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Susan Getgood

Blog with Integrity Webinar on Disclosure – Wed. Sept. 9th at noon

September 4, 2009 by Susan Getgood

BWIThe Blog with Integrity campaign will be hosting its first free webinar, Disclosure: What it means, why bloggers need it and how to get it right next Wednesday September 9, 2009 at 12 noon EDT.

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Disclosure. We’ve been talking about it for months, and more so since May when word first hit that the FTC was revising its guidelines on commercial endorsements to include blogs and other social media. But, there’s still a lot of confusion. What exactly do bloggers need to disclose? Why is it so important ? What’s the best way to do it? And, what happens if we don’t?

In this webinar, Blog with Integrity co-founders Julie Marsh, Susan Getgood, Liz Gumbinner and Kristen Chase will answer these questions with clear explanations, concrete examples and best practices for blog disclosure.

We’ll be joined by Joanne Bamberger, blogger, political analyst and former SEC attorney. Joanne will clue us into what we can expect from the FTC’s enforcement process with an inside look at how federal agencies really work.

There will be plenty of time for questions at the conclusion of the webinar.

Whether you regularly write sponsored posts, review products now and then, or simply have a few affiliate links on your blog, disclosure matters. You need to protect yourself. We’ll help you get it right.

The Disclosure webinar is free to attendees thanks to sponsor Wiley. Support was also provided by GetGood Strategic Marketing and the Parent Bloggers Network.

To register: Email us at blogwithintegrity@gmail.com to confirm your plans to attend. We’ll forward an official invitation with all the registration and login details.

Sponsors:

Copy-of-wiley_imp_clpr_k

GGLogo_50perwhitebackgrnd_webPBNlogo

Filed Under: Blog with Integrity, Workshops

Women are more than mommies: More Women

September 1, 2009 by Susan Getgood

crossposted to Snapshot Chronicles

I’m sure it will be a surprise to the mainstream media, but women are more than mommies.

Many women aren’t mommies at all, for a variety of reasons that are their business, not ours. Those of us that are parents don’t define ourselves solely by that role, even if we write a mom blog. And definitely when we do not write a blog about our parenting experiences.  When our blogs are about other things important to us — our jobs, our hobbies, our causes, our politics, our opinions, our rants and our raves.

Our lives. Ourselves.

We find our identity beyond our motherhood. It may encompass it, but women are not simply wombs who walk.

But in the minds of the media  and many marketers, women bloggers are mom bloggers. The consumer products companies reach out to moms. The media companies create opportunities for moms. Moms moms moms.

It’s a perennial frustration for women’s blogging community BlogHer, which works overtime to focus attention on the full spectrum of women’s blogging, but regularly sees the media hone in on the one segment. Mom.

Some — myself included — see this repeated reduction of women to our reproductive status as a form of sexism. Moms are about kids. Men are about the world. Moms aren’t serious.

It’s part of a cultural mentality in which a company can argue that lactation is not a condition of pregnancy, and dismiss an employee for taking unauthorized breaks to pump while allowing smoke and pee breaks. Isotoner/Totes, if you are wondering. That Danielle has a nice summary with links to other posts.

Bullshit.

But, you know, we are more than our reproductive organs. Media, marketers should pay attention. We’ve got disposable income. Even if we are moms, we do not spend every cent on floor wax, juice boxes and school supplies. If we aren’t supporting the Disney and LEGO franchises, we’ve got even more money to spend on stuff.

So, why aren’t companies reaching out to us in greater numbers? Why isn’t the media telling the stories about women entrepreneurs, women bloggers, women philanthropists? Grandmas and grad students. Women doing all sorts of things to make a difference in the world beyond just the genetic material we created or might create.

It’s been a refrain for years at the BlogHer conference. This year, the indomitable Grace Davis decided to do something about it. Something to call attention to More Women (than just moms.)

She’s created an online community called More Women.

Why is this important?

If you are a woman blogger, with or without offspring, check it out. We need to make our voices heard as women, not just as mothers.

If you are a marketer, pay attention. We will be heard, and you might want to be among the first to catch our ear.

Laugh if you will. I know the song is a bit hokey and outdated. But for many of us in Generation Jones, it was large part of our development as women and feminists. More than 30 years later,  I  Am Woman still says we won’t give up.

I am woman, hear me roar. In numbers too big to ignore…

Filed Under: Blogging, BlogHer, Community, Gender, Social networks

Part-time telesales/telemarketing rep opportunity (Nashua, NH)

September 1, 2009 by Susan Getgood

My client GuideMark is looking for a part-time telemarketing/telesales rep.

Inside Sales/Telemarketing
Part-time, Contractor

Approximately 20 hours per week, preferably at the GuideMark offices in Nashua, NH,  however there is flexibility for some of the hours to be done from home.

