Blog Council focuses on issues unique to big companies
Years ago, Myron “Mike” Emmanuel started a forum in which the top internal communicators from some of the biggest companies in the U.S. could get together a few times a year to share issues unique to large organizations. When Mike retired, the group faded until it was reinvigorated last year by ROI Communications. I was fortunate to be part of the group, that also included Roger D’Aprix and Brad Whitworth, that put the ROI Forum together. The rules are simple. There are no membership dues or fees. One of the participating companies hosts the meeting (it’ll be in Atlanta next, at the end of January). Only one company per industry can participate. The group stays small so meaningful discussions can be held. The meetings last one day with the group picking the topic.
The Forum is well-received by its participants, who represent companies like Chevron, Kellogg’s, Pitney Bowes and Hallmark.
The same philosophy seems to underlie yesterday’s launch of a new group called “The Blog Council,” which was started under the auspieces of Gas Pedal, managed by Word of Mouth Marketing Association founder Andy Sernovitz. The idea is for big companies to be able to get together and discuss the issues that surround blogging in large organizations. The first meeting will be held in Orlando on January 22.
A press release on the group’s home page makes it clear that the Council is not a trade association or a nonprofit, but exists “as a forum for executives to meet one another in a private, vendor-free environment and share tactics, offer advice based on past experience, and develop standards-based best practices as a model for other corporate blogs.” Initial participants include The Coca-Cola Company, Kaiser Permanente, Dell, Nokia, SAP, Microsoft, General Motors and Wells Fargo, among others. (A complete list appears here.
Sernovitz is right when he suggests that big corporations face different issues than small companies and individuals. In the release, he says:
We still need to deliver a responsible and effective corporate message, but we need to do it in the complicated environment of the blogosphere. We have to speak for a corporation, but never sound ‘corporate.’ And we have to learn to do it live, and in real-time.
The Council hopes to advocate for “responsible, ethics-based corporate blogs.” In addition, according to the release, the group will tackle questions like…
- How do global brands manage blogs in more than one language?
- What do you do when hundreds or thousands of your employees have personal blogs?
- What is the role of the corporate brand in a media landscape increasingly geared toward
- consumer-generated media?
- What is the correct way to engage and respond to bloggers who write about your company?
- How do you use a blog during a crisis?
- How do you build buy-in for corporate blogging?
- What is the appropriate way to respond to external posts?
- What do you do when you provide product samples for review?
Others have also blogged about the Council’s launch, offering a range of thoughts about its potential. These include…
- Kami Watson Huyse
- Geoff Livingston
- Mack Collier
- David Parmet
- Josh Hallett (who will speak at the Orlando meeting)
- John Cass
There is some skepticism among those commenting on the Council, based in part on the lack of effective blogging by some of the participants (although we don’t know what they’re doing internally, which will undoubtedly be fodder for discussion along with external blogging). There’s also some concern that the Council may be limiting itself by restricting discussion to blogs instead of the broader issue of social media.
But if it works the way the ROI Forum does (and the Conference Board’s, Forrester’s, and Gartner’s, to which the Council is comparing itself—I guess they haven’t heard of the ROI Forum), small group discussions away from the spotlight associated with conferences could produce useful results for the participants. And if they all get on the same page and employ best practices, those practices could spread beyond the Council’s membership. I wish Andy and the Council the best of luck.
12/05/07 | 8 Comments | Blog Council focuses on issues unique to big companies