Recent Articles

Qualities Of A Social Media Manager
The relationship economy posted a great article pointing out that in the last three years social media jobs have grown some 325%. The problem though is how you make sure you are hiring the right people for the job.

Increased Workloads Can Lead to Worker Unsatisfaction
As companies continue to cut staff, you have to give the work to someone, which could lead to worker burn out. This can also lead to a lot of worker unsatisfaction, which can lead to more attrition than the company initially...

Promote Change Within an Organization
What is Change Management? Change Management provides the process to manage the impact that change has on the people in an organization. It is concerned...

Trends in the Business Operations Platform
The folks from Cordys presented their view of the new business operations platform. Current systems development is in the context of four key...

Convincing Your Company to Use Social Media
Gary Koelling is a blogger, Twitterati, public speaker and a social media pathfinder. He's also Senior Manager, Social Technology at Best Buy. Best Buy is undoubtedly one of the “best” known brands in retail and in...

Responding to Online Criticism
It's interesting how issues seem to come at you in waves. Some are like rolling thunder beginning as far back as you can see from the shore. Others are like sneaker waves, crashing over you and knocking you down...


12.02.08

What To Do With A Corporate Blog When The Blogger Leaves?

By Tac Anderson

One of the most powerful aspects of social media is the ability for the people inside your company to connect with the people outside your company.

Social media, at its best, is transparent and authentic. One of the most common and effective ways to do this is to allow your experts, your talented personalities demonstrate their expertise through a blog.

This is a great way to add a human side to your company.  Many of the early successes are based on personality bloggers. Robert Scoble at Microsoft is a classic example. Famous CEO blogger Jonathan Schwartz is another one.

What’s worse than loosing your good employees?

Keeping the bad ones.

One of the challenges I’ve had to deal with at HP lately is, what do you do when one of your personalities leave? Just last year 3 of our top 5 bloggers where Vince Ferraro and the LaserJet Blog, Eric Kintz’s Digital Mindset Blog and Stan Garfield’s Weekly Knowledge Management Blog.

Recently all three bloggers have left HP. Vince retired while Eric and Stan moved on to other companies.

Vince was the first to leave and it was at that time that we had to decide what we would do with their blogs. Our Core Community Team met and ultimately decided on what we felt were three ideal options.

The Fundamental Server: Everything You
Need Inside and Outside the Box - Learn More

• If the group within HP wanted to keep the topic of the blog going another expert could step in and take over the blog, continuing along the same topic. The blog could also be turned into a group blog with multiple bloggers taking on the task.

• If the blog were still recently new and did not have significant traffic (that decision would be made on a case by case basis) , the blog would just be deleted. This also works for bloggers who fail to keep up a blog even though they haven’t left the company.

• If the blog was popular enough then the blog would be closed, comments would be turned off and the blog would be left up for archival purposes. Ideally each blogger would leave one final post explaining the situation. If the blogger left the company before doing this, someone else could step in and make the final post.

In the case of Stan and Vince they each left one final post. In Eric’s case he left before doing this so I went in and left the final post.

It’s always tough to loose talented people. It’s especially tough when those people are publicly facing. I remember when Robert left Microsoft, people were actually predicting the demise of Microsoft. That obviously didn’t happen. Robert and Microsoft have both done just fine on their own.

So far this has worked out for us. Has anyone else had this experience yet? How have you dealt with it?

Comments


About the Author:
Tac Anderson is a serial entrepreneur, born contrarian, avid blogger and a voracious reader and learner. A local tech evangelist, Tac stays busy fostering discussions as the Founder and Chief Instigator at TechBoise.com. In his spare time, he foments revolutions with social software, helps with the forthcoming WaterCooler and has completed the Executive MBA program at BSU in May 2008. Tac is a contributing writer on conversations matter.
About ManagerNewz
ManagerNewz is a collection of news, editorials and advice for ebusiness managers seeking to stay informed about the latest trends and topics in their fields. News and Advice for eBusiness Managers





ManagerNewz is brought to you by:

ActivePro.com EnterpriseWebPro.com
AdvertisingDay.com EntrepreneurNewz.com
CareerNewz.com ERPupdate.com
CRMNewz.com InsideOffice.com
EcommNewz.com InvestNewz.com
NetDummy.com SmallSiteNews.com





-- ManagerNewz is an iEntry, Inc. publication --
iEntry, Inc. 2549 Richmond Rd. Lexington KY, 40509
2008 iEntry, Inc. All Rights Reserved Privacy Policy Legal

archives | advertising info | news headlines | free newsletters | comments/feedback | submit article


News and Advice for eBusiness Managers ManagerNewz Home Page About Article Archive News Downloads WebProWorld Forums Jayde iEntry Advertise Contact ManagerNewz News Archives About Us Feedback