We Forgot to Tell You!

Sometimes we get so busy we forget to talk about the big stuff! Last month we had a great time producing the festival we created 7 years ago. The Fan Fest Society is quite a community and we’d love to tell you more about it. What a cast & crew…what a tremendous weekend. Fall in Maine, it doesn’t get any better, until you add these people & the attendees.

As we move into the end of the year, we’re mapping out 2023. We’d love to know your big goals! Did you hit all your marks in 2022? Can we help you with finalizing a project or getting it noticed? Reach out anytime, we love hearing from you!

We're Still Talking About It

Mental Health affects us all year long, so we’re extending September’s awareness into October. This week we’ll be in 6 cities over 7 nights, sharing notes from those we’ve lost to suicide and the ones who‘ve survived attempts. Please join us in sharing the message and spreading the word. We hope to see you in the theaters.

Awareness Leads to Prevention

This is the most important piece of content I have swirling around my mind.

September is Suicide Prevention Awareness Month and right now all we’re talking about in the office is filling seats for the east coast tour of Stan Zimmerman’s play “Right Before I Go”. If you’re in any of these states around these times, we’d encourage you to snag a ticket and join us for an important conversation.

Summer Reading

I guess we should have asked what you wanted to read this summer and then held you accountable. But, alas, it slipped our minds. We spent the summer reading, a lot! I was teaching Creatives in Media at the University of Hawaii this summer and when I wasn’t doing that or spending time on client work, I was deep into several good books with an impressive background to admire.

The pace of summer is a bit slower. The kids are home and there’s less running around. Ours are an age where we should be present, but we don’t need to interact all the time. They play together. They read too. They journal. And, thankfully, they still don’t need electronics. And, when you’re in Hawaii for the summer, there’s plenty of natural spaces to explore.

I found myself reading a lot of fiction and a few books related to the field. Two of my favorite books were historical fiction, loosely based on real accounts of life—Sister Stardust by Jane Green & Call Your Daughter Home by Deb Spera. But page turners and interesting works of fiction that taught me a bit about a different time of life.

We’d love to know what you’re reading! There’s a constant queue on our Kindles and recs from people we admire are always welcome! Especially now as we prepare to return to Austin, where the temperatures are too high to do anything outside until October! As we close out summer, we hope yours was enjoyable, full of things you love and happy memories. We’re ready for another school year and eager to see what’s ahead!

Five Yeses

We’re giving this Forbes article five yeses, https://www.forbes.com/sites/forbesagencycouncil/2022/03/31/how-to-use-pr-to-strengthen-your-brand/?sh=1d8ae26a5771.

Looking to strengthen your brand? Whether it’s something you’re tackling on your own, as a small business owner, or you’re part of a large corporation (with more layers than ranunculus in bloom), this article is spot on.

Read it, apply it and thank the good team at Forbes. We’re just passing it along…

Your Guide to a Restful Summer

Ha! Is there such a thing as a restful summer for families of young kids? (The answer is no). But, Community Impact, is trying to help. Bless them.

The bad news is that if you haven’t secured plans for kids this summer, it’s not too late, but you’re dangerously close to all your kids hovering over your every breath. So, I’m just going to leave this right here and close.

https://communityimpact.com/austin/southwest-austin-dripping-springs/education/2022/03/03/2022-south-austin-and-dripping-springs-summer-camp-guide-41-academic-arts-day-and-sports-camp-options/

Happy Summer! I hope if you aren’t in our area, that you find a similar link—and quick!

"May" We Introduce You to Seedling Events?

We know, the title is a lame attempt to illustrate our announcement! The hope was that it got your attention!

It’s May, the month of Mom’s, margarita’s and Memorial Day! It’s also the month we unveil Seedling Events—which I hope the disappointment over my lack of alliteration doesn’t overshadow our excitement!

Seedling Events, which you can click through on our website headers now, can also be reached at www.seedlingevents.com. It’s another arm of our communications agency, meant to “plant, grow, share” good things—messages, joy, community. Plant, grow, share, was our agency tagline from day 1, in case you missed it and Seedling Events will be no different.

We’ll use that platform as a way to produce events, be it a play, a retreat, a seminar or a race. We invite you to watch the space and see what’s next. For now, if you find yourself near New England, we hope you’ll join us for our inaugural event, on a very important topic, as we raise money and increase awareness on the topic of suicide this October.

We’re grateful for all the opportunities we’ve had over the years, but this one feels extra special to us, as it combines our love for live events & crafting good messages as a way to increase awareness, participation and education.

Darn Good Advice

Sometimes you read an article and think, “yes” to a few takeaways. You remember some, you incorporate some and you leave some behind. Other times you read something and you think, “yes, to all of the above”.

