Building Blocks 2013: social media & a presidential visit

We are very excited to announce a great speaker and topic lineup for this year’s full-day Building Blocks session! We’ve had desire from our members to learn more about social media, so we’ve got two presentations for you from experienced practitioners of social media – Kemp Edmonds of Hootsuite in Vancouver, and Jessica Quinn of Northern Health. We’re also lucky to be getting a visit from the CPRS National President, Richard Truscott! Hope you can all make it!

Date: Friday, April 26, 2013
Time: 9am – 4pm
Where: Regional District of Fraser Fort George Boardroom (155 George St., Prince George)
Lunch: Included, as is coffee/tea during the day
Cost: $60 for members; $80 for non-members
RSVP: by Tuesday, April 23, 2014 to cprsnl@gmail.com or on our Facebook event page.

Note: If you’re outside of Prince George, but still want to participate, please let us know! Teleconferencing is available.

Schedule for the day

9:00am-9:15am Welcome
9:15am-10:15am Kemp Edmonds, Hootsuite (via GoToMeeting)
10:15am-10:30am Stretch & Networking Break
10:30am-12:30pm Jessica Quinn, Northern Health
12:30pm-1:30pm Lunch
1:30pm-4:00pm Richard Truscott, CPRS National President

The Speakers

KempEdmonds

Kemp Edmonds (photo credit: WendyD.ca)

Kemp Edmonds, Hootsuite, Sales Engineer
Twitter: @kempedmonds
Web: kempedmonds.com

The Current State of Social Media

Kemp Edmonds is a strategist and speaker, and the lead sales engineer with Hootsuite in Vancouver. He will use his passion and knowledge of online communications and human behaviour to talk about the current state of social media, including the “good” and the “bad” in terms of tools and platforms, considerations when starting to work with social media, tactics, strategies and best practices.

Bio: Kemp Edmonds works for Vancouver-based HootSuite as the lead Sales Engineer. HootSuite is the world’s leading social media management system. Kemp was inspired to pursue a career in emerging online media while in the classroom at the British Columbia Institute of Technology where he then worked in Marketing and went on to create and teach the Institute’s first social media courses. Kemp was recently named to the Board of Directors for Social Media Club International, the largest professional trade group of its kind.

Kemp also provides consulting, training and recruitment services to aid organizations. His passion for people, technology and education enables his work. Through his speaking and appearances in the media, Kemp discusses the politics of social networks, online communications, the law and digital culture. He can also be found blogging on kempedmonds.com, chopping wood on small islands in the Howe Sound and documenting life.

Jessica Quinn

Jessica Quinn (photo by yellowribbonphotography.ca)

Jessica Quinn, Northern Health, Regional Manager, Health Promotion and Community Engagement
Twitter: @jessicaleequinn
Web: jessicaquinn.ca

Engaging a Healthier Life: Social Media in Health Promotion

Social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter aren’t going anywhere anytime soon and are, in fact, effective promotional platforms for public engagement. How can non-profit organizations and businesses alike use social media to capture their audience’s attention?

Jessica recently completed a master’s degree in professional, where she conducted a comparative case study and evaluative assessment of the practice of social media at Northern Health. Looking in depth at current practices of multiple health organizations in BC and taking advice from influential authors and practitioners of social media, Jessica implemented a new, focused social media strategy at NH using what she determined as best practices for the use of social media for health promotion and public engagement purposes.

Jessica will not only share the findings of her research, but the strategies and tactics Northern Health uses to engage northern BC residents on social media platforms, such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and the Northern Health Matters blog. By creating these forums where informal, real-time, transparent conversations can take place, NH engage members of the public to participate in health activities and think more actively about their health.

Jessica will also share some basic considerations to think about when starting to build a social media strategy and some principles to apply social media for business marketing and promotions.

Bio: Jessica Quinn has worked for Northern Health for the past six years, filling various communications roles. In her current role as Regional Manager, Health Promotion and Community Engagement, and previously as Communications Officer, Jessica leads the NH marketing initiatives, which has included project managing the NH website redesign and launching the organization into the social media sphere. Under Jessica’s management, NH now has an active and engaging presence on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Pinterest, as well as Northern Health Matters blog. Jessica is actively involved in using these channels to promote the great work of NH’s public and population health teams to encourage and educate the public about healthy and active lifestyles.

Jessica has a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Northern BC and a Master of Arts degree in professional communications from Royal Roads University, where the focus of her major research paper was the use of social media in health care promotions.

