February 5, 2012

FTC wants to Regulate Bloggers

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Look out Mommy Bloggers and Reviewers, the government is coming to get you! According to the Washington Post (Article June 22, 2009) the Federal Trade Commission is reviewing guidelines it hopes to present later this summer that would regulate how bloggers disclose that they are receiving payments or freebies for their review. MomCentral (@momcentral) and IZEA (@IZEAinc) both of whom follow me on Twitter are mentioned in the article. I’ve met Stacy DeBroff very quickly after she spoke to IABC in San Francisco recently and put the following question to her via Twitter:

My question for @momcentral how do you stay transparent that you are tweeting/blogging for a paying client? #iabc09 ROI to SOI7:38 PM Jun 8th from Twittelator

I haven’t received an answer, yet. I’m sure Stacy or @MomCentral fields hundreds of direct tweets, so maybe they can’t answer them all, but it’s curious that the Washington Post singled them out over their practice of supplying coupons to Mommy bloggers so a certain product can be reviewed. IZEA on the other hand follows me, but has yet to reach out to me to offer any products or companies. But, it should be interesting how the FTC handles the slippery slope of trying to regulate the Internet.

Will bloggers go off-shore to accept payments for reviews? What about Twitter, much of the buzz on the microblogging site, is where do you put a disclaimer in the 140 characters you have to work with? I think the government should review the existing laws it has in place for retailers and the like. Rather than trying to chase down every Mom on a blog or band geek turned techno-blog reviewer, the U.S. Government should clamp down on the unscrupulous retailer trying to lure shoppers with “independent testimonials.” Code of ethics for bloggers are a good thing as well, and most bloggers who don’t disclaim they are receiving payment for their posts are soon uncovered by others who are trying to make blogging an trust-worthy news and information source. As for me, I have never taken payment for my thoughts, if I were, trust me, it would be disclosed.

What are your thoughts on this controversy?

Until next time, Tim

Other thoughts on the issue: Debbie WeilIdeas that SpreadWeblog Tools Collection

Inspiration From: an inflight magazine

I’ll occasionally find inspiration in the oddest places, I’ll try to share them here with you, please feel free to share where you feel inspired or are inspired.

I’ve been traveling a lot lately and on a recent flight from Milwaukee to Philly on Midwest Airlines, I read through their magazine.

I found an ad that got me thinking. It’s from Dodge County, I didn’t even know where Dodge County is located, I assumed it’s in Wisconsin, but it is in Nebraska, I had to look it up, but the ad was very clever.

Headline:
Refresh with Dodge County

Remember when Menus were about food?

Remember when Plug-ins were electrical outlets?

Remember when Browsers were looking in store windows?

It made me wonder, especially as a web designer, how many terms the online world has “borrowed” from the English Language? “Tabs” used to be in binders, “Windows” were for looking through. “Scrolls” were what monks wrote on … etc.

Do you have any examples? Kudos to Dodge County and www.fdcvb.org … maybe I’ll refresh there next time I’m in Nebraska.

Until next time, Tim

Recap via Twitter of IABC World Conference 2009 – Part 2

SanFrancisco_FerryIn my last post, I reviewed the first half of the IABC 2009 World Conference as I saw it (and how I tweeted about it) and how Twitter was a huge part of the conference. Now I’d like to review the second half and the powerful speakers who helped shape the focus and energize the attendees.

Tuesday was, of course, followed by Monday night, and the IABC Heritage Region reception where I met @kathryncobb (from Chicago, its a long story how she wound up at the Heritage Reception) and two friends I’d made the night before at the Welcoming Reception at the Ferry Building (pictured here) in San Francisco. Laura Stone Bell and Erin Sullivan from Jones Day were, as many IABCers are, welcoming, friendly, and a lot of fun. Long story short, the four of us wound up at Halmand Palace, an Afghan restaurant in SF. The food was delicious, it was my first time having such cuisine, but Kathryn, who grew up in Pakistan, explained to us first how to pronounce  what we would be eating and what is typically in the food of that region. Seems her father a doctor, took her family to Pakistan when she was young to show villagers how to cut down on infant-mortality and other health-risks and the family lived in northern Pakistan until she was 17. Another world-shrinking moment for me as a result of my involvement with IABC.

Tuesday General Session:
I was frankly too enthralled by Robert Swan, OBE to tweet much during his speech to IABC. His insights into leadership, the environment and our own sustainability as a planet where spot on, and I’m proud of IABC as an organization which brings us such speakers and walks the walk with its own environmental practices. Gone are the days of water bottles, huge conference programs and directories at IABC conferences, instead opting for more online resources for speaker notes and glasses and water jugs in the session rooms.  Why do such sessions make us so thirsty? Bravo IABC!

