I often get asked by clients and the non-profits I volunteer for… “What if we put ourselves out there and someone says something bad about us.” My feedback is always that people are going to talk about you… you can’t control that… that is the nature of the Internet and where it has evolved to. What you can (and in my opinion MUST) do is to build your network before you need it. Launching a blog or a twitter account in response to a crisis is to late… totally and completely too late. Putting in the time, the effort, and the risk up front to connect with people and then connect them in a web of support that will in turn support you, if and when you ever need it – is WORTH IT.

Yesterday, I saw a perfect example of this unfold throughout the afternoon. While taking a quick peek in on the Twitter traffic in between tasks I caught a post by Elise Bauer of @simplyrecipes:

simply1

I was intrigued… maybe it was the mention of a company my grandfather gave 40 years to… more than likely it was just seeing a tweet by simplyrecipes. SimplyRecipes.com is actually the first blog I ever added to Google Reader 4 years ago… it was the first blog I actually followed… it was the recipe site that wooed me away from a very passionate addiction to allrecipes.com. I don’t see Elise tweet often… so when I see one in the stream I pay attention and this one had really sparked my curiosity. I quickly scanned and saw a follow up post:

Simply Recipes is a federally registered trademark and has been for years. In order to keep the trademark valid, I must defend it.

Well, what was this I wondered… and skipped on over to check out the link… and found this title: How SimplyRecipes and Elise Bauer is Like Monsanto (Did ya catch that? Yes, Elise linked me to an article that was attacking her… I didn’t have to go find it – she sent me to it.) In the post on a third party blog (FocusOrganic.com) Mike Lieberman shares that he has a blog called SimpleRawRecipes.com – and has received notification that he is infringing on the SimplyRecipe trademark… long story short… Mike is not too happy about this and is voicing his opinion about the matter, which he has every right to do.

I read the post, formed my own opinion – a bit biased due to my loyalty and how much I know about domain names and trademark laws – and wondered what the comments looked like. Before Elise posted the link on Twitter the comments where in support of the author. Then, starting shortly after Elise’s tweet – the tone changes, the comments changed in support of Elise… did ya catch that one? That’s right… Elise did not and has not addressed the blog post. In fact, quite beautifully, if you go to SimplyRecipes.com the first post is about hope and ending world hunger – and I doubt that’s some political move – it just so happens to be that’s how SimplyRecipes rolls. Her support network addressed the post for her. And it grew from there… people who like simplyrecipes.com told other people about it and those people left their own comments (speaking from experience on that one.) When I checked the post this morning there were more than 80 comments – split between the 2 sides of the argument. Still, there is content in there in support (sometime passionate support) of SimplyRecipes and Elise. I don’t believe that would have happened to the extent it has if she had not alerted her supporters to the post’s existence.

Because SimplyRecipes has build up a network of supporters by putting out good content, good vibes, and good Karma for the last 5 years – when she needed them – those supporters came out for her.

I don’t know what the outcome of the conflict will be. It is like the wild wild west when it comes to precedent on trademark laws and domain names. And I think that Mike does make a valid point that generally speaking the folks with the money or connections for better lawyers often win – regardless of who is “right”. And it is true that Elise is legally obligated to defend or lose her trademark. Who knows how the cards will shuffle out on this one. What I do know is that from a PR and brand awareness perspective there are a couple of ways this could have gone:

  1. Elise could have had no social media network and no way of alerting her supporters to the blog post to get them to help her out.
  2. Elise could have simply ignored the post and hoped for the best – let the comments on the article go unchecked, building in volume with negative content about SimplyRecipes. Letting it eat up Google love for SimplyRecipes.
  3. Alert the supporters, let them defend her and hopefully outweigh the negative content with positive – and if not, at least mix in positive content that does not generate from SimplyRecipes itself.

The first 2 options leave the negative content out there unchecked and growing – and this is why I think growing your social network NOW is a must.

Here are a couple of tips on how to handle someone saying something bad about you:

  1. Set up Google Alerts for your name and your organization – so you get an email when someone writes about you online. Knowing is the first and most important step.
  2. Be transparent, be honest, be graceful, be kind if you can… stick to the data… avoid judgments.
  3. Address the issue head on… do not stick your head in the sand… it will only make it worse.
  4. Let your supporters know how you would like them to support you… send them to the post to leave comments -or– write a post on your blog addressing the issue (once again, be transparent, honest, graceful and kind – get help with this if you are so pissed you can’t see straight!)

