Before you read my post I want to state that I LOVE the SocialMedian site and I am an avid follower of Jason Goldberg.
With that said…
I happen to agree with a lot of what Jason posts on Twitter and Friendfeed. Our political opinions vary but we agree on most concepts surrounding politics and government. I have been growing a little concerned with personal political opinions being used on a company branded communication platform. Jason uses his twitter account to post news items from Social|Median but he also uses that account for his personal
political viewpoints.
I am not judging how Jason runs his twitter account but a question should be raised when
it comes to the branding of a company. Should personal politics be brought into the company communication medium? When you are trying to set an image of a company into a market is it best to keep neutral and just share information with your followers?
I have a feeling Jason and SocialMedian is putting off some users because of the political opinion of one of the creators using Twitter. When you are building a brand for your company is it best to leave personal opinions on the wayside?
This is a great question when it comes to branding a new startup. The personality of a company is directly related to the creators but how far can you go?
What do you think?
Politics is just one more Niche –
From a marketing standpoint, his politics adds to his identity. Will it turn off some of his readers, maybe, but it will also create more loyal followers in his niche.
Kyle-
I have had the same concern on Twitter for some others I follow. In one case I know that an individual’s Twitter feed actually posts to his company website as well.
While I am open minded to people’s political choice, I feel they need to use caution in the words chosen when communicating with others on the subject. Obviously in today’s Internet world we need to especially be cautious about what we write as it is permanent.
Yes, in marketing we can’t make everyone happy, but as with any sales conversation keep the politics and religion out to avoid some major risks. It’s just so tough to judge with each individual where the “I’m now offended line” is on these topics. I say leave your opinions out, or run the risk of someone saying “no longer following @twitterfriend due to his/her worthless billion tweets this evening during the speech.”
Kyle,
I agree with Lorraine regarding “identity”. What we are really talking about is whether or not clients, visitor, users, etc…. potentially get offended.
Take a look at someone like Loren Feldmen who has fine tuned his niche by being simply that… offensive. he and all others who delve into voicing their opinions, however offensive, live by the sword and die by the sword.
@Adam thanks the thoughts. I think the difference between SocialMedian and Loren Feldman is the fact that Loren is his own personal brand. SocialMedian is a company. There is a fine line to draw with personal political ideas and a companies brand image.
@Mark Well said.. I couldn’t have said it better myself.
[...] Jason’s political views? I have not seen any real mention of this as an issue, except for a blog post from Kyle Lacy who brings up some good [...]
[...] Jason’s political views? I have not seen any real mention of this as an issue, except for a blog post from Kyle Lacy who brings up some good [...]
I can’t agree with Lorraine or Adam. While Jason and everyone should be free to do what they want, the idea of spouting off one’s political views – under the banner of representing a company – is dangerous territory to enter.
I don’t like Bush. But the financial crisis we have now is multi-faceted and has some roots in Democratic legislation as it relates to Fanny May and Freddie Mac. And I personally get sick of the automatic blame game – blame the ones who you disagree with politically.
Sure there are exceptions – companies that are inherently very pro-environmental for example. But those exceptions are relatively rare.
[...] las opiniones políticas de Jason? No he visto ninguna mención real de esto como asunto, salvo por un artículo de blog de Kyle Lacy que plantea buenas preguntas: ¿La política personal debe plantearse en el medio de comunicación [...]
[...] Lacy also caught onto this a little while back and asked pretty much the big one: Should personal politics be brought into the company communication medium? When you are trying to [...]