January 2015 Luncheon: Communications & Outreach in an Evolving Environment

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As one of North America’s leading energy infrastructure companies, Williams is growing as it works to complete $25 billion in capital spend for new, greenfield pipeline projects as well as expansions to existing facilities and pipelines over the next several years.

Join us Wednesday, Jan. 21, as Rob Hatley discusses how Williams’ Communications & Strategic Outreach team is constantly adapting to the needs of the business, while helping leadership understand the value his team provides. He also will present a case study on lessons learned through support of two of the company’s recent new pipeline projects; and the lessons learned about the importance of engaging stakeholders with one, consistent voice across multiple channels – from face-to-face meetings with landowners to strategically placed tweets.

All about Rob

Rob Hatley is vice president of Communications & Strategic Outreach for Williams. He is responsible for the company’s internal and external communications efforts, including public relations, crisis communications, advertising, branding, charitable giving and public outreach. Rob joined Williams in May 2013. Prior to that, he was responsible for global communications at Freescale Semiconductor. He also was part of the communications leadership team with Dell in Austin, Texas, during its fast- paced growth from 1999 to 2006.

When: Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2015, 11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m.

Where: OSU-Tulsa, North Hall, B.S. Roberts Room

700 N. Greenwood Ave.

Tulsa, OK 74106

Fee: Event Registration

  • Member Fee $25
  • Non-Member/Guest Fee $35
  • Students $15

RSVP: Monday, Jan. 19, 2015

Click here to register for this event

Meet The Pros!

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IABC Tulsa is hosting its first Meet the Pros night!

Learn how to take the next step in your career — whether that is landing that first job or using your expertise to open your own firm — from successful communicators and PR professionals at our October professional development event. A panel of experts will answer questions from members and local communications students. Stick around after the panel discussion for networking to meet other professionals of IABC/Tulsa as well as the next generation of pros.

Join us for networking and refreshments Thursday, October 23rd from 5:30-7:00 pm at Foolish Things Coffee.

About our Panel
Joe Williams heads up Joe Williams Communications, a 29-year-old consulting, research and training firm that works with diverse clients such General Dynamics, the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, Butterfield Bank in Bermuda, the Government of the Republic of South Africa and Cirque du Soleil. Joe holds more than 125 national awards for his work, including 13 IABC Gold Quills. He has served on the IABC Gold Quill Blue Ribbon panel, and is an All-Star speaker at World Conferences. IABC named him a Fellow in 2009.

Joe holds a Master’s in Mass Communications from OSU, served in the Army in the late 60s, and in his salad days he was on the editorial staff for the Daily American newspaper in Rome, Italy. He and his young family once spent more than a year vagabonding through Europe and North Africa in a VW camper. Joe’s six grandchildren say he tells a good story, he’s funny, he’s good at starting things, talking to strangers and brightening their day. They say he gets things done…and gets paid for it.

Ginger Homan, ABC is the founder and owner of Zia Communications and a founding partner in MODA, a branding and architecture firm. Both firms focus on building communities and creating thriving cultures. Homan specializes in getting a client’s message heard, understood and acted upon. She is a recipient of the 2011 Tulsa Chapter IABC John Hartman Professional Communicator of the Year; former president of the Tulsa chapter; and the former Director of North America for the IABC Accreditation Committee. She currently serves as a member of the IABC International Executive Board.

Amanda Clinton serves as the director of communications for Cherokee Nation and Cherokee Nation Businesses. Prior to joining the tribe’s communications department in 2005, Amanda worked at ABC affiliates in Tulsa and Topeka, Kan., where she held various jobs as a producer, weekend reporter and assignments editor. She earned both her bachelors and masters degrees from Oklahoma State University, and teaches strategic communications writing as an adjunct professor at OSU Tulsa since 2011. Her departments at Cherokee Nation and CNB earned national PR Daily Awards in 2012 and 2014. Amanda is a Cherokee Nation citizen originally from Locust Grove, but has called Tulsa home for more than 10 years.

Lizaimee (Liza) Mata is a communications specialist II in the Communication and Strategic Outreach department at Williams. Currently, Liza’s work focuses on communicating with internal and external stakeholders through channels like Williams’ blog, social media, advertising campaigns and the Williams’ customer magazine, Connect.

