Interview: Donna Byerly

When thinking about my future career I am filled with hope and excitement.  So when I talk to my boyfriend’s mom, it confirms these feelings even more. Donna Byerly is a Director/Project Manager for the company Maritz.  Which almost exactly the career I am seeking in the future.

  • Donna Byerly went to South East Missouri State (SEMO) to be a secretary when she graduated.  However, she was in a relationship for over 7 years and decided to get married and to pursue her marriage, she chose for destiny by leaving SEMO.

She ended up at Maritz a performance awarding company and has spent the last 33 years at this company.

Starting as a word processing typist, then Executive Secretaryà then with a large surge in the economy many of the employees in a higher department were worked so hard with so many hours, many walked out, and found other positions through other companies.  Thus, Donna picked up a higher position as she worked there for quite some time.

Over these 33 years at Maritz, Donna saw large amounts of change from, no computers, smaller, much more casual, to having an application for the I-Phone, larger, much more business.

One of her memories from when she first started was, her boss would load up a tin bucket with all different types of liquor during the holiday season, because it was so stressful.  So anyone could walk down with a cup and get a cup full to calm down a bit. Now a days, that type of thing would not happen or be expectable.

A little history about the company, it actually started as a jewelry company, then after the great depression hit they needed to compromise in order to keep succeeding in the economy.  So, they then converted the company into an incentive company, within years there was yet another decline in the company making another change in order, then focusing on research, motivation, and travel.  For example; they have done events like the World Cup, NFL, etc.

Through these years, technology has improved, changed drastically.  When Donna came into the company there was no voicemail, no fax machines, or even computers.  They had to learn how to adjust to computers, messaging, etc. She stated, “Nobody could have imagined the technology in the future, so we were obviously quite resistant at first.”

Social media is a subject that we have talked thoroughly about in my Survey to Professional Media class.  This subject was even brought up in my interview with Donna, without even intending.

As the company has progressed they have obviously had to adapt.  Well, Maritz had done competitions within the company years ago but stopped for around 10 years. Within the last year they have chosen to get back to those competitions.  “Giving a voice to their employees,” Donna stated.  She even participated in a competition for creating an application for the I-Phone.  Her group even won!  The company split $10,000 just for their group and about $55,000 for the entire competition.

She also believes that maybe this is another way of dealing with the Generation Y and accommodating there ways to succeed in the company and enhance their skills.

The final question I asked her was why she has stayed at Maritz for so many years, with the ups and downs, she responds by simply saying, “It’s the people, ask anybody!”  Thus, the atmosphere makes the company a good one.

Disney Star= Spanish Star?

I was recently looking for some music to listen to on YouTube and came across this.  It’s Selena Gomez, a Disney Character singing in spanish! I had no idea she had even become this popular.  Well Check it out, it’s actually pretty good! 🙂

Black Friday…. Freak out.

So … since I started working at the mall. I’ve begun to look at different black friday videos on YouTube and such and I;m pretty sure they could still not prepare me for the craziness that will happen. :/

Makes me miss my B.A.D. team… :p

Harry Potter #7: Astonishing Movie or Just another Billion Dollar Money Maker?

 

When I went to see the Harry Potter premiere this last Thursday the last thing on my mind was blogging but when I started looking at our recent power points in my Survey to Professional Media class, I came across the slide on Collecting Money.

In this slide, many things were discussed directly and indirectly, were the main topics.  I learned that direct is buying media products directly (books, magazines, DVDs, Internet or cable subscription, movie tickets, etc). However, indirect is buying advertised products.

So basically, buying any forms of mass media — generate revenue both directly and indirectly — like magazines, major movie premieres, or cable companies.  They charge subscriptions, sell advertising, or even the un-noticeable movie advertisements.

This one slide made me think back to watch Harry Potter and The Deathly Hollows. I recently read an article called ‘Harry Potter’ Has $330 Million Debut Weekend by Brook Barnes, on November 21, 2010.

 

 

Through reading this article I was informed that the seventh Harry Potter movie opened to a jaw-dropping $330 million in ticket sales, globally, just over the weekend. Proving that the Warner Brothers marketing and distribution departments, stepped it up to the plate and hit a home run, yet again.

