(Members of the Blog Council lead corporate blogging and social media at large corporations. We are delighted to share their thoughts on blogging from the corporate perspective. This post is the guest author’s personal opinion.)
I recently presented to the 2008 MIMA Summit on the topic of corporate blogging. Of the many thoughts I presented, which you can view here, I am most interested in your reaction to the following:
- How can you be humanly authentic? (as corporate blogger) – It’s useful when the company knows itself and you can use that as a guideline as to the personality of the business. There needs to be internal/external alignment so that there will be less dissonance between internal and external conversations. The company’s culture is the platform for passion about your business, products and services to shine through. Remember that honesty is the basis for truth.
- Do brands suffer? (when they go from one interaction many times like advertising to many interactions one time like social media) – my thinking is that community conversations strengthen the relationships we form with brands. By being available to many interactions, brand are not locked into one rigid expression or experience – they can become nuanced and personal.
- What is the worst that could happen? (when you open your company to social interaction) – if anyone here has ever tried to map the answers to this question with a full representation of their company, including legal, you have probably a better idea of how you’d moderate a conversation now. What are your thoughts on this one?
- How do you empower your community? – to me this is about enabling comments and staying on top f them, even when you moderate them. Allowing trackbacks and links. The other consideration is one of attitude. Would you leave customer reviews on your site? Even negative ones?
Community is a balancing act. It’s about navigating the fine line between active listening. On one hand it’s advocating for the community, while on the other you become an ambassador for the company.
Learn more about Valeria Maltoni:
- Employment: Director, Marketing Communications at SunGard Availability Services
- Blog: Conversation Agent
- Twitter: ConversationAge
- Presentation: View Valeria’s presentation from the Mima Summit