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Splommenters please no comment by Susan Scrupski on May 16, 2008 - 06:28 PM read 8439 times Source: http://susanitsa.wordpress.com/?p=223 |
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Shame, shame, shame. I realize Social Media is the new black in the art of PR, but how irritating is this? Tammy Erickson, our in-house workforce guru, published a post today on women’s progress in the workplace on her Harvard Business School discussion leader blog. Her first comment was from Ms. Kimberly Rosenberg who lavishes her with praise then notso deftly segues into how she is using Microsoft Office Live for Small Business (no hyperlinks intended) to increase her productivity.
I sleuthed around online on Ms. Rosenberg, and it appears she has left virtually the same comment on at least 4 other blogs in the past few weeks. Ewwww.
http://www.blissfullydomestic.com/2008/04/an-organized-ho.html
http://experts.internetbasedmoms.com/aurelia/finding-balance-as-a-wahm
http://www.entrepremusings.com/index.php/2008/04/24/why-arent-there-more-rich-women-entrepreneurs/
Microsoft Office Live for Small Business product management– what are you thinking? So blatant an attempt to hawk your wares? Buy an ad. There are right ways and wrong ways to engage the blogosphere. Please start feeding any number of the excellent social media blogs that will instruct you on how to do this right. If Ms. Rosenberg works for a PR agency, send her to social media school. Or send her to start doing some homework here (Chris Brogan) and here (Brian Solis).
The smoking gun:

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By: Susan Scrupski
a reply to Splommenters please no comment
by Susan Scrupski on May 17, 2008 - 09:35 AM read 98 times
Source: http://susanitsa.wordpress.com/?p=223#comment-17266
@Paul. I tried emailing Ms. Rosenberg. The link (mailto) on her signature links to– guess where? The Office Live Small Business web site. Try it. I looked her up on LinkedIn and found it could possibly be someone at DBB NY, but could not confirm it was the same person. Let’s hope she has a vanity alert set. Maybe she’ll leave me a comment? At some point, you can’t blame this woman, it’s kind of like teenage driving, yes? I fault Microsoft for permitting this online behavior.
It comes at an ironic time for Microsoft as they’ve been all over the web lately proselytizing how they “get 2.0.” See Bill Gates this week on how “adoption of social networking-type applications within companies would drive the next generation of business software and growth.” http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/djf500/200805141324DOWJONESDJONLINE000791_FORTUNE5.htm Of course he’s talking about SharePoint and not OLSM, but in this case, Microsoft’s brand is tarnished with the same brush.
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By: paul
a reply to Splommenters please no comment
by paul on May 17, 2008 - 06:39 AM read 111 times
Source: http://susanitsa.wordpress.com/?p=223#comment-17265
It’s very common for certain Social Media guys to reTweet the same message with a link over and over.
Did you send Kimberly an email?
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By: PR as spam, take two Lara Kretlers blog
a reply to Splommenters please no comment
by PR as spam, take two Lara Kretlers blog on May 17, 2008 - 06:25 AM read 118 times
Source: http://susanitsa.wordpress.com/?p=223#comment-17263
[...] Chris Brogan just Tweeted (one of my favorite uses of Twitter, by the way) about a blog post on ITSinsiderabout “Splommenters” or PR people who leave blog comments blatantly plugging their [...]
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By: larak
a reply to Splommenters please no comment
by larak on May 17, 2008 - 06:04 AM read 98 times
Source: http://susanitsa.wordpress.com/?p=223#comment-17262
You’re right, that is pretty blatantly a commercial. You can tell she’s at least trying to read and participate in an authentic way, but she’s just not quite getting it. At least she admits that she works with Microsoft (proof that she’s at their PR agency - we always say we work “with” clients not for them when pitching). It would be far worse without that in the closing!
Thanks for posting this, I’ll definitely be sharing this with other PR folks as we all try to improve our craft. And by the way, “Social media is the new black in the art of PR” is the best line EVER. When I first read it, I thought it said “Social media is the new black art in PR” and I suppose one could make that case, too.
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By: chrisbrogan
a reply to Splommenters please no comment
by chrisbrogan on May 17, 2008 - 05:53 AM read 102 times
Source: http://susanitsa.wordpress.com/?p=223#comment-17261
Wow! That’s just poopy, really. I mean, if the blog post was maybe about software that moms used to get back more of their day or something, but yikes. Not exactly what we mean when we say “engage in the conversation.”
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By: Shashi Bellamkonda
a reply to Splommenters please no comment
by Shashi Bellamkonda on May 18, 2008 - 05:19 PM read 153 times
Source: http://susanitsa.wordpress.com/?p=223#comment-17269
I think Ms.Rosenberg is not alone. I was looking at this post http://silkcharm.blogspot.com/2008/03/women-in-business-behind-veil.html where Tanya Middleton was trying to be “helpful”.
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By: Aruni
a reply to Splommenters please no comment
by Aruni on May 18, 2008 - 08:40 PM read 128 times
Source: http://susanitsa.wordpress.com/?p=223#comment-17271
I did think it was odd she left such detailed sales-type comments on my site http://www.entrepreMusings.com. I allowed them because as Larak mentioned above she seemed to be trying to participate in the conversation. I don’t think they are going to be that effective in attracting women entrepreneurs to work with them that way, but it is certainly one way to get the word out. I think Microsoft will have to do much more than leave comments on blogs to get people (or in this case women entrepreneurs) to get involved. Now, if they offered me free PR help/hours and visible cross promotion help, then I would definitely get involved!

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Violation of TOU
a reply to Splommenters please no comment
by Steve Elmore on May 28, 2008 - 07:37 AM read 146 timesVery interesting!
So, Microsoft avoids the sock puppet conundrum by being open about the affiliation, but the intent is purely commercial. (And frankly, the writing is cheesy!) Their attempt to be viral has backfired here because the post has been repeated numerous times without alteration other than perhaps the salutation and closing. This is pretty weak and just goes to show that our friends in Redmond still don't get it. We may need to put some thought into a flagging capability to identify commercial posts.
Also, I need to point out that the Rosenberg post would be a violation of our Terms of Use if it was posted on our site:
By participating in any interactive portion of the nGenera site, including the posting of content, you agree that you will not upload, post, or otherwise transmit any content (including text, documents, material, links, communications, software, images, sounds, data, or other information) that does any of the following:
3. Constitutes advertising or promotion, junk mail, "spamming," chain letters, or any other form of unauthorized solicitation. Links that connect to commercial websites will not be considered unauthorized solicitations unless the link or the website content appears to be intended as a means of solicitation as determined by nGenera in its sole discretion.
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By: simone
a reply to Splommenters please no comment
by simone on Jul 02, 2008 - 12:51 PM read 64 times
Source: http://susanitsa.wordpress.com/?p=223#comment-17333
We had exactly the same experience, at first we were happy that microsoft left a comment at http://www.thextweb.org and our new business magazine for female internet heroes, http://www.thenextwomen.com then we replied and nothing came about. we looked at linkedin etc. and now we feel a little bit strange about it. Microsoft want more women involved, we want to help them to reach these women and now they don’t reply…..




