Brands such as O2 and Topshop have been quick to jump on the social networking bandwagon by using sites such as Facebook to target consumers, but a more recent trend and one that carries some risk has been the use of personal blogs as a communications tool.
Last month Waitrose managing director Mark Price, nicknamed the ‘chubby grocer’, launched a blog on the retailer’s website in which he shares his experiences on a healthier eating regime and tracks his efforts to lose weight, as well as arguing for the introduction of tea trolleys to airport immigration halls.
Price’s actions are relatively unusual, as corporate blogging is still in its infancy in the UK. However, it is thought likely that it will become as popular as it is in the US, where practitioners include General Motors vice-chairman Bob Lutz.
Several other brands, including Dell and Benetton, also operate blogs where employees and consumers can interact.
The appeal is obvious. Blogs are a way of achieving vast reach at a minimal cost. Microsoft chairman Bill Gates spoke about the benefits of communicating with customers via blogs at Microsoft’s CEO Summit in 2004.
It had advantages over more traditional communication methods such as emails, he argued, which could be too imposing or exclude potential audiences.
Microsoft encourages its staff to talk to consumers through blogging; it claims that more than 2000 employees use blogs to keep people up to date with their projects.
“It is a great way to communicate with a wider audience,” says Dave Gartenberg, HR director at Microsoft UK. “We are lucky that some of the most prominent bloggers in the world are based at Microsoft.”
Sunday, March 9, 2008
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