Tuesday Morning:
BJ Fogg, Ph.D. presentation Design for Behavior Change: Why Facebook and Twitter are winning was awesome. His insights into to how design can make people act, for me, was worth the price of the entire conference and yet, it was only one of the many sessions I attended. BJ broke down the complex nature of behavioral studies and design into clean, fun, and powerful examples. His session was the first I ran into that the speaker didn’t want anyone blogging about his presentation as he is publishing a book about the topic. He didn’t mind the occasional tweet about it, so I’ll respect his work and limit my review of the presentation to my tweets: Behavior change through on line video very interesting. Start small…; BJ Fogg improv with audience members very funny. Good sports and adventurous Adam, Eve and Serpent #iabc09 persuasion behaviormodel.org; BJ Fogg pain/pleasure core motivators hope/fear social belonging other core motivators; BJ Fogg behavior is all about motivation and ability. Make it simple, to motivate “view your world through this filter.”; We live in a one click world – BJ Fogg.

Tuesday Afternoon:
After a lunch out by Union Square, where I caught some of the 47th Annual Cable Car Bell-ringing Contest. I was back at the conference for the Web 2.0 and internal communication panel discussion with Deborah Moore, from here in Philly, Karen Horn, from Washington State and Jeremy Schultz (@jschultz) from the state of Oregon and Intel. This discussion really found its legs when it was opened up to questions from the audience. It seemed the post-lunch energy level of the panel was a bit off as the majority of the session was very low-key and the examples were nothing earth-shattering. Tweets speak for themselves: T10 web 2.0 presentation needs more energy. Speakers seem very laid back. GSK Intranet homepage the busiest I’ve ever seen.; T10 Web 2.0 a second wind has liven up the presentation with questions from the audience. D. Moore is quite the comic “youtwitface”; RT @disruptivethink #iabc09 – check out ibm beehive -http://bit.ly/1Tejt Intranet based on facebook; RT @llibitz #iabc09 T10 – Web 2.0 tools don’t replace the traditional emp. comm tools (printed pubs, f2f, etc.) just augments them – AMEN!

While I was sitting in the Web 2.0 presentation I was also following along with on Twitter the other presentation going on through my fellow Twitter-journalists such as @BryanPerson who was conducting a Twitter session for communicators. It was the first time that that’s happened at an IABC conference and it was like a sub-conference of information going on.

All-Star Session Tuesday Afternoon:
I chose Shel Holtz @shel for my late afternoon session and his topic News Releases in the Social Media Era. I’ve seen Shel present several times and he, like most of the all-star presenters, never fails to deliver. He captured the mood of the present state of print-publications, newspapers and magazines and then set about explaining how social media, the web and the up and coming workforce are changing the rules. I found it very interesting how IABC has sponsored the creation of standards for the social media news release, or as Shel said it should be called the Media Packet, as it contains more than stale quotes and boilerplates. It’s holds logos, video, images, key content, facts, and links to what others are saying on the web. My tweets: Traditional press releases are dead or dying as they were designed for print when most journalism is moving online. #iabc09 shel holtz as5; @shel sncr.org shel founding partner of society of new communication research. #IABC09 SNCR; Online press releases work to push folks to Corp. Websites and interview requests, but it must be news; @shel Mayo Clinic uses YouTube and wordpress to spread its news no video bandwidth used at Mayo US Dept of Labor on twitter; @shel ”Communicators need to learn SEO it’s the price of admission” learn how to use keywords. #iabc09 focus on first 250 words of pr; #iabc09 pressreleasegrader.com can be used to test your online press release before you release it. @shel can only analyze ones in English.; “PDFs don’t work as online press releases. Avoid them at all times.” @shel #iabc09; @shel IABC is sponsoring and pushing the social media release. Lots of controversy followed. #iabc09; @shel showing core facts, links, and multimedia (video, logos, images) of the social media press release. #iabc09; @shel research aids include tags, links, and what other people are saying about this release #iabc09 boilerplate, contact and SM links.; @shel PRXbuilder, Pitchengine, storycrafter, realwire are all Social Media Release creators. #iabc09 all trying 2 standardize.

Dine-Around: An IABC Tradition:
I chose Nettie’s Crab Shack for the San Francisco Dine-Around, as I like seafood. Little did I know the lack of seafood most Canadians from Calgary, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and the like have access to in their hometowns. It explains why out of 9 of us at dinner only three including our host David Kilgman from the SF chapter of IABC where from outside the U.S. – Simon Hardaker from Great Britain and I had to explain why we chose the restaurant. It was a great meal and good company and we all got to know a bit more about each other. Adrianne Hartley Lovric explained how she was recently married, but was just now getting to met her in-laws as her husband was from Croatia. The International in IABC can be overemphasized, I learn how small the U.S. is in the world and yet I was asked repeatedly by those from other countries what Americans thought of our new president. I suggest the Cobb Louis salad at Nettie’s Crab Shack, by-the-way.