That total easily made “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1” No. 1 in North America generated a $125.1 million. It is the second-biggest domestic opening for the entire Harry Potter franchise; adjusting for higher ticket prices, “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” sold $127.4 million over its first three days in November 2005.

The strong results for this film obviously reflected the continued popularity of the J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter books.  It seems as though every single one of these movies has also earned strong reviews in all of the box office.

But just as important was the strenuous yearlong, full-court press by Warner’s global marketing chief, Sue Kroll, to position the “Deathly Hallows” as a must-see event for both children and adults, alike. These advertising campaigns played up the sophisticated, yet darker elements of the plot. Harry, Ron, and Hermione are now all grown up and that good-versus-evil battle is becoming extremely intense.

The marketing materials also showed some type of edge into the different types of franchise by taking risks like identifying the film only by the letters “HP7” and posting posters and billboards with what looked like blood; especially posters like the one that depicted the Hogwarts castle in flames.

“It paid off to the point that was unexpected, about 25 % of the North American audience for “Deathly Hallows” was in the 18-to-34-year-old age group,” according to Dan Fellman, Warner’s president of domestic distribution.  “No other franchise has been able to age and expand the audience this way,” Mr. Fellman said. Thus, young and old media professionals should observe how things affect one another in marketing.

Generation Y, definitely took full advantage of this movie, considering the intensity of how many people from this age group attended or supported the movie/books.

The Harry Potter series will finally conclude with the 3-D release of part 2 of the “Deathly Hallows” on July 15, 2011.  This franchise, that is overseen by Alan F. Horn, Warner’s chief operating officer, has generated $6 billion at the global box office and billions in television, DVD, and merchandise sales.

“The success of “Deathly Hallows” just how big a hole Warner, owned by Time Warner, will have to fill once the series ends,” box office analysts said.

wondering if i should see it: any suggestions?

Interesting Guy? I think so… :)

“Today, after more than a century of electric technology, we have extended our central nervous system itself in a global embrace, abolishing both space and time as far as our planet is concerned,” is just one of the many famous quotes by Marshall McLuhan, this particular quote is found in Understanding Media, 1964.  Born as Herbert Marshall McLuhan in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on July 21, 191, McLuhan lived a long and extremely prosperous life.

Recently, in my Survey class we were told to write about this man.  I personally questioned, “What’s so great about this guy?” as I began to look up articles, movies, and videos about him. I started to realize how much he truly did change the outlook on Media to this day.

Throughout his life he attended college at the University of Manitoba and, of course, Cambridge University. In 1939 he married, Corinne Keller Lewis of Fort Worth, Texas. But not letting marriage slow him down, by 1942 he received his doctorate began to teach, write, and basically do anything his little heart desired. He even received quite a few honorable awards ranging from, “Honorary Award in Culture and Communication” in 1967 to “Man of Achievement” in 1975, with many others in-between.

"Marshall M" contributed by Google Images

"Marshall M" contributed by Google Images

 

But, I’m not here to tell the world about how great McLuhan was, I’m here to talk about why the heck this guys matters today, to communications.  Not only to adults but STUDENTS too!

McLuhan believed that the print revolution begun with Gutenberg, the “forerunner” of the industrial revolution. One unforeseen consequence of print was the fragmentation of society.

McLuhan argued that readers would now read in private, and so be alienated from others.  “Printing confirmed and extended the new visual stress. It created the portable book, which men could read in privacy and in isolation from others,” McLuhan said.

On the other hand, his “global village” theory allowed the ability and access of electronic media to create a unity of groups among people. What McLuhan did not live to see, but maybe perhaps saw in the future, was the merging of text and electronic mass media, in this new media called the Internet.  Thus, to answer the question, “Why does this pertain to students today?” The INTERNET!

Marshall McLuhan was the first person to popularize the concept of this global village and to consider its actual social effects among people and their lives. His insights were completely and utterly revolutionary at the time and changed how everyone has thought about media, technology, and communications ever since.

McLuhan came up with the phrase “global village” to show his observation that the media was rapidly integrating the planet.  Like, events in one part of the world could be experienced from other parts of the world in real-time; this is what human experience was like when we lived in small villages or colonies.

While McLuhan made this concept popular, yet he was not the first to think about the unifying effects of communication technology and fully admits this.