Liza received her Bachelor’s degree in Communication from the University of Tulsa in 2010. Liza completed her Master of Science in Strategic Communication Management from Oklahoma State University in Tulsa in December 2013.

Date: October 23
Time: 5:30 p.m. – 7:00 pm

Venue: Foolish Things Coffee
1001 S. Main St. , Tulsa, OK 74199 United States

TulsaTalks 2014: Digital Strategies

TulsaTalks 2014: Digital Strategies

TulsaTalks 2014: Digital Strategies

IABC Tulsa is sponsoring ORU’s first annual TulsaTalks conference.

Connect at TulsaTalks, a “let’s talk” business strategies and benchmarks conference. This year’s one-day TulsaTalks conference focuses 12 workshops and two keynotes on digital strategies in four areas: PR, brand management, SEM and SEO and digital advertising. This event is a fundraiser for ORU’s ad club.

Date: November 13
Time: 7:30 am – 4:00 pm

Venue: ORU Mabee Center
7777 SOUTH LEWIS AVE.,Tulsa, 74171

Register online at http://tulsa-talks.com/

Communicators Summit

Communicators Summit

Communicators Summit

Join IABC and PRSA at the annual Communicators Summit to learn “How to Think Like a CEO” and learn more about measuring your communications efforts. The keynote address on thinking like a CEO will be presented by David Grossman, ABC, APR and Fellow PRSA.

Case Studies/Presentations on the topic of measurement will include:

  • Measurement of Digital Channels presented by Nicole Nascenzi, Williams
  • Measurement of Consumer Research presented by Kelli Bruer, EMSA
  • Measurement of Traditional Media presented by Melanie Christian, Saxum

The event will conclude with a networking reception at the Tulsa Press Club (415 S. Boston Ave.). Buy your tickets before Aug. 27 to save money!

Presenting Sponsor:

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Gold Sponsor:
af45292b-671c-42a9-9e2b-586d09b915e4
Supporting Sponsors:

9246af65-63d7-44fe-912d-3d36857b8a11   1c29a1dd-82eb-4627-9390-d8b598eae5d6

Ticket Price  Early Bird Discount Rate 
(through Aug. 27)
PRSA/IABC Members $50 $40
Non Members (Guests)  $60 $50
Students $25 $20

 

 

 

 

Why You Should Go To IABC’s Southern Region Conference

On the fence about attending the IABC Southern Region Conference? IABC Tulsa’s Sara Reynolds attended the Southern Region Conference in 2011 and shares her experience with us.

Picture this: New Orleans, 2011, Southern Region Conference.  As a four year IABC member and three time conference veteran, I had this! My sessions were picked and my top restaurant choices for the dine-around selected before I even left Little Rock.  It was time to rock this conference!

I arrived at the welcome reception and all of my preparation and nerve disappeared as quickly as the bananas foster was served to conference goers. I didn’t know anyone there. I was the only IABC/Arkansas delegate there. I was alone in a room full of people reconnecting with old friends, introducing each other to new friends and just having fun mingling.

Here is where I admit my big secret; I am actually quite shy unless forced to be otherwise and no one was forcing me to participate. So I went up to my room (after eating, of course) and got some rest. The next morning would be my morning. Seriously, it would.

Continue reading

President’s Column – August 2014

By Angela Byers, IABC Tulsa President

In 2002, I was working as a graphic designer in a corporate communications department. It was during that time that WorldCom’s corporate accounting fraud came to light – and I remember it well. As we know, WorldCom was not alone in these illegal accounting practices and several other corporations fell in similar fashion. It was a painful lesson to many companies, their employees and investors. It was also in 2002 that U.S. Congress passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (or SOX), which set public companies and accounting firms on a new path to accountability, transparency and better business ethics.

This month, IABC/Tulsa teams up with the Oklahoma Business Ethics Consortium (OK Ethics) for its August meeting titled Ethical Leadership for the 21st Century. Cynthia Cooper, CEO of The Cooper Group, is the speaker and I am very excited about hearing her story. Cooper led the small, internal audit team that uncovered nearly $4 billion in illegal accounting practices at WorldCom. She is now an ambassador for business ethics – teaching professionals and students how to prepare themselves for that moment when they face a situation that tests their ethics and integrity.