Wednesday Morning:
Sam Harrison @zingzone from Georgia got our creative juices flowing in his session the Three Ps for more Creative Marketing – passion, performance and pitch. My tweets can’t cover the inspiration I felt during this session and beyond as I’ve started on some project back here in office. #iabc09 where are we in a rut in our lives? Sam Harrison 3ps where are we not creative because of our “velvet rut” – our comfortable zone. Passion fuels creativity and we need to practice Kaizen and stretch our selves. 3ps of marketing #iabc09; Learn not to be careful- D. Arbus – take risks and be willing to take risks. 3ps of marketing #iabc09; Harvest your mistakes. Good mistakes = strong procedure/bad results 3ps of marketing #iabc09; Sometimes you need to go against the rules of your org. And personal rules. Stop worrying what other people think. 3ps of marketing #iabc09; Dave Eggers and the story of 826 Valencia – go against the rules. 3ps of marketing #iabc09; Don’t fool yourselves and get galumping (L. Carroll ) 3ps of marketing tap your childhood creativity and whimsy. #iabc09; Throwing paper airplanes with inspiration phrases images at each other in Sam Harrisons sessions. FUN #iabc09 3ps of marketing; (the paper I picked up by the way simply said “Oz” on it, I think it’s fate, as I’m a huge Baum fan and collect all the Oz books, serendipity!) Great inspirational stories of people looking at the ordinary in new ways. #iabc09 3ps of marketing find the opportunity in the ordinary.; Popping bubble wrap in Harrison’s session pop pop pop take the ordinary and turn it into extraordinary. #iabc09; Get outside and get outside ourselves. 3ps of marketing #IABC09 get inspired by nature. Playpumps.com; Good/bad stuff lists – you find the good always outweighs the bad. 3ps of marketing #iabc09 list what good stuff happened to u today and bad; Stop saying “they just don’t get it.” it’s our job to make sure they get it. Prepare, not about you it’s about the decision makers #IABC09; Ask if it’s a good time to present your ideas, and be passionate. – Harrison #iabc09; Missle defense system prior to presenting anticipate objections (missles) and your defenses – Harrison #iabc09 be persistent.

Closing Session:
I can’t pretend to do justice to Sir Ken Robinson’s, Ph.D.  closing speech to IABC. All I can say is buy his book(s). Out of Our Minds and The Element. You won’t be disappointed. If we all found our passion the world would be a much better and happier place. The conference ended fittingly with a standing ovation.

Let’ keep the dialogue going. What did you think of the conference, a session in particular, what have you done since the conference that was a direct result of attending? What did you think of the Twitter coverage or my summary?

Until next time, Tim

Recap via Twitter of IABC World Conference 2009 – Part 1

abccolor_logoI started using Twitter at IABC International Conference in 2008. It was held in New York City and I soon became a big fan of Twitter and saw that it was a great tool to recap conferences. Back in 2008 there were a handful of us using Twitter and commenting on keynote addresses, what we thought of the breakout session speakers and what we were doing in New York. Checkout out my tweets about the IABC world conference 2009.

This year’s conference was in San Francisco and before the conference event began there was buzz about the conference on Twitter. Then as the conference started, I witnessed an entire sub-conference going on. I’m recapping it here and linking to other recaps from fellow members of IABC.

Prior to the conference and recapping the conference as it happened was OutoftheGate and Linda Johannesson. Byran Person and the Daily Boo also did a nice job recapping the conference.

It’s interesting to see each individuals takeaways from the conference and even the difference in opinions as the session were taking place. Typing in ‘#IABC09′ into Twitter search you will find a plethora of opinions, tips, and recaps. I also made lot of new friends on Twitter through recapping the conference, including: @valpakcoupons @dave1meyer @glendarholmes @distruptivethink @Punkpoet_jb @jenbenz @tomroux @zingzone @kathryncobb @shaileymotial @llibitz @willy26 @paulbartonABC @paulacassin and many more… If you review any of their tweets you’ll see a different perspective on the conference. 