When I came across this Entrepreneur article I couldn’t deny that it really encompasses all the things I believe strong PR initiatives require today. But, before you hire a scantily clad woman with unbelievable proportions to grace your social media with a dozen filters to show your ability to hire an influencer, I implore you to do A LOT of research (or ask someone who is willing) on what an influencer is for your specific brand. And, at the very least, make them relatable & authentic for your specific goals.

There are several takeaways here, https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/402683, but I just wanted to clarify that specific point because the water isn’t clear and there are a lot of organizations doing this poorly, to their demise—from a financial standpoint to a branding standpoint—and the right influencer will add to your communications goals without being confusing to your audience or burying your team in unrequited costs.

Coming Soon…

We’ve been asked to support countless initiatives over the years & we’ve been involved in a host of projects we never dreamed we’d get to be a part of. Of note, in 2016 we sat in a final planning meeting for a pro bono project and the client wavered at the last minute, asking us to create a production company to run the entire event right before the launch. So, instead of simply serving as the PR agency of record, we were responsible for the entire event from top to bottom. It was a bit terrifying, but thrilling was it was over, and led to many of our most incredible moments as an agency.

Over the years we’ve successfully built a community with reach around the world and hosted an international festival, among other accomplishments we’re incredibly proud of, all because we said yes to something new. My most earnest wish since that fateful day in 2016 has been that we could replicate that situation in the future. 

Over the years we’ve learned to say yes to opportunities we might not have considered, like the one above. Ironically the post I wrote last month, about our dear friend Stan Zimmerman, was the same person we said “yes, and” to right afterwards. 

We wanted to help him bring a play to life, and Stan asked us to produce it. This one is a very important one and we are honored by the ask. We said, “yes, and” we’ll do our best to raise money for the right non-profit along the way. 

We’ll share more in the coming weeks, but the exciting part is that it led us to something we’ve talked about for quite some time. We’ve been planning to add on events & retreats to the Seedling brand for the past few years, but there was a pandemic that hit (maybe you’re familiar with it?!) that uprooted our timeline. Learning to live with COVID means that we have to plan the best we can, but that moving forward is the only way to create progress. 

So, today we’re announcing a new initiative, Seedling Events. In the next few weeks we’ll launch another portion of our website and our first event. As time goes on, we hope you’ll join us. For plays, retreats, festivals, races and anything that interests you. The idea is that you can plant an idea, watch it grow and share it with others, the basic tenets of our agency. 

Seedling Communications turns 12 this month and our tagline couldn’t be more true for our communications, our events and our dreams, “Plant. Grow. Share” 

Yes, and...

When you hear something that resonates, it’s a disservice to keep it to yourself! This isn’t specifically PR related, but it’s important and it’s my plea for more encouragement, more wisdom and more sharing the good stuff. The hard things won’t stop being hard, but after a few difficult years, celebrating the good is more important than ever before. For you, for your brand, for your organization and for your community. 

A good friend of ours, Stan Zimmerman, harps on the art of  “yes, and,” often. And, after hearing it a few times, it finally hit home. I’ve heard him say it before, but this past week I talked to him about a project and it stuck. In fact, I keep running the phrase through my mind. 

Stan, from what I believe, was referring to opening doors and then opening them further. Exploring beyond the opportunity, solution, the event, the concept, the intention, to something even bigger, better or possibly even more fulfilling.

When someone says, “could you?” why not let your reply be, “yes, and” to see what comes of it. For us, it’s allowed our team to grow client initiatives, to champion new ideas, to work on bigger projects as a branch of a much larger team, to launch a festival and lately—to teach at the university level and enlighten a class with successful professionals in dozens of communications industries. In turn, it’s allowed me to speak to some of my idols, people I never thought I’d have a chance to meet, much less interview at the front of my class.

My recent “yes, and” comes down to this, I’ve always wanted to teach. And, I could have done it anywhere, but when the position at the University of Hawaii opened up, I thought, “yes, I can do that, AND because we work virtually it’ll allow our family to live part of the year in our favorite place.” Once I got the curriculum put into motion, I thought, “yes, I can teach this material, AND I can bring in interesting speakers." The speakers have not only brought a dimension to the classroom that I could’t have fulfilled, they’ve also encouraged me in many ways. I could share story after story, situation after situation, where a little nudge turned into something marvelous.

It’s funny how the “yes, and,” concept applies to relationships, client work, passion projects and social lives. But, in the midst of a pandemic I know many people were forced to do the bare minimum. Now that we’re learning how to live with COVID swirling the globe, I hope we can all say a few more “yeses” and follow them up with “and’s”. 

I’m not sure what you’re working on right now, but I would encourage you to apply Stan’s, “yes, and,” concept too. When it bears fruit, I hope you’ll share it with us. 

