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Industry News    Crisis Management    Mack Collier: Worried About Bloggers Dissing...

Mack Collier: Worried About Bloggers Dissing Your Company? Read This.


Print - FPinfomart - Newstex Blogs - Friday May 30th, 2008


Babblesoft founder Aruni Gunasegaram found herself in a position that any company would dread. She had launched a new product that she had hoped would be well-received by her target audience, mothers who breastfeed their children. Unfortunately, the product was immediately reviewed, and shredded, by Jennifer Laycock, a very popular mommy-blogger who blogs at The Lactivist. What happened next is a great lesson for companies wanting to handle crisis- management in the blogosphere.

Here's what Jennifer said about the software program, Baby Insights:I don't know about you, but the last time a family member had the gall to ask me "what did you do all day" they got a talking to that made it clear they were never, ever EVER to ask that question again. At least not until our children were old enough to have children of their own.

Besides, when was the last time your friends and family members sat down with you so that you could "proudly and confidently" show them just how much time you spent feeding your baby in the last few days?

Am I the only one that wonders if this is a gag?

Understandably, Aruni was in a state of almost panic upon seeing this. But what Aruni, and Jennifer did next, is a great lesson for companies that want to interact with and respond to bloggers.

First, Aruni didn't get defensive and lash out at Jennifer. That would have made a potentially bad situation a four-alarm disaster. Instead, she contacted Connie Reece at Every Dot Connects, who was handling her PR, to seek Connie's advice. Connie explains thatTo her credit, Aruni not only asked for advice, she followed it. She did not respond in anger, but did her homework and learned something about Jennifer, her blog, and her readers. When Aruni did add a comment to The Lactivist, it was well received. She and Jennifer also exchanged e-mails, establishing the basis for a relationship.

Aruni left a comment to Jennifer's post and graciously accepted the feedback from Jennifer and her readers, and calmly stated her reasoning for creating the product. That was the perfect response as it made Aruni look like she was confident in her product.

But also notice how Jennifer reacted. In the comments section, while some of her community agreed with her on the product's potential utility, some thought she was being too hard on the software, and added that they could see themselves using it.

Jennifer eventually added in the comments:While I could still never imagine using a program like that myself, my readers have really given some great reasons why it's still a useful programs for some moms....That's the great thing about this blog. If I go on a rant without thinking something through from all angles, my readers aren't afraid to call me on it.

Two big lessons here for companies:

1 - Even if a blogger slams you, how you respond is STILL more important. Aruni's response determined the positive outcome.

2 - Bloggers are usually pretty reasonable people. Even though my good friend Jennifer came out pretty hard on Baby Insights, she was reasonable enough to see that some of her readers definitely disagreed with her opinions of the software.

A bad product review from a popular blogger isn't always the end of the world. In fact if you keep your wits about you, it can actually be the start of a friendship. As Connie adds:Several months later Aruni started her own blog, entrepreMusings, and she and Jennifer follow each other on Twitter now. And to show what a small world it is, I had dinner with Jennifer last month at BloggerSocial08 in New York. We shared a laugh over how the situation had unfolded and how the former critic had become an ally.

BTW this episode is better explained in a great case study that Every Dot Connects just released.

This article and summary was retrieved from online electronic sources using keywords setup within dna13's media and market monitoring software. dna13 offers on-demand, communications and stakeholder management software designed to help PR professionals manage, monitor and measure their outreach, relationships and corporate reputation. The web-based solution helps you organize your communications workflow around the campaigns and issues you.re tracking, for synchronized management 24/7 and around the globe. The automated media monitoring function lets you define unlimited search terms as it scans the largest collection of TV, print, Internet and blog media content available electronically, bringing full text and video direct to your desktop. No more ordering broadcast clips. Instead, click a button and watch a clip stream on your computer. Real time alerts on breaking news, and comparative keyword analysis of markets, mediums and outlets . even competitor coverage, puts you in a position for agile reaction. Create campaign outreach and media analysis reports with our integrated Clip Book publishing wizard and share electronically with your stakeholders and team members in multiple formats.

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