Twitter the Conference’s Hot Topic:
As for the conference Twitter was a part of the majority of the sessions I attended. I think it was mentioned in every session where social media was the topic or not. It’s the hot topic in communication. It was used live to demonstrate how social media is changing the communicator’s role and job in today’s business world. Neville Hobson (@jangles) in his podcasting session did a live Audio Boo recording and instantly had a photo and audio up on the site. That’s me in the green shirt in the blurry photo. He did it all from his iPhone, so lots of other equipment isn’t necessary. Shel Holtz (@shel) showed off the future of the Social Media News Release, I like that he called it a Social Media Kit as it has multimedia information for the press and everyone else out on the net to use as they like. Stacy DeBroff, aka @momcentral discussed Twitter at length and so did Barbara Gibson @Barb_G and @BryanPerson who did an entire session on Twitter for the Communicator.

Opening Session Sunday:
The overall feeling about Blair Christie and Cisco’s opening session was that is was a bit heavy handed on what Cisco could do for its clients and not the expected 30-thousand foot look at the communication industry. The tweets flew fast and furious throughout the speech and demonstration of Cisco’s intranet software packages.

General Session Monday:
Brian Dunn COO and soon-to-be CEO of Best Buy was awarded the IABC Excel Award for his leadership in communication. His thoughts on there no longer being internal and external communication (is all shows up on the Internet) was spot on. And the work his communication staff of 70 is doing with videos for employees and the new ads featuring real employee stories was a great way to highlight the youth of his company’s employee (avg. age 24) and the creativity of the company.

Monday Afternoon:
Branding session: David Grossman, ABC, APR, Fellow PRSA and Marty Campanello, APR, Fellow PRSA Did a great job recapping the Carolinas Healthcare System and it’s rebranding effort: Highlights: Branding and brands the currency of business today marketing from the inside out; Branding session – 26% of employees engaged according to Gallup leaves lots of disengaged and not engaged; in the age of mergers employees need to know what brand promise is and act on it; Carolinas Medical Center transformed their brand – the challenge was encouraging caring staff over other measures; Internal branding isn’t a logo, tagline, giveaway, website. It’s the promise of the brand that make people act; Grossman -branding brings up ops issues that get in way for employees must be addressed.

ROi to SOI: Stacy Debroff: Return on Investment to Sphere of Influence: Stacy who is the CEO of Mom Central Consulting demonstrated how she’s captured the niche market of moms on the social media networks and turned it into a successful consulting business. She’s been a part of campaigns for Frigidaire, Motrin (post-Motrin Moms incident, which she recapped for her point of view). Like any great blogger, she dropped a lot of names, but also backed it up with great content. Highlights: ROI to SOI: social media is changing the way we do everything. Power to the Moms!; ROI to SOI google is new corporate homepage. What people say about you is more important than you say about yourself; SOI increase enthusiasts, negate detractors, drive to action, change perception; transparency and authenticity again appears. The truth will set you free; Now following @momcentral from roi to soi at #IABC09 huge crowd majority of audience is in SM her followers growing by the minute; SM has given rise to crisis management via SM by 45%. Can companies manage a crisis on Twitter?; Stacy DeBroff getting clients off Twitter. MomCentral connects with Pepperidge Farms via a tweet exchange.; Great examples about the power of social media Frigidaire, Ringling Bros., Disney on Ice.; “motrin put out a stupid, bad ad about baby-wearing.” deep analysis YouTube twitter bloggers jumped on it.; how to crisis respond via SM for your company? Need to be able to respond where the conversation is taking place.; Debroff “never argue with an idiot because from the outside you can’t tell who is who!”; SOI is all about relationships. ROI to SOI #iabc09 create brand enthusiasts, stream of conversation – thread a story together. Impressions.; What is the story you want to tell via social media? ROI to SOI Can you change the perception of your brand with those on SM?

My question for @momcentral was how do you stay transparent that you are tweeting/blogging for a paying client? Still waiting for an answer.

Tuesday and Wednesday recap

Until next time, Tim

Made in America – Red, White and Green…

img_0490Last week ABC’s NIGHTLINE did an interesting story on how hard it is to buy products Made in America. As I watched I found it interesting how complacent everyone was about it. I remember watching John Ratzenberger and his Made In America series on the Travel Channel and thinking how proud I was that Americans still make top quality products. A search of “Made in America” on the web finds that maybe the future of American industry lies in new forms of energy. This video is cause for hope, maybe this economy will force America to embrace alternative energy. I recently returned from a trip to San Francisco and was amazed at the “eco-savviness” of the city. Recycling was prominent everywhere, the food court at the Westfield served you on china and with utensils to cut down on the paper plates and cups going in the trash stream. Hybrid taxis and no or low emission vehicles were everywhere. I understand from one of our cabbies all taxis in SF must be hybrid or natural gas vehicles by 2012. It just reminded me that we have a long way to go here in Pennsylvania. The future is alternative and thinking green and the East Coast of the US has a long way to go.