally managed to persuade Thomas Power that I should rewrite his profile in July 2006. When he published the result and posted a blog about it, I soon realised that I had just invented an industry. By October of 2006, I had a constant three week waiting list of customers, and they were almost half referrals from existing customers.

I decided that I should investigate joining BlackStar: for two reasons. 1) Some of the best networkers in Ecademy were Blackstars; 2) Many of my customers were Blackstars; and 3) The energy and focus these people all seemed to have intrigued me, as did the idea of a wealth profile – something that I kept seeing and hearing about.

In correspondence and meetings with Thomas and other Black Stars, I saw that being “a member” somehow helped other Blackstars to get to the point quickly, establish a level of intimicy and trust that seemed almost automatic, intuitive. I also read up on wealth profiles and the work of Roger Hamilton. I decided to apply in December, filled out an application form, and had an interview of about an hour and a half, at the end of which, I was accepted as a member.

I made my payment, and within two hours, was astonished to see that I had an inbox message welcoming me to BlackStar. What? How did that colleague know so soon? I looked at my profile summary, and it suddenly dawned on me: my little membership icon had changed from orange to black. I was a BlackStar.

It was the 29th of December, 2006. I did not quite know it then, but I had the most stimulating, fulfilling and rewarding three weeks of my life ahead of me, which were beautifully crystallised on Monday 22nd January, at my first ever (and I hear the biggest ever) BlackStar Monthly Meeting in London.

(Free MP3 Recorded version of this story will be available shortly – just send an email to blackstar25@searchsuccess.net and you’ll get to grab it when it’s edited.)

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David Petherick — January 2, 2007, 9:26 am

David Petherick’s Online Profile Masterclass: Barcelona, 12 February 2007

David Petherick, the Profile Makeover Expert, is offering a one-day Masterclass on how to edit, format and promote your business and personal brand through your online profile.

Thomas Power is Chairman of Ecademy, and Penny Power is its Founder. Together, they have perhaps the most-visited profiles online at Ecademy. However, both asked David Petherick to makeover and rewrite their profiles. Why was that?

The answer is that they were objective, and recognised that they were not the best person to author their profile. Being objective about what to include and how to structure your own profile is very difficult. Most people can not be objective when describing themselves – that’s why so many autobiographies are unreadable.

Your profile is your first and often your last chance to make an impression online. No matter how impressive your online contribution to discussions, groups, clubs, assisting and advising others – your profile is the touchstone and reference point. It’s a combination of a sales pitch, a personal presentation, a business card, a brochure, a personal statement, a list of recommendations, a mini web-site, and a wave from across the room.

It has a lot of work to do. Is your profile doing you proper justice?

Date: Monday 12th February 2007
Time: 10:00 – 16:30
Place: Barcelona, Catalonia
Fee: £97

MakeClick here to Reserve your Place at the Barcelona Profile Masterclass today!
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David Petherick — December 7, 2006, 6:55 pm

Barcelona in Space: Rocket Launch Live Online 10:25pm CET, Friday

Barcelona Televisió will broadcast La nit aeronàutica, live,
on Friday 8 December, (10.25 p.m.). The special programme is for the
launch of the space rocket Ariane 5, which has been baptised Ciutat de Barcelona.

The Barcelona television programme will follow the launch of the rocket
from the base at Kourou (French Guyana) and at CosmoCaixa, where the
event will be shown on giant screens.

Cristina Vicente, who will lead the programme through space from the
Barcelona Televisió studio, will establish links with Silvia Carbonell
(at CosmoCaixa) and with Vanessa Petit (at the Kourou base).

The objective of the rocket launch is to put two US communications
satellites into orbit. When the nosecone is opened, it will fall back
towards Earth, and will disintegrate when it enters into contact with
the atmosphere.

You can also watch the broadcast live on the Barcelona Televisió website within the section “Barcelona TV en directe”.

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David Petherick — November 19, 2006, 11:12 am

Fleck in New York: Return of the White Suit

John Travolta, eat your heart out…

The boys from Fleck at the Techcrunch launch in New York City 16th November 2006. Boris is on the right. Boris’ Virtual Bar is here.

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David Petherick — September 23, 2006, 6:24 pm

Why not buy me a pint – virtually?

David Petherick of LCarocadaI’ve often been criticised for being far too generous with my time and advice, but I wouldn’t have it any other way. However, there are issues with paying for life’s little luxuries when you don’t really have a ‘proper’ job…

So now, I think I have the solution – when people want to say thanks for my help or advice, they can now buy me a pint, virtually…

Well, they can buy me a pint virtually, at www.buy-me-a-pint.com and they can also advertise the fact that they have bought me a pint, and link to their own web site… all automatically, as I patiently wait the 119.6 seconds required for the next pint of Guinness to be poured…

Pouring Pints by PayPal…
What www.buy-me-a-pint.com does is quite simple – it passes payments to PayPal for services and amounts which the site visitor can define, either by selecting a ‘drink’ to buy me, or ‘mixing their own’ and setting the price. And once the payment is cleared, they can elect to add their details and a link to the web site of their choice to my site as a sponsor, or as someone who’s bought a drink!

Sponsors are those who elect to set up monthly payments through PayPal in the same way, allowing them to sponsor me, or buy me a drink regularly – I like that idea, and can have my daily newspaper, or monthly magazines sponsored!

;-) And being a Scot – don’t think I haven’t thought of offering to set up the same service for you, so you can have drinks bought for you by your friends! It’ll cost from $197 for a software license and for a custom installation so people can buy you a pint! The systems is enabled for English, French, German and Portuguese as standard.

See www.build-me-a-bar.com

David Petherick — August 10, 2006, 8:00 pm

Business Blogs still make sense…

I originally posted this message in June 2005, but it still holds true…

A survey carried out by Backbonemedia on business blogging has some amazing conclusions…

“…build trust, collect valuable feedback and foster strengthened relationships while and at the same time benefiting in ways that are tangible.”

Just like in other aspects of life, success breeds success. What we see with successful blogs is a chain reaction that starts with a sincere interest on the part of the bloggers to provide their audience with great value in terms of useful and engaging content in the form of information, help, discussion and ideas. If a company can harness their customers’ knowledge and ideas, a company will find better ways to satisfy their customers needs and wants.

Look at the executive summary or read the full report (70 page PDF file). Thanks to Radiant Marketing Group for highlighting this report.