TwIRps

September 4th, 2009 by Stewart McKie - Executive Advisor

It’s pretty easy to understand the first two parts of our new tag line – Comply and Control – but what about Communicate?

Financial communication isn’t just about publishing and distributing financial reports like income statements and balance sheets. Consider the combination of Twitter, Investor relations and XBRL. In a recent interview with IR Alert, Michelle Savage, VP of Communications at XBRL US mentions corporate actions as an area of future interest for XBRL US:

One area that we’re focusing on now beyond financials reporting that does have impact on IR is the area of corporate actions. This is when an event happens like a merger or something, that information is transmitted by the company in form of a release or prospectus or a combo of those things and others. Today, it’s in a free form document—and we’re advocating that it gets announced via XBRL. If it’s a prospectus today, the document could have tags embedded or pieces of it pulled out to create those tags and separate elements.

Today, an obvious way to communicate corporate actions to reach a wide audience is through Twitter. The action ‘alert’ is Tweeted and a link provided to look more closely at the full action ‘report’. However Twitter isn’t an XBRL-enabled communication medium. But it could be. Read the rest of this entry »




Really, really good stuff from Michelle Savage (XBRL-US) on Investor Relations and XBRL

August 30th, 2009 by Emily Huang - VP, Business Technology & Cofounder

A recent interview published on www.irwebreport.com has caught my attention. In the article, Michelle Savage (VP of Communications at XBRL-US) has provided some really, really good advice for Investor Relations Officers (IROs) about what they need to know and do about XBRL.

According to Michelle, the biggest challenges from an IRO standpoint are:

The challenge is getting educated and feeling comfortable with what elements are being chosen — and being comfortable with how your own financials are converted into XBRL. That comes down to understanding not the technology, per se, but rather how your financial guys define your statements using XBRL tags, as well as how your industry or market peers and competitors do the same thing.

Read the rest of this entry »