Jessica is currently vice president of the local chapter of the Canadian Public Relations Society (CPRS). She also provides social media marketing consulting services to businesses and organizations and blogs about social media, cooking and Northern BC outdoors at jessicaquinn.ca.

Richard Truscott

Richard Truscott

Richard Truscott, APR, CPRS National President
Twitter: @cfibAB
Web: cfib.ca

Navigating through effective government-stakeholder relationships

Virtually every organization, whether it be a small private company, a major publicly traded corporation, or a non-profit group, can achieve significant benefits from developing and maintaining mutually beneficial relationships with governments. Join Richard Truscott, APR, as he reviews the best practices for building productive relationships with policy-makers through the use of innovative and effective public relations campaigns. Richard will also outline specific examples of how governments and stakeholder groups can work together to help achieve better communication and public relations outcomes.

Richard will also give an overview of CPRS from his perspective of National President.

Bio: Richard Truscott is Alberta Director for the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB). CFIB is a non-partisan, not-for-profit political advocacy organization founded in 1971 that represents the interests of 109,000 small and medium-sized businesses across the country to all levels of government.

Richard has more than 20 years of experience in public relations, communications management and public policy. Prior to joining CFIB, he worked as Senior Public Relations Strategist with Venture Communications, one of Canada’s largest independent marketing and advertising companies, where he led a team creating public relations campaigns for companies like Toyota, EnCana and the Forzani Group. In his current role as Alberta Director for CFIB, Richard serves as the lead spokesperson and lobbyist on behalf of the organization’s 10,000 members in Alberta. He is a frequent opinion editorial contributor to the Calgary Herald, the Edmonton Journal, and a number of daily and weekly publications across Alberta.

Richard has a diverse educational background, including a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree from the University of Calgary, a Master’s in Business Administration (MBA) degree from Queen’s University, and an Accreditation in Public Relations (APR) from the Canadian Public Relations Society.

Richard has a long record of service on behalf of CPRS, including serving as president of CPRS Calgary in 2006. He has been chair of the CPRS National Membership Committee since 2006 and has led the development and launch of a number of new initiatives, including the bi-annual national member survey, the Member Referral Program and the National Student Member Program. He was elected to the CPRS National Board in 2009 and currently serves as president.

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March is Membership Month

Membership MonthMarch is Membership Month!

During membership month (March), I’m asking for your support in spreading the word about the benefits of being a CPRS member. The National office provided a template e-mail for you to personalize as you see fit, which you can then forward to colleagues who you think should consider joining CPRS (contact Matt for a copy of this email).

But before you do, think about the reasons you made the decision to join and what it has meant to you, and share that in your email. You can tell your story far better than my template e-mail can!

Don’t forget about the Member Referral Program – you will receive a $100 credit toward all national programs and offerings, to help pay for things like membership fees, awards submissions, national conference registration, and accreditation fees. I know I’m owed 100 bucks this year!

We have 26 national members at this writing, and we’re bucking the trend when it comes to membership attraction and retention. Our numbers are better than most chapters, so let’s keep the ball rolling!

As always, if you have any questions or concerns regarding CPRS, please don’t hesitate to contact me or any other member of the executive.

Thanks very much for your support – I’m very proud to be president of this fine chapter, and look forward to its continued success.

~Matt Wood, President

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March Lunch & Learn: STOP HIV/AIDS Pilot Project

Join us for our March Lunch & Learn session, as Steve Raper (Director of Communications for Northern Health), Mike Doran (Partner and Agency Director, Splash Media Group, Inc.) and Joanne MacDonald (Communications Officer, Northern Health) talk about the STOP HIV/AIDS Pilot Project.

When: Friday, March 22

Time: 12pm – 1pm

Where: Regional District of Fraser Fort George, Board Room

Cost: $20 for members/ $25 for non-members

Lunch: Included

RSVP: By March 20 (on our Facebook page or email cprsnl@gmail.com)

About the Session:

The outbreak and mass publicity of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the early 1980s created a culture of fear and misunderstanding about the virus and its transmission. Since then, with significant changes in available treatments including highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), extensive research has proven that contracting HIV is not a death sentence, with people now living healthy, productive lives after being diagnosed. Yet, after 35 million deaths from AIDS worldwide since its outbreak, HIV/AIDS is still surrounded by many myths and stigma, creating challenges for those wishing to publicly communicate information about HIV/AIDS.

Northern Health and the Province of B.C. are addressing these challenges through the STOP HIV/AIDS pilot project. STOP — which stands for Seek and Treat for Optimal Prevention — is a four-year, provincially-funded initiative, running from 2010 to 2013 in Prince George and Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.