Remember… people will talk about you. You have no control over that. You can control how the conversation goes. If it is a valid complaint about your product or organization – address it, fix it, and THANK the person who brought it into the light – they just helped you make your product or company better. If it’s just a rant and bad for your brand- call in the people who love you and send them over to help you out.

Most importantly – use Social Media to find and connect the people who love you – help them – before you need them to help you.

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So, it’s not really a site – its more an account on a site… still, I love that the White House is using flickr to share a breadth of images we would typically have to wait for a memoire to see in a frequency that meets the expectations of the online world we live in.  Below is a slideshow for the First 100 Days set… there are lots of really cool pics on flickr… check it out!

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Ever see a blue McDonald’s Logo or the ever recognizable scripty fonted Coca-Cola printed in neon green? Me neither! These super-mega-world-domineering brands practice a very simple marketing rule… consistency.

The web today is changing the face of marketing…  allowing individuals, small businesses, non-profits and super-mega-world-domineering brands alike the opportunity to reach their audiences in new and amazing ways. Still, I believe consistency is as important as it ever was.

Marketing is shifting away from the drowning roar of “let me tell you why you should buy my thing-a-ma-bob” to “let’s have a relationship and you will buy my product cause you like & trust me.” There are so many online social marketing tools available now, with more popping up each day… your brand (personal or corporate) can become very easily and quickly diluted. Enter the age old rule of consistency… make sure you look and sound the same where ever you are. Well what does that look like? If you are just getting your feet wet with social marketing/media, try this as a goal:

  • Your avatar is the same on facebook, twitter, linkedin, flickr, etc.
  • You name is the same everywhere.
  • www.jjlassberg.com
  • twitter.com/jjlassberg
  • jjlassberg at g mail dot com
  • www.flickr/jjlassberg
  • You website, blog and twitter background all compliment each other… if not exactly the same.
  • Where ever you are online, make sure that all the info, pictures, colors, fonts and design elements are as consistent as you can make them.

This will let people know that no matter where they connect with you online, they have indeed connected with YOU… which goes back to the trusting and liking and buying from you thing.

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tT is for Twitter

Here is a list of some very cool twitter tools that were buzzing around the Summit:

  1. Twitter Search (Summize): What are Twitterers Tweeting about these days
  2. Twirl: Nice API. Floats on your desktop. Has notification pop-up and a makes tweeting a little easier.
  3. TweetDeck: Saw lots of this at the summit. Has all the typical Twitter Tool functionality with the addition of group/deck feature. Create your own groups… put people in ‘em… word of warning, DON’T close a group you have created… it will go away… for-EVER! and you will have to start it all over again
  4. TweetScan: Tweet Scan searches Twitter
  5. Splitweet: Easy management for multiple Twitter accounts and brand monitor
  6. TwitterBerry: Twitter for your Crackberry… this is how I do all my out and about Twittering… it has made me a master at the Crackberry keyboard.
  7. TwitterSnooze: Stop following someone for a few days cause they are taking notes on a conference via twitter and the hashtags and twittering every freakin’ 5 seconds is starting to drive you batty… or something like that.
  8. Mr. Tweet: Suggestions on who to follow
  9. Friend or Follow: In case you just have to know…
  10. TweetGrid: Twitter search dashboard
  11. Twittervision: I don’t know if this actually useful, but it is totally fun
  12. CityTweet: Search local tweet by city. This sounds really cool… but its not available for Houston… sigh…
  13. TweetLater: Automated Tweets like auto-follow new followers.
  14. TwitterFeed: Automatically post your new blog entries to Twitter. (Guy says this is a must, must, must!)

And Not Twitter related by Guy Kawasaki related:

  1. Tynt Tracer: When your content is copied, Tracer automatically adds an attribution link to claim it as yours. Pretty cool way of tracing where your content if heading off to once you set it free.
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Fab!Hubby walked in Sunday morning and announced, “Twitter is main stream!” He relaid he had heard 5 different references to Twitter in his 30 minute drive back from a job site he was checking on. And I have to agree with him… a large portion of the Mom 2.0 Summit was focused on Twitter. Lots of talk about twitter, lots of #mom2summit twittering on twitter, lots of intro’s and how-to’s for twitter users (more on that later) and I decided to take the opportunity to put down pencil and paper and take up the challenge of live twitter note taking. It turns out, posting out the things I want to remember in 140 characters or less was actually quite useful.

Realtime results for jjlassberg #mom2

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