Late yesterday, I received the following email from Gina. My reply is further down the page:
Hi Chris,
Thanks for your email. My name and further explanation appears on the
wiki, which anyone can leave a comment on. (You just need to log into
PBwiki to do so.)Also, as I say on the wiki, I welcome story pitches to tips@lifehacker.com.
Have a good weekend,
Gina
I also received some Tweets and emails saying yesterday’s post/email was a little harsh.
The post was about accountability, communication and education. If someone creates something that could impact people’s pocket books, that person should take responsibility for their actions. Especially if that person is already involved in social media and understands that nature of how it works.
On Gina’s blog and in her books, she helps educate people by offering tips and tricks to do things more effectively. That’s what was so irksome about the situation. She could have easily taken the same amount of time to write an educational post–or really any post at all–and could have positively affected the conversation.
My reply to Gina is below. As always, please feel free to comment.
Hi Gina:
Thanks for your email, and thanks for changing the wiki. I’m 100% for sharing opinions. I also 100% understand your frustration.
From what I can see from your blog, you and I both have the same goal: to help and educate. That is probably why I found your actions so upsetting. Instead of using your talent and skill to help people learn and perhaps prevent the mistake, you chose a negative action. You used your position of power and influence to negatively affect an industry on which you rely. You may say, “I shouldn’t have to educate people on how to do their job,” but you do it daily on your blog.
Check out these posts from Mashable and this one from ReadWriteWeb. By offering tips with best and worst practices, these guys are helping to make it easier for themselves and the PR pros that pitch them. After receiving several really really bad pitches of the course of a few days, I also posted “Luke I Am Your Blogger, How to Pitch From the Dark Side” as a way for me to vent my frustrations. It also allowed me to use my unique role as both blogger and PR pro to help others grow from my experience.
Remember, what you say/post can affect people’s pocketbooks. Please think about that and look to find ways to positively impact the conversation.
Thank you,
Chris
Don’t miss a post: Got RSS? [what’s that?]. Or, start your morning with socialTNT in your InBox!
[The above painting is by my favorite guerrilla artist, Banksy. His book says "Copyright is for losers," so I don't think he'll mind if we use it]
In the past, socialTNT has responded with blog posts on how to increase communications (you can find those
Last night, my MacBook decided it wanted to be ornery. I tried repairing the OS, but that didn’t work. I ended up having to do a clean install of Leopard. After that didn’t work, my happy MacBook has to spend today at the Apple Genius Bar. Luckily I had an archive (Thanks Timemachine!), so they were able to restore my data. There is still some software that needs to be reinstalled, but the interview slated for today will be up tomorrow.
Every Thursday, socialTNT channels the spirit of citizen journalism by putting bloggers, reporters, PR pro’s or anyone with something to say about social media in front of the camera for a short, three minute interview. The videos are meant to encourage dialog between PR/communications practitioners, journalists and marketers on the future of media.





Web 2.0 Expo marches on, and socialTNT has been there day and night. On Thursday, Day 2 at Moscone Center, socialTNT ran into ReadWriteWeb’s 
Put together by the











“Yahoo’s Jerry Yang Doesn’t Understand Blogging”
It’s a great letter to shareholders–or a press release–but it’s not a blog post. As we’ve mentioned before, a blog is a conversation. If Jerry wants to use it to put out company messages, that’s fine, but what’s the point. He’s losing a chance to re-energize the Yahoo user base.
Take a look at sampling of some of the comments:
A user named Jive sums it up best: “Above all, listen to us, your consumer, because we use your products and have specific wants, habits, usage etc.”
Wanna make it back on top, Jerry? Here are some suggestions:
Jerry, I love Yahoo. You guys have so many great properties, but they are all disconnected. If you read the comments on your post, you’ll see many users feel the same way. You’ll also see that most of them still love Yahoo. Give them something to get excited about. Your users make or break the company. If you listen to them–and interact with them–they will welcome you back with open arms. I guarantee it.
What do you think? Did Jerry’s post legitimately address user concerns? What do you think Yahoo should do to reengage its user base?
Also, don’t miss out: Got RSS? [what’s that?]. Or, start your morning with socialTNT in your InBox!
6 Comments
Filed under Community Manager, It's A Conversation, Public Relations 2.0, Social Media
Tagged as Community Relations, corporate social media, Dell, energize community, how to comment on blog, IdeaStorm, Jerry Yang, microhoo, social media for marketing, social media for PR, Yahoo