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Professor’s study explores the culturization of customized marketing

In a study published in Mass Communication and Society, Assistant Professor Cong Li explored the cultural components of customized marketing in this digital age. He found that “favorable customization effects may be contingent upon cultural meaning activation” (p. 60). Cultural priming has a moderating effect on tailoring and targeting messages, according to his experiment.

Two existing customization approaches (tailoring and targeting) were tested with 102 participants in an experiment. It was found that when participants were primed with individualistic meanings, they tended to generate a more favorable attitude toward tailored messages than targeted messages. In contrast, when participants were primed with collectivist meanings, they formed a more favorable attitude toward targeted messages than tailored ones. Based on the study findings, the conceptualization of customization needs to incorporate the cultural factor.

The article, entitled “‘Cultumization?’ The Impact of Cultural Priming on Customized Communication,” is accessible here or here.

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Canes Film Festival

The 16th annual Canes Film Festival is fast approaching, May 3rd through 5th.

Run by our Department of Cinema and Interactive Media, the 2013 Canes Film Festival is a competitive festival open to students enrolled in our Motion Pictures program.  The films are juried by a panel of professionals from the film and television industry.

Click here for the schedule. Click here for samples of work from last year. Contact here if you want more info, or directions to the cinema.

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Meet the Cinema & Interactive Media Department

The Cinema & Interactive Media Department of the School of Communication offers Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degrees in Motion Pictures and Interactive Media.

The department offers a complete curricular experience in critical understanding and effective creation of contemporary moving image media and interactive design.  The programs are designed to prepare a new generation of innovators, storytellers, and leaders in the field of cinema, transmedia, and interaction design with a mission to explore the creative uses of narrative, documentary, technology, design, and human behavior to entertain, impact, augment, and influence how people communicate. Their slogan is “Trans-cultural, Trans-medial, Trans-formative.”

The MFA in Motion Pictures trains moving image artists at the highest professional levels, offering a three-year MFA degree with flexible specialization in Producing, Directing, Screenwriting, Editing, Cinematography, Sound, Non-Fiction, and Interactive Media creation.

The MFA in Interactive Media aims to prepare a new generation of innovators and leaders in the field of interaction design. Its mission is to explore the use of technology, design,
human behavior, and their impact on communication.

Click here to read more about the faculty, staff, students, and alumni of the department.

 

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Career Opportunities in the Professional Industry

The School of Communication has an online section of Career Postings in the area.

They include:

Click here to read more of the posts.

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Creative Activity and Research Forum

The School of Communication Graduate Studies is holding a “creative activity and research forum,” featuring presentations by MFA students, Ph.D. students, and faculty. The event is March 25 from 9:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. in room 1021.  The complete schedule is below. 
  
Time
Presenter
Title
9:15 a.m.
Yves Colon
Feasibility Study to Establish a TV Station in Cap-Haitien, Haiti
9:30
Ed Talavera
Accidental Power: The Ascendance to the Ecuadorian Presidency of Doctor Luis Alfredo Palacio
9:45
MFA Students Rachelle Salnave and Yale Yang
The Heavenly Nut
10
Sunny Tsai
Brands as Fashionable Friends
10:15
Cong Li
“Show Me Something I Care!” A Test of Product Involvement and Personalized Advertising
10:30
Sunny Tsai
The Power of Many: A Cross-Cultural Comparison of Collective Buying on the Web
10:45
Break/Catch Up Time
11 a.m.
Doctoral Student Zongchao (Cathy) Li (presenting) and Cong Li
User Motivation, Message Strategies and Interactivity in Corporate Twitter Accounts
 
11:15
MFA Student Rachelle Salnave
Viter Juste: The father of Little Haiti
11:30
Cong Li
Placebo Effect in Personalized Advertising
11:45
Doctoral Student Qinghua (Candy) Yang (presenting)
Online Identity Construction on Personal Websites: Does the Background Music Genre Make You More Attractive and Memorable?