Tele-rep will be:

  • making calls to fill seminar/webinar seats from both house and purchased lists;
  • qualifying suspects & prospects to set appointments for in-person sales calls for outside rep
  • prospecting from purchased lists.

Job requirements:

  • Two-five years inside sales or telemarketing experience, preferably with B2B technology products.
  • Bachelor’s degree or equivalent experience
  • Familiarity with common office software (Word, Excel, Outlook) required. Past experience with CRM preferred.

Interested? Email your resume to gmehr@guidemark.com

Filed Under: Client News

Attention: Social Media Innovators

August 31, 2009 by Susan Getgood

Did your company, organization or agency execute an interesting and successful social media project last year?

The Society for New Communications Research would love to hear about it, and invites you to submit your project for consideration in its Annual Awards. The deadline is September 7, 2009. More information at sncr.org.

Why should you enter? Of course, there’s the recognition for your project and your team, and who doesn’t like a little recognition for their achievements?

Just as important, though, is what your peers can learn from your best-in-class work. SNCR highlights the winners at the awards ceremony, in association publications and on the program at the annual conference, New Comm Forum.

Don’t miss this opportunity to contribute your work to our collective body of knowledge.

Filed Under: SNCR

What #maytag & @dooce says about customer service in America… and it’s NOT good

August 30, 2009 by Susan Getgood

Earlier this week, a customer service nightmare erupted for Maytag when popular blogger Heather Armstrong, “dooce,” tweeted her frustration with the company’s service, or lack thereof,  to her one million plus Twitter followers.

The incident raised more than a few issues, from whether celebrities have a greater responsibility for restraint in their use of social broadcasting tools like Twitter, to just what IS wrong with customer service in this country. We’ll take each of these in turn, but before you read my analysis, if you aren’t familiar with the tale, read these posts:

  • @dooce summarizes the tale, along with its relatively happy ending in Containing a capital letter or two
  • @sundry, another  highly respected mom blogger, clarifies her concerns about Armstrong’s use of Twitter in  To clarify
  • @mommymelee provides some perspective on using our powers for good in What would Peter Parker do?
  • And do a quick Twitter search on #maytag.

The Celebrity Effect

It’s a well-known fact. Celebrities get better customer service than the rest of us. If Caroline Kennedy, Oprah or Madonna called Maytag customer service, they probably would have had a better outcome than Heather Armstrong, even if the telerep were in Bangalore not Brooklyn. There’s real-world celebrity, and there’s web celebrity, and the reality is very few web celebrities cross that chasm.The digerati know who we, and they are, but the public at large, no.

As a result, corporate policies and processes are still trying to catch up with the effect of the web, and the social broadcasting tools at our disposal. They don’t have a good answer for Heather Armstrong or Dave Carroll (United Hates Guitars) because they don’t understand how online influence works.

Here’s the scary reality: a little influence and a good story is enough. Sure, Heather Armstrong’s one-million followers made it happen faster but even someone with far fewer followers can precipitate a customer service nightmare.

Yet, most customer service organizations are still operating under a policy that doesn’t understand the impact of social networks. I completely understand not wanting to respond to “blogger blackmail” but increasingly by the time there is more proof, it’s the VP of Customer Service and the CMO dealing with the problem, not the line.

Social networks give us all far more influence than we had before. Our words are amplified.

Responsibility and influence

Does that mean we have to exercise greater care with our online influence? I think yes. While I understand the frustration that leads to TWEETS IN ALL CAPS, Twitter is like the game of Telephone. Unlike a blog post, in which we can explain, a tweet starts with only 140 characters, and as it is retweeted, original meaning can be lost. Even if we link a post, the original link can be lost.

That doesn’t mean we aren’t allowed to tweet about customer service frustrations. We are. It does mean we have to weigh our influence before we speak, and do our best to tell the story, not just vent. Whether we have a one million Twitter followers or merely a few thousand.

We also need to collectively guard against the mob mentality. Sure, we can sympathize with a fellow blogger, but the Twitter pile-on can be a bit excessive.

Think. Before you tweet. Before you retweet. Before you respond.

The fundamental customer service problem

At the end of the day, no one should be so frustrated with customer service that they feel they need to tell 100 or 1 million of their (closest) Twitter friends. Yet it happens everyday. If it did not, @dooce’s fans would not have been so ready to jump on the maytag-hating bandwagon. It isn’t just that they love her, and she had a problem. They can identify. They’ve had a customer service nightmare too.

We know from research conducted by the Society for New Communications Research  that people are increasingly willing to share their customer service experiences online. We also make purchase decisions based on the experiences of others.

That, combined with anecdotal evidence like the #maytag twitterstorm, would indicate that it is well past time for companies to develop a better response to online criticism than “sorry” and throwing tons of resources at high profile problems.

Even better, why not anticipate, and avoid, potential problems. You know, with better customer service.

Wouldn’t that be nice?

Filed Under: Blogging, Customer Satisfaction, Customer Service

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