Concerning the new status of man in technology and media-dominated society, McLuhan states:

“If the work of the city is the remaking or translating of man into a more suitable form than his nomadic ancestors achieved, then might not our current translation of our entire lives into the spiritual form of information seem to make of the entire globe, and of the human family, a single consciousness?”

McLuhan announces the existence of a global village and predicts the extraordinary intensified media/more of the world community to its present expression.

McLuhan is well known for his division of media into HOT and COOL categories. Hot media are low in audience participation especially due to their high resolution.  Cool media are high in audience participation due to fact that has a low definition.  McLuhan’s philosophy was influenced by the work of the Catholic philosopher Pierre Teilhard de Chardin.  In that he believed that the use of electricity extends the central nervous system.

Mcluhan was known for many quotes a few of my favorite are the following, “The nature of people demands that most of them be engaged in the most frivolous possible activities—like making money,” this reminds me so much of how people treat others today, I have had so many people mistreat me, due to the fact that they were treated differently because they grew up with tons and tons of money. I know this isn’t exactly what this quote means but its how I relate it to my own life.

Another one is “The trouble with a cheap, specialized education is that you never stop paying for it,” when I was in high school I was taught that if we at least tried we would succeed, even in honors courses, however whenever I got to college, phew, did I get a slap in the face with realization?… I had to basically try 3 times as hard as if I would have if I had been taught correctly in the first place. The final quite that is one my favorite is, “People don’t actually read newspapers. They step into them every morning like a hot bath,” this reminds me of people and how they read into stories not just in the newspaper, but on the daily news, or even magazines, they take their emotions into all factors.

On McLuhan’s gravestone are the words “The Truth Shall Make You Free.” People may not fully agree with his outlooks however, most do remember that his life was dedicated to showing men the truth about the world they live in.


The Girl :D

This Brave New World is More of the Same

Recently, I read an article named This Brave New World is More of the Same written by Curt Hopkins.  This article was written recently on November 3rd.  He goes on and on about how different Internet technology aspects have come along over many years.

The main conclusion was that, “All technologies that flow from the Internet – including Web, social media, and mobile – are not qualitatively different than anything that came before. They are instead, differences in quantity.” Speed and access are the qualities that every normal average everyday person relies on in internet technology.

When someone that was born in the eighties looks on the internet they go about it for varied tasks completely different then someone who was born quite recent.  Thus, instead of writing a letter that takes days to receive, anyone can send an email and receive it just seconds later. Or on the other hand, you could take into factor the instant messaging, on Facebook, MySpace, etc.

Even RSS feeds give access to more thoughts, more quickly than visiting blogs and online sites, for different types of materials.  The only possible exception to this state of Internet/extensive amount of exposure is called augmented reality.

Instead of looking up a map on the un-reliable MapQuest, using a GPS to determine your location and then using a search engine to look up information on that location Augmented Reality just speeds up the process.

And now that I have followed that line of thinking through this argument seems more compelling than the qualitative, even Augmented Reality.

So, do you agree or disagree? If which then later, which technologies do you believe are qualitatively different than that which came before? Or which tech has changed the nature of our world instead of simply compressing the speed by which we reach it or broadening access to it?

“To be clear, I don’t think this necessarily makes the technology less important or useful or needful of coverage. Simply, as that most odious of Georgians once said, “Quantity has a quality all its own.”

This ties into our current unit due to the fact that, we have recently talked about Public Relations. In Public Relations, the entire range of efforts by an individual, an agency, or any organization attempting to reach or persuade audiences.

“The multibillion-dollar industry remains virtually invisible to the public, most of whom have never heard of Burson-Marstellar, Hill & Knowlton, or Ketchum.”
-Media & Culture Public Relations

The Social and cultural influence is immense as in Public Relations helped convince many American businesses of the value of nurturing the public and important once America became consumer-oriented society.

Generation Y is generation in which they are completely consumed by media. I personally am part of it and am part of this. When I started to read this article I automatically could relate to it. I always feel as though there is so much technology in so many different forms and I can barely keep up.

When it comes to qualitative verses quantitative, one can tell that technology seems like there is always another updated version, thus, a large quantity of items.  If you don’t have the I-Phone, High-Speed Internet, or even a Mac Comp, then you will be lost in the “techy” world/media.

Like you doooooo… oooo… :)

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