Comment
Great post, Craig. I appreciate the focus on an organization's decision/action/message, as opposed to the channel through which it is expressed. If the focus were here, instead of on the channel, there would certainly be fewer "social media disasters" to deal with.
Comment by Colleen Ayers on February 21, 2012 at 9:48am I don't understand why "everyone" thinks this is such a new phenomenon. Yes, the effect tends to be a bit "bigger" because the communication can reach thousands of people so quickly, but the mistake is little different than an indiscreet comment made at a big social function with clients as guests, or an advertisement posted in a newspaper that wasn't properly vetted. Particularly in government, there's long been policies in place that guide or restrict what employees can say to journalists, rules about what you can publish in your own works, etc. The key is reminding people that these still apply with new platforms.
Sometimes, I think the problems are more about lack of common sense and etiquette than anything else.
Comment by Robert Bacal on February 20, 2012 at 2:07pm Agree! I also think there's a belief on the part of some people that when you mess up, and get caught, you can somehow "fix" it with social media. I was talking to some people about customer service, and said, on the topic: "forget about social media when it comes to customer service mistakes, and simply don't screw up".
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