Cynthia Cooper, Worldcom Whistleblower

August 2014 Event

Cynthia Cooper, Worldcom Whistleblower

Ethics in Business – Lessons from the WorldCom Scandal

In 2002, Cynthia Cooper led a small team of auditors, frequently in secret and at night to uncover almost $4 billion of unethical and illegal accounting practices at WorldCom, in an effort to inflate assets and stock price. The internal audit team alerted the company’s audit committee and board of directors who took swift action. Soon after, the U.S. Security and Exchange Committee began an investigation that uncovered about $11 billion in inflated assets.

What would you do in Cynthia’s situation? Everyone hopes they would push for answers by doing whatever necessary to find out the truth about people they probably really like and the company for which they work.

The Oklahoma Business Ethics Consortium, in conjunction with IABC/Tulsa, The Association for Women in Communications and PRSA Tulsa proudly presents CynthiaCooper, CEO of The Cooper Group. Join us Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2014, from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Doubletree Hotel in Downtown Tulsa as Cynthia shares her personal experiences at WorldCom as well as critical ethics and governance lessons from some of the largest corporate scandals.

About Cynthia

Cynthia Cooper is an internationally recognized speaker, best-selling author and consultant. Cynthia and her team unraveled the fraud at WorldCom, to date one of the largest corporate frauds in history. She was named one of Time Magazine’s Persons of the Year. In addition to Cynthia, the designation has been given to seven women including Madame Chiang Kai-Shek, Elizabeth II and Corazon Aquino. She also was featured as one of 25 influential working mothers in Working Mother magazine.

Cynthia has been featured in national periodicals such as The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, CFO Magazine and Business Week. She has served on panels with notables such as Brian Williams, Anderson Cooper, Donna Brazile and Grover Norquist, and has appeared on programs including Fox Business’ America’s Nightly Scoreboard, PBS’s Tavis Smiley, NBC’s The Today Show, ABC’s This Week with George Stephanopoulos, CSPAN’s BookTV, CNBC’s The Big Idea with Donnie Deutsch and CNBC’s Squawk Box.

When Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2014, 11:30 AM  –  1:00 PM
Where Doubletree Hotel
Downtown Tulsa
616 W 17th Street
Tulsa, Ok
Fees Event Registration
IABC/Tulsa Member Fee  $25.00
IABC/Tulsa Non-Member/Guest Fee  $35.00

For more information:
Contact: Jalisha Petties
Phone: 405-889-0498
Email:  okethics@yahoo.com

Please note that this jointly presented professional development opportunity is in lieu of our regular monthly meetings.

July 2014 Newsletter

President’s Column

By Angela Byers, IABC Tulsa President

Hello fellow IABC communicators,

While at IABC International Conference this June, I attended a session called, “Implementing the Global StandardSM of the Communication Profession into the Every Day.” I chose this session out of curiosity, as I wasn’t aware of any standards in our industry. I found the session enlightening, and wanted to share the information with you.

If you are an internal communications professional, and wondered what career track you might follow, you’ll be pleased to know IABC has developed standards in your industry, including Career Paths of the Communication Professional.

Your career path will more than likely fall into one of these 4 areas:

Foundation

This is the entry level of the profession. At this level the communication professional attains the education and develops the core skills required to be competent within all Principles of the Global Standard and to work across disciplines.

Foundational skills are required to do the job and understand the organization’s culture, structure and function.

At this milestone the professional is expected to contribute under relatively close supervision and direction from a more senior person, and is expected to exercise initiative and creativity within a well-defined area. They must master basic and routine communication tasks, and demonstrate competence on a portion of a larger communication project or task.

Generalist/Specialist

At this level the communication professional branches into a role with either a specific or a generalist focus, where work experience provides opportunities for a more strategic and problem-solving approach. The communication professional will apply a deeper understanding and practice of the Principles.

Here, the communication professional begins to refine their career choices. They can be satisfied as a generalist or specialist for a number of years or for a whole career, but expertise and responsibility will continue to grow. Some professionals never need or want to move away from this milestone, thriving on interdependent work. They will build expertise in at least one area of the industry. They will develop credibility and a reputation while building strong internal networks of relationships related on their area of expertise and gain greater ability to develop strategic focus and problem solving techniques.

Strategic Advisor

Maturing as a communication professional though consistent application of the Principles, at this milestone they are expanding expertise and innovation. The communication professional assumes increased responsibilities, including resource management.