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Faculty member develops Apple App

Clay Ewing, Assistant Professor in the Interactive Media department, has developed an iOS Apple app that helps New Yorkers report illegal advertising by turning social policing into a game.

According to Ewing:

New York City has an illegal advertising problem.  An illegal ad can be fined up to $25,000 a day, yet these fines are rarely collected.  Outdoor advertising companies are able to skirt the laws and regulations put in place by the city for three reasons: ads are everywhere, documenting wrongdoing is an arduous task, and many people believe that illegal advertisements are in fact legal.

Ad Patrol is a mobile game that attempts to address the shortcomings of current law enforcement for illegal advertising.  Using permit data from the Department of Buildings, the game maps out legitimate advertising in the city and then turns policing into a casual game experience.  Players seek out new and existing ads to claim them for their own.  To claim an ad, a player takes a photo and documents the company being advertised.

You can read more about Ewing designing the app (iPhone screenshot pictured below) here and here.

You can read more about the app here. Ewing’s Web site is here.

 

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Summer Internships

Tomorrow, Friday, Feb. 8, representatives from Dream Careers, a program for communication-related summer internships, will be meeting with students for advising
appointments throughout the day.

It is an all-inclusive program (housing, staff, transportation, events, etc) that offers guaranteed internships in PR, advertising, film, television, marketing, radio, music, event planning, fashion and many other fields in major cities around the world, including: New York, London, Los Angeles, Chicago, Barcelona, Boston, San Francisco, Hong Kong, Barcelona and Washington, D.C.

Examples of past internships:
Marketing / Advertising / PR: Edelman, Ruder Finn, MWW, Ogilvy
TV, Music, & Film: Comedy Central, NBC Universal, CNN, Warner Music
Fashion: Vera Wang, Chanel, Gucci, BCBG, Betsey Johnson, Dolce & Gabbana

Click here to book a meeting.

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Professor Stacks Elected Chair of Commission, Unveils New Blog

Dr. Don Stacks, professor of public relations, is the newly-elected chair of the Institute for Public Relations (IPR) Measurement Commission.

Also, Stacks unveiled a blog he will be running, in conjunction with the IPR, called “Stacks on Research.”

“As chair of the Measurement Commission and a Trustee of the Institute,” he writes, “I will be focusing on research standards, standard-setting, best practices, and how all three contribute to an objective evaluation of how well we did what we set out to do.”

The IPR is an independent nonprofit foundation dedicated to the science beneath the art of public relations.

Click here to read more about the commission announcement.

Click here to read Dr. Stacks’ blog.

Click here to read more about the IPR.

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School of Communication PR event to benefit non-profits

The School of Communication was featured recently in the Sun-Sentinel for an upcoming event by Public Relations students to benefit non-profits. The article follows below. Click here to access the original article online. Click here to read more about the event. Click here to read more about Meryl Blau, a faculty member who is in the article. Click here to read more about our MA in PR.

Students, nonprofits partner in PhilAdthropy marathon

January 22, 2013

By Doreen Hemlock

Joanna Horowitz, center, one of the founders of Jody’s Couture for the Cancer Cure, reacts to the campaign presentation Saturday morning. Ashley Testa, Michelle DaBols, Alexandra Goldman, Melisa Ramos, and Shayla Garcia worked together for 25 hours in order to come up with a design concept for their client, Jody’s Couture. The student volunteer team was with the guide of Meryl Blau, the team leader. (Marlena Skrobe, Courtesy)

 

It’s a win-win for students and nonprofits: Advertising and public relations students pull an all-nighter to help charities with ad campaigns, providing students with practical experience and cash-strapped nonprofits with promotional materials they likely couldn’t afford.

The University of Miami School of Communication holds its Fourth Annual PhilADthropy event Feb. 8-9, a 25-hour marathon. Local nonprofits are invited to submit applications by Friday; sixteen will be chosen.

