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Posts Tagged ‘Barack Obama’

Ghost Twittering - Is it Spooking Your Followers?

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

President Barack Obama shook the social media world two weeks ago with his confession that he has never used Twitter. Talking to students in China, he said, “I have never used Twitter but I’m an advocate of technology and not restricting internet access”. Suddenly, his heartfelt Twitter reaction to winning the Nobel Peace Prize seemed a heart-wrenching farce to many in the Twitterverse:

Obamas Humbled tweet.

The event has brought two intimidating question to the forefront. One side of the camp asks, “Didn’t we vote for him because he was approachable, sincere, tech-savvy, and down-to-earth? So was it all a lie?” The other side asks, “How can people be so naïve as to assume that busy celebrities, especially the President of the United States, actually post their own tweets?” Dialogues are rife on these issues, but it brings to surface these older, yet very relevant questions:

Do celebrities really hire ghost-twitterers?” Yes, it appears so. There are many famous personalities who have had their tweets posted by another person who is familiar with their sentiments on most things, and is privy to their day-to-day happenings. Apart from President Obama, some well-known celebrities who have ghost-twitterers are 50 Cent, Britney Spears, Shaquille O’Neal, and Guy Kawasaki, and even some CEOs of famous companies, to name a few.

“Isn’t this unethical?” Well, the floor is divided on this one. Some say that it is downright unethical, as the very objective of Twitter is to tell the world what you are doing, thinking, feeling etc. It is unfair to lead people to think they have an online rapport with an individual, when it is really their secretary or some other third person. It is especially unacceptable if a CEO uses a twitter account ostensibly to interact with customers and supporters, but all responses are from third parties. Others, like Guy Kawasaki, claim that ‘content is king’. Good content can be contributed by anyone. The identity of the twitterer makes no difference.

Which leads us to the third question, “Don’t followers deserve a full disclosure?” Why don’t people simply tell the readers that their posts are updated by ghost-twitterers? It would make everything that much more simpler. Guy Kawasaki stands by this notion, as seen in an interview with Dave Fleet on davefleet.com. Britney Spears has two ghost-twitterers as is apparent from some of her tweets labeled “Adam Leber” and “Lauren Kozak”.

Follow that with, “Doesn’t the term ‘Verified Account’ lose some of its meaning now?” Twitter labels the real Twitter accounts of celebrities as “Verified Accounts”. It is taken for granted that the tweets are from the individuals themselves. Followers are as much attracted to the sincerity and reality of the celebrity, as to the rush of rubbing virtual shoulders with a star. When a CEO claims he will answer queries from customers,  people come looking for a response from the man himself, not the customer service desk. In the light of ghost twittering, whether disclosed or otherwise, it all becomes a little pointless.

If we were to now look at things from the PR perspective, the final ‘nail-in-the-coffin’ question is this: “Did people’s trust in high profile twitter users just fall a notch or two?” Will the client ever trust again? Can good PR be done through ghost twitterers and proxies?

What’s your take on this issue?

Kanye West - A PR Machine?

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

If you’re talking about PR strategies, “I’m a let you finish”, but Kanye West is the best PR Machine ever! The man unwittingly made a whole bunch of people popular, created opportunities for some crazy Twitter apps, and even boosted Obama’s public image! If that’s not PR, what is?

If you were anywhere near the Internet in the past few days, you definitely could not have missed Kanye’s outburst at the MTV Video Music Awards, where he interrupted Taylor Swift’s acceptance speech after she got the award for best singer. Kanye stormed on stage, grabbed the mic from Taylor, and declared, “Yo Taylor, I’m really happy for you, I’m a let you finish. But Beyonce has one of the best videos of all time !” (Yeah, what was he thinking!!) leaving Ms.Swift with a bewildered expression, and handing VMA its YouTube moment on a platter!

The video got millions of views on YouTube, and also created quite the controversy. And the world would be a boring place if things just stopped at that!

People started digging up other similar stunts that Kanye West has pulled in the past. They even did a study to prove that his comment about George Bush not caring about Blacks was the most controversial! Of course, Twitter went crazy, with a million tweets on the outburst threatening to halt Twitter… again!

As if this hype wasn’t enough, President Obama had to step into the picture. Cut to the scene of an interview with CNBC, and an off-the-record moment when the interviewer asks the President what he thought about Kanye’s outburst. President Obama’s response, “The young lady seems like a perfectly nice person, she’s getting her award, what is he doing up there? He’s a jackass”, put the media on its second wave of frenzy. ABC’s Terry Moran tweeted the comment, but promptly deleted it, and the channel apologized for the slip-up, but the tweet was picked up by hundred of his followers, and then there was no stopping it!

Then, TMZ decided to do its part for the common good, and released the audio of the President’s comment. And this is all happening very quickly, so try to keep up! Anyway, now CNN feels that seeing is indeed believing, and airs the video of President Obama actually making the comment.

Since then, Kanye has apologized on Jay Leno’s talk show, Taylor Swift has spoken about her feelings (she feels better now, thank you!), Russell Brand (equally interesting personality) has come to Kanye’s rescue, Jimmy Carter (!) has spoken out on his opinion of the young man, and one website that lets Kanye insult your own website called Kanyelicio.us and another that lets Kanye ruin your Twitter avatar have launched.

As said earlier, Obama’s comment has even shone the President in good light, for having made an honest (some say rare!) comment that hasn’t been heavily filtered.

Moral of the story? If you’re in the PR industry, you’re every move is watched. Goodwill takes years to build, but with the rise of social media, it just got harder. And, we all know, Every Opportunity is a PR Opportunity!