This is a course specifically designed for Marketers, PR and digital and e-marketing professionals working for Healthcare organisations and brands. This workshop considers how the Internet, especially Social Media and User Generated Content (UGC), is affecting how healthcare brands and businesses get their messages across, manage their reputations and sectorial specific restrictions and opportunities.
It highlights the importance of PR skills in an increasingly networked and conversational web environment. The course explores the Online PR and social media toolbox, uses healthcare specific corporate and brand case studies and provides delegates with the opportunity to try out some online PR research, planning and online reputation monitoring tools.
WHAT WILL I LEARN?
• How to make your healthcare brand/organisation/clients more visible on the web using Online PR tools
• How to proactively engage with stakeholders and enhance your brand reputation online
• How to audit and monitor the online environment - what is being said about your brand/organisation/industry. Identifying ‘traditional’ media targets and other influencers and their networks
• To appreciate the risks and opportunities of social media engagement and develop strategies for reducing the risk of negative brand perception
WHO IS THE WORKSHOP LEADER?
Michelle Goodall specialises in Online Public Relations. Formerly the Digital Director at Lexis Public Relations (), she has over 10 years' online PR consultancy and implementation experience working on award winning campaigns and crisis and issues management projects with many blue-chip organisations including Norwich Union, Coca Cola, Domino's, eBay, Camelot and Diageo.
Michelle understands how evolving web technologies are affecting traditional PR models. She has helped PR and marketing professionals embrace the medium by advocating a simple and pragmatic approach and likes to laugh at the lingo ('poke', 'widgets' and 'blogrolls'… you've got to admit that they sound a bit ridiculous).
When she is not glued to a computer, Michelle likes to spend time with her husband and two young children, drink red wine and cook.