They are interdependent, taking responsibility for work other than their own and developing others within the organization. To accommodate their personal development needs, they seek to build additional areas of expertise. They have strong interpersonal skills, broad business perspectives, stimulate others through ideas and knowledge, and effectively represent the organization’s clients and external groups. They have expanded their expertise in niche disciplines and explored innovations within these disciplines. They are highly skilled and confident, providing strategic communication advice and counsel to the organization’s leadership.

Business Leader

The communication professional at this milestone demonstrates the ability to serve at a senior peer level, leads within an organization by providing counsel, and helps to set organizational direction at a strategic level. They set a standard for application of the Principles.
As business leader, they play a key role in shaping the future of the organization by sponsoring promising people, programs and ideas. At this milestone they have developed a distinct competence in several areas of expertise and often have a regional or national reputation. The professional influences the future of the organization though original concepts that often lead to changing the way business is done. They are adept at seeing new business opportunities, motivating buy-in and gaining resources. They competently represent the organization on critical strategic issues, and are sought after to provide counsel and function at a peer level with other senior executives.

There are also The Six Principles of the Communication Profession, including ethics, consistency, context, analysis, strategy, engagement.

These are guidelines that every communications professional can follow, and the career paths are a great roadmap for an employee or hiring manager.

These roles are vital to every organization as you are the voice of your company, and often the voice of your leadership – always guiding in strategy and vision.

I’ll make this reference guide available on our website – download here.

Best to you in your communications career endeavors,
– Angela Byers
IABC Tulsa President


July Meeting

Register TODAY to hear Nicole Burgin detail how Tulsa Community College recovered after an electrical fire last year.

The Night the Lights Went Out in Tulsa (Community College)

On the evening of June 17, 2013, Tulsa Community College’s Metro Campus was evacuated due to a fire in the electrical system that supplies power to its cluster of buildings. Summer classes were underway; smoke permeated its three buildings; the sprinkler system provided the added effect of water damage; and the resulting power outage impacted the college’s campus wide information technology system.

TCC immediately implemented its emergency operations plan and the communications team went into crisis management mode. In the hours, days and weeks that followed, TCC had to share accurate, timely information about the unfolding events with 4,000 students, faculty and staff, as well as the general public.

Join us Wednesday, July 16, as Nicole Burgin provides an inside look at the communications challenges TCC faced and how it managed the process successfully to a re-opening of the campus just five short weeks later. She’ll share lessons learned that she guarantees every communications professional can benefit from – regardless of the industry in which you work.

All About Nicole

Nicole Burgin became the media relations specialist for Tulsa Community College in September 2012 after a 19-year career in broadcast journalism. She handles all media inquiries for the college and works with reporters from local and national media outlets to help tell TCC’s story. Nicole’s received a Grand Award from the Oklahoma College Public Relations Association for news writing and received numerous awards from the Oklahoma Association of Broadcasters and Associated Press for her work as a journalist.

Register today!

IABC/Tulsa will not host an August Professional Development meeting but instead we are co-sponsoring Cynthia Cooper, Worldcom whistleblower and CEO of The Cooper Group, along with OK Ethics on Wednesday, August 20. Get the details here.


IABC/Tulsa Now Accepting Credit Cards

You see the stickers everywhere…clothing boutiques, food trucks and other small businesses. Now you will see the same advertisement at IABC/Tulsa meetings because we are now accepting all major credit cards with Square.

Grab your card and scoot out of the door Wednesday for our next Professional Development meeting. This time, you wont have to double and triple check that you have that check from Accounts Payable or the check book you stopped carrying years ago. In fact, never go through that process again! We are making it easier to attend events by using the secure and well-known service.

Register for our September PD meeting (remember, IABC/Tulsa is not hosting an August meeting) with the pay in person option.  Liza Mata, IABC VP of finance; JoAnn Bartlett, IABC VP of hospitality; or other board members will be able to accept your card on the spot.

We look forward to seeing you Wednesday!


Embracing Big Data

Few topics have created as much buzz recently as big data.

As a marketing professional, are you confident in your understanding of the communication implications of big data? Have you clearly defined your role in advising clients and executives on how to use data responsibly?

If you haven’t been paying attention, now’s the time—before armies of data analysts, statisticians and software vendors lock the doors to the C-suite boardroom behind them.