Two Broward County nonprofits that have participated in PhilADthropy recommend the program.

Darrell Gwynn Foundation of Davie was looking to develop an ad campaign, so that they could encourage more owners of classic cars and sports cars to donate vehicles. The foundation sells those cars and uses proceeds to provide at least 30 customized wheelchairs a year to special-needs users.

A team of UM Communication students came up with the slogan: “You give a ride; They get a ride.”

“We’ve turned it into an ad campaign that’s been real successful for us,” said Ryan Rogers, the foundation’s director of marketing and communications.

“It’s a tremendous value to get something like that.” Rogers said, estimating that similar work at an ad agency might have cost $5,000. “The concept and slogan are the hardest things to come up with.”

National K-9 Working Dog Inc. of Pompano Beach wanted help to spread the word that dogs trained to help police often are killed after retirement, because handlers don’t receive money for K-9 medical care. The nonprofit is pushing for K-9 rights in legislatures, stressing the dogs are “officers,” not “equipment.”

“The students gave us a complete makeover. They changed the logos, changed the message, did everything. They were fantastic,” said Jay Meranchik, 62, a professional dog trainer and computer engineer who started the nonprofit but lacked skills in advertising and communications.

With the new materials, “on Facebook alone, we went from less than 400 to more than 2,000 [likes] in a year’s time,” Meranchik said. “And a T-shirt with the logo they gave us, it’s been a big hit.”

Meryl Blau, a UM lecturer and former creative director at an ad agency, dreamed up PhilADthopy after hearing of an outreach program elsewhere by graphic design students. She figured a 25-hour event would put student’s classroom skills to the test, let them experience the real pressures faced with clients on a job and also, keep their volunteering to a finite time. Results have exceeded her expectations.

“Students have seen their work show up on billboards on I-95 and pitched to national organizations by their South Florida branches. Their social media campaigns now are viewed on a national level. They’ve seen video they’ve created go viral,” said Blau. “And nonprofits get finished artwork they can use.”

About 100 students are expected to take part this year, including senior Aaron Martin, 21, of Pembroke Pines. The advertising-psychology major has enjoyed PhilADthropy so much that he signed up again.

Martin said he’s energized by the challenge of teaming with students he doesn’t know, brainstorming, choosing a concept and pushing past dawn to offer a presentation to their client before noon.

“Late at night, you have to have someone playing good music, or everyone will crash,” joked Martin.

He’s also found it rewarding to see his team’s concept brought to life. Community Smiles of Miami-Dade County used the students’ idea to re-design its dental clinic lounge, with slogans of reasons to smile.

Martin said he’d like more programs like PhilAdthropy, so students can gain work experience and aid the community: “The clients love our input. They’re kind of surprised to see what we come up with.”

For more information or for nonprofits to apply, visit http://www.philadthropy.com.

dhemlock@sunsentinel.com, 305-810-5009

http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2013-01-22/business/fl-philadthropy-20130122_1_nonprofits-ad-campaign-ad-agency

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How coding can make you a better story teller

A School of Communication graduate, Miranda Mulligan, now executive director of the Knight News Innovation Lab at Northwestern University, will be here to speak and answer questions Wednesday, January 30.

Her presentation will be about media coding, for those who want to learn about journalism, writing, projects, Web page production and digital design.

The event is being organized by Randy Stano, Professor of Practice, in the department of journalism and media management.

Miranda is credited with launching one of the earliest and largest responsive design sites for a large northeast news organization — and recently left The Boston Globe to head up the Knight News Innovation Lab at Northwestern University. Miranda believes, passionately, that journalists should learn more about the Internet. Understanding our medium makes us better storytellers.

The event is Jan. 30, at 7:30 p.m., in Shoma Hall. Shoma Hall is located in International Building, room 5100, on Brunson Drive, Coral Gables, FL 33146.

Click here to read more about Mulligan.

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