Creativity is Accessible

I’m teaching a class at the University of Hawaii right now, titled “Creatives in Media” and this week we opened the semester on the subject of creativity. For their assignment I asked the students to share their strengths and weaknesses as creators and most of them said something along the lines of they weren’t as creative as others and it made them uncomfortable sharing. Some went as far as to say they weren’t creative and others said they were too lazy to be creative. Teaching a class on creativity in media, to the next generation of communicators, brings a certain level of responsibility, so I found myself seeking out ways to encourage them. 

I bought a few books, the first I should have read years ago, “On Writing Well” by William Zinsser and I pulled several articles to share with them. 

One of them stuck out to me on PR Daily and I thought I’d share it. 

https://www.prdaily.com/3-ways-to-add-creativity-to-your-writing/?utm_source=RDH&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=RDH+(2021-12-06)&utm_content=article+title&utm_term=2&oly_enc_id=9918C5599389G3T

The writer here brings three really good ideas to put into practice in product marketing, specifically, I’ll summarize and you can read the article if you’d like. 

  1. Reintroduce yourself to poetry because it makes us feel, and evokes emotion.

  2. Practice the 3 P’s: put people first (don’t push a product without connecting first), perceive pain points (resolve a conflict for the consumer authentically), practice precision (brevity is crucial, write short, edit aggressively).

  3. Unlock your imagination — Everybody is creative, but not everybody knows it. Get comfortable with quick brainstorming so you don’t overthink it, master metaphors, idioms and pubs, and mix opposites because our brains crave different ways of seeing things.

This is a good one to share too, https://www.nytimes.com/guides/year-of-living-better/how-to-be-creative, practical, tangible ways to be creative in day to day life, not just your writing. 

And, here’s one on the science of creativity. Science is based on facts, so we trust it and it’s hard to argue. https://www.apa.org/gradpsych/2009/01/creativity

For us, creativity comes from countless outlets, but our top three deserve to be shared. The outdoors provides a great outlet, exercise gets our brains moving and journaling creates a place of expression; that’s likely the places where our best ideas have come from. We’d love to hear what works for you, it may just end up in one of my lectures. 

Lessons From A Gritty 2021

This year taught us grit; last year taught us patience. May the culmination of the two bring measurable success to you in 2022. 

In 2021, we have grown brands, rebranded brands and helped launch brands. We’ve seen how COVID affected us all in ways we’ll likely feel for years to come. Through it all, we’re still learning, adapting and aiming to thrive in ever-changing environments. 

Just the other day, someone asked us how we’re able to make plans amidst the unknowns of an ongoing pandemic. In full transparency, it’s usually just one foot in front of the other with a healthy balance of reality and hopefulness. As we endure the disruptions, we must move forward with preparations and protocols. Additionally we’ve collectively discussed some of our best tips for communicators, businesses and those still getting their footing this season, hopefully these speak to you too. 

Don’t Leave People Wondering
We’ve seen clear and consistent communication help build trust with audiences. Make sure you’re reaching out to those looking for your voice as often as you have something to share. When you make updates, changes and improvements—tell them. Vague isn’t vogue. 

Think About the Future
While you may feel like you’re in purgatory, watching for COVID to disappear, it’s still important to make and act on your plans. Think ahead, things may be slow now, but you’ve got to keep building or else your competition will be taller and stronger when you decide to get back in the game. Use your lulls to help you grow. Move forward even when it’s uncomfortable. 

Lead Well
In a time of unknowns, be a good citizen and lead others. Corporate social responsibility & environmental social governance are beacons that reign from the top-down, but your individual qualities should shine on others regardless of your position in a company. Sometimes doing the right thing isn’t popular, but if you’ve left high school being popular shouldn’t matter. Do the right thing and your best customers & opportunities will follow. We lived through a doozy this year—ask us about it if you’re curious. The key take away was that we’re glad we stood up for what was right, it’ll pay off in dividends for years to come and we saved a brand because of it. 

Create Space
Make room to listen and learn in all areas of your life just like you would for your business. The past two years have allowed us to cull out the less important things from our social and professional lives, don’t rush to add them back when life starts moving full-speed ahead. Instead make space for the right things, fill your mind and your time with valuable information and opportunities. And, if you haven’t identified those yet, hold space for it. 

One thing I’m especially proud of, on a personal note, is keeping this space for a monthly check in. Last December I made a goal to write here, monthly, as a way to share what was on our mind. A year later I’m glad I did just that, it was a small goal but it was achieved and that’s worth celebrating! 

These are just a few lessons we’ve lived by that have allowed us make the most of “the now”. We’d love to hear your best ideas too, send us an email, we’re always listening.

Cheers & happy holidays!