In case you have missed the major selling point of big data, to executives it spells big profits. According to a KPMG study last August, almost two-thirds of CFOs and CIOs in the Americas admitted they had changed their business strategy because of big data and analytics. The results were nearly the same in Asia/Pacific

READ MORE »
READ COMMUNICATION WORLD MAGAZINE »


Job Line – Local and International

Looking for local, regional or international career opportunities? Have an open position and looking for a talented professional to fill it?

IABC Tulsa and IABC International both have career listings available.

The IABC Job Center is the definitive career resource for the communication profession, serving job seekers and employers in all industries and communication functions.

Case study: Electrical fire closes TCC Metro Campus

July 2014 Event

The Night the Lights Went Out in Tulsa (Community College)

On the evening of June 17, 2013, Tulsa Community College’s Metro Campus was evacuated due to a fire in the electrical system that supplies power to its cluster of buildings. Summer classes were underway; smoke permeated its three buildings; the sprinkler system provided the added effect of water damage; and the resulting power outage impacted the college’s campus wide information technology system.

TCC immediately implemented its emergency operations plan and the communications team went into crisis management mode. In the hours, days and weeks that followed, TCC had to share accurate, timely information about the unfolding events with 4,000 students, faculty and staff, as well as the general public.

Join us Wednesday, July 16, as Nicole Burgin provides an inside look at the communications challenges TCC faced and how it managed the process successfully to a re-opening of the campus just five short weeks later. She’ll share lessons learned that she guarantees every communications professional can benefit from – regardless of the industry in which you work.

All About Nicole

Nicole Burgin became the media relations specialist for Tulsa Community College in September 2012 after a 19-year career in broadcast journalism. She handles all media inquires for the college and works with reporters from local and national media outlets to help tell TCC’s story. Nicole’s received a Grand Award from the Oklahoma College Public Relations Association for news writing and received numerous awards from the Oklahoma Association of Broadcasters and Associated Press for her work as a journalist.

When: Wednesday, July 16, 2014 11:30 AM  –  1:00 PM

Where: The Summit Club – Bank of America Center
Governor’s Suite – 30th Floor
15 W 6th Street
Parking ticket validated
Tulsa, Oklahoma

Fees: Event Registration
IABC/Tulsa Meeting (Member Fee)  $25.00
IABC/Tulsa Meeting (Non-Member/Guest Fee)  $35.00

RSVP by Monday, July 14 »

President’s Column – June 2014

President’s Column
By Angela Byers, IABC Tulsa President

I just returned from IABC world conference in Toronto, Ontario where communications professionals gathered to learn from the best and brightest in our industry. There were over 2,000 registered attendees with representation from as far away as Africa, South America and Europe. Before the opening session, I joined a walking tour of beautiful downtown Toronto, and explored China Town, Kensington and Dundas districts. Toronto is a beautiful, clean and friendly city that reminded me of NYC in many ways. It was energizing to be around so many communications professionals. Those that I met are articulate, confident, and great thought leaders within their organizations. They are the voice of their companies and often the voice of their leadership. While we were in Toronto we went to sessions that taught us how to enhance our skills, create an authentic culture, generate employee engagement, and apply science to use our brain in new ways.

The keynote speakers included Lesley Jane Seymour from MORE Magazine, Gregg Lederman from Brand Integrity Group, Hayley Wickenheiser from the Canadian Women’s Olympic Hockey Team, and many more.

Shannon Frederick and Ginger Homan were officially slated into the regional and international board. Joe Williams and John Clemons were a raving success in their circle of fellows presentations. Ginger Homan accepted an Award of Excellence.

One of my favorite keynote speakers Mike Walsh. He is a leading authority on the digital future, the bestselling author of Futuretainment and the CEO of Tomorrow, a global innovation lab in Berkeley, Calif. His opening general session provided the excitement of scanning the near future for the next communication trends. He introduced a fresh, symbiotic way of looking at the relationships we have with our clients and customers. His opening keynote session on Sunday showed us that shifts in human behavior in relation to emerging technologies must inform our business transformations if we’re to truly serve our stakeholders.


 
Be sure and register for next year’s conference, which will be in San Francisco. You won’t want to miss it.

Proud to represent our great chapter,
Angela