Northern Health’s STOP HIV/AIDS pilot project is an ambitious multi-media, community-outreach collaboration between Northern Health, its community partners and the Province of B.C. The project aims to normalize HIV testing; educate and bring awareness to northerners about the benefits of early HIV testing and treatment; and ultimately reduce the spread of HIV throughout northern BC.

The four-year pilot project began in 2010 to educate the public on safe sexual behaviour and the risks of certain types of drug use. Northern Health’s preventive public health department worked extensively with community partners, actively supporting the HIV-positive population, connecting them with existing services, and developing new testing initiatives. The STOP project’s education and awareness component, launched in May 2012, featured an aggressive online and traditional advertising campaign, with messaging encouraging early HIV testing and treatment. The public campaign was a true collaborative effort, with Northern Health staff forming an advisory group with key community partners to develop messaging speaking to all age groups, genders and sexual preferences. The community partners included Positive Living North, the Northern BC  First Nations HIV/AIDS Coalition, and the Central Interior Native Health Society, as well as physicians, nurse practitioners and other health care providers. Splash Media Group Inc. played a pivotal role, providing the branding and creative guidance for the public campaign.

Together, Northern Health and its partners launched their public call to action on May 29, 2012 — encouraging northerners to seek early HIV testing and, if necessary, early treatment.

About the Speakers:

Steve Raper, Director of Communications at Northern Health, is a professional communications executive with 15 years’ experience. Working in the college and university sectors before moving to the health care field five years ago, Steve has a wealth of experience managing and leading issues, crises, web, marketing, and internal communications for large, complex organizations. Steve believes in life-long learning and has been accepted to study law part-time. He is a proponent of skill-based learning seminars and opportunities, and also enjoys networking with other communications professionals. In his spare time, Steve teaches college business courses. He also serves on the boards of Pacific Sport North, Prince George Youth Soccer, and the Canadian Blood Services Liaison Committee, provincially and nationally.

Mike Doran is a Partner and Agency Director of Splash Media Group Inc., and leads most client initiatives. With over 17 years of experience, Mike’s passion is making businesses succeed through strong creative and strategic execution. Mike and his team worked hand in hand with the Northern Health team and partner agencies on the STOP campaign, with Mike’s nine staff members all involved with the project. With Mike as the team lead, Splash led the engagement consultations, identified market segments, brand development, messaging, marketing material selection, marketing budget creation, media buying, design for all materials, photography, and video.

Joanne MacDonald, a Northern Health Communications Officer, previously worked as a journalist for daily and community newspapers and, from 2005 to 2010, was employed as a communications officer with the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, a national not-for-profit municipal advocacy organization based in Ottawa. Joanne joined Northern Health in October 2011 to work on the Stop HIV/AIDS pilot project, and was the liaison between Northern Health, its community partners and Splash Media. Joanne organized and facilitated the brainstorming/consultation sessions that brought Northern Health and the advisory group partners together, from the inception of the public campaign to its rollout. She is also the lead content editor for hiv101.ca, and writes, edits and produces communications materials for the STOP team.

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February Lunch & Learn with Shauna Harper

Shauna Harper, online marketing & internal communications strategist

Shauna Harper, online marketing & internal communications strategist

Join us for our February Lunch & Learn session with Shauna Harper, online marketing & internal communications strategist!

When: Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Time: 12pm – 1pm

Where: Regional District of Fraser Fort George – Board Room

Cost: $20 for members / $25 for non-members

RSVP by: Friday, February 7, 2013

Shauna Harper has built her marketing & communications business in Prince George using grassroots techniques, collaboration with connectors, and of course leveraging social media. As an organization, you are working hard at building your visibility, keeping up with the latest online tips and guessing when Facebook is going to change their rules. Again.

Shauna is going to talk about how organizations can leverage grassroots movements and businesses such as her own, and get them to partner with you to share your message online. Come with an open mind, and bring your thinking caps and collaborative energy.

RSVP on our Facebook event page or by emailing cprsnl@gmail.com.

See you there!
~Jessica

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Join us!

Welcome to the new site for the Northern Lights chapter of CPRS.

Our goal is to bring together all public relations and communications professionals in Northern BC to develop our skills, stay connected and learn from other members through quality professional development seminars – our Lunch & Learn sessions!

We’re always happy to welcome new members to our group! Take a peek at our Membership page for more info on how to join. You can even check out a couple events if you’re not a member yet – find a session on our Events page that works for you. And if you’d like to learn more, feel free to contact any of us!

~Jessica

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