Are bloggers authoritative sources at big companies?

I just saw this over on the BrandToBeDetermined blog — that Shel Holtz and Neville Hobson are talking about are bloggers an authoritative source at big companies? Turns out the answer, at least here at Microsoft, is "maybe." (They asked our PR department and I got involved in the conversation internally that happened).

  • Executives like Ray Ozzie who blog? Absolutely. Any executive is almost always on the record for the company.
  • Team blogs like the IE team blog or the Xbox team blog? Yes with an asterisk, because what goes on those blogs is usually vetted by other people on the team and they discuss it (which explains why those blogs are generally a bit more reserved than individual blogs. I put an asterisk there because some teams might not require pre-vetting, but up to today team blogs are generally good sources of information on those products).
  • Individual bloggers like me? Depends (the PR team says to always call and verify facts, just to be safe). For me, it depends what I'm writing about and the tone I'm taking in my writing. If it's about the team I'm on (which does On10.net and Channel 9) and I say something you can assume I'm pretty authoritative and the facts I'm giving you are pretty accurate. If I interview, say, the head of the Internet Explorer team or Bill Gates or someone else, you can be pretty sure that's an authoritative piece of content that reflects the company's opinion pretty well. But most of the other writings I do? I'm not vetted. I don't check with others before I write my opinions. So, you should "fact check my a**" as they say around the blogosphere. On the other hand, I am on the record and you can quote me in press and blogs and other stuff (and I often do). If I say something about Microsoft I work very hard to make sure it's accurate (and if it isn't, you see that within minutes as my readers jump on me in my comments which are open and unmoderated).

That said, if you're a journalist writing a story it's best to check in with our PR teams (if you don't know how to get ahold of them, see the "Press" link on the right side of my blog, or drop me a line and I'll get you with them). They will be happy to give you the "official" story as well as they know who the official spokespeople are from each team and can put you in touch with them.

I do expect blogs to be used to get both the official and unofficial story out about things, just as the Security Team is communicating about Internet Explorer fixes on its blog.

This came up a few times in speeches today. Many PR departments are really struggling with this. They don't like the fact that employees at the edge of a company can get quoted in news media. This is a grand experiment that still is playing out in corporate America today.

What do you think?

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76 thoughts on “Are bloggers authoritative sources at big companies?

  1. like it or not, corporations would do well to have policies around blogging for their employees. Perception is reality in the blogosphere. Whether accurate or not, you are a blogger representing Microsoft. The world knøws that. Even if you way this is “your personal blog”, no one believes that. So, you have a responsibility to the company and its shareholders to look out for the best interests of the company.

    Corporations should be concerned about the maturity and wisdom of the low level employee blogging as a representative of the company. Will that employee inadvertently share inside information (Sarbanes Oxley risks)? corporate secrets? private customer information? In short, “corporate bloggers”, unless vetted, but a company at potential risk with every post they make. In essence, companies can likely be held liable for comments made by employess on a blog that are harmful. Once it’s out there the damage is done to the corp and no amount of “oops! I was mistaken” or PR firm damage control can clean up the damage. It’s a fine balancing act to get the transparancy benefits blogging allows, while still keeping the corporation protected.

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  2. like it or not, corporations would do well to have policies around blogging for their employees. Perception is reality in the blogosphere. Whether accurate or not, you are a blogger representing Microsoft. The world knøws that. Even if you way this is “your personal blog”, no one believes that. So, you have a responsibility to the company and its shareholders to look out for the best interests of the company.

    Corporations should be concerned about the maturity and wisdom of the low level employee blogging as a representative of the company. Will that employee inadvertently share inside information (Sarbanes Oxley risks)? corporate secrets? private customer information? In short, “corporate bloggers”, unless vetted, but a company at potential risk with every post they make. In essence, companies can likely be held liable for comments made by employess on a blog that are harmful. Once it’s out there the damage is done to the corp and no amount of “oops! I was mistaken” or PR firm damage control can clean up the damage. It’s a fine balancing act to get the transparancy benefits blogging allows, while still keeping the corporation protected.

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  3. >So, you have a responsibility to the company and its shareholders to look out for the best interests of the company.

    I totally agree.

    We have a policy here called “be smart.”

    That means doing the right thing on all of the above.

    By the way, I can get a company in just as much trouble on all these issues outside of my blog as well. I’ve seen people get fired at other companies for what they say at parties, for instance.

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  4. >So, you have a responsibility to the company and its shareholders to look out for the best interests of the company.

    I totally agree.

    We have a policy here called “be smart.”

    That means doing the right thing on all of the above.

    By the way, I can get a company in just as much trouble on all these issues outside of my blog as well. I’ve seen people get fired at other companies for what they say at parties, for instance.

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  5. Glad to see you finally getting round to answering my dumb question to youon Sunday.

    Bloggers can be credible authorities on topics within their realm of expertise and responsibility. They can add credibility and context to the official line, even when they disagree publicly with it.

    However, unless it is their role due to their title, bloggers cannot be official spokespeople for their organizations as a whole.

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  6. Glad to see you finally getting round to answering my dumb question to youon Sunday.

    Bloggers can be credible authorities on topics within their realm of expertise and responsibility. They can add credibility and context to the official line, even when they disagree publicly with it.

    However, unless it is their role due to their title, bloggers cannot be official spokespeople for their organizations as a whole.

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  7. I think you are too defensive. You provide value that is recognized by the company you work for. All else is ephemeral.

    Your response on minimsft is part of the impetus of this comment.

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  8. I think you are too defensive. You provide value that is recognized by the company you work for. All else is ephemeral.

    Your response on minimsft is part of the impetus of this comment.

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  9. Jack: I hear ya. When I'm attacked I do tend to get my feathers up. Might not be a nice sight, but it's me. Raw. That's what you get here at 11:23 p.m.

    If someone walked into my house and said "you don't deserve your paycheck" I'd be defensive. I don't know how else to be. Other people might get offensive and pop the person in the nose. That's not my style, and anyway, that leads to other problems.

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  10. Jack: I hear ya. When I'm attacked I do tend to get my feathers up. Might not be a nice sight, but it's me. Raw. That's what you get here at 11:23 p.m.

    If someone walked into my house and said "you don't deserve your paycheck" I'd be defensive. I don't know how else to be. Other people might get offensive and pop the person in the nose. That's not my style, and anyway, that leads to other problems.

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  11. Robert,

    I think too many people have been overassessing the impact of you getting angry in your blog. People who read your blog understand you’re a person, and I don’t think any show of emotion causes Microsoft crash to dive. You don’t need to be a stuffed suit.

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  12. Robert,

    I think too many people have been overassessing the impact of you getting angry in your blog. People who read your blog understand you’re a person, and I don’t think any show of emotion causes Microsoft crash to dive. You don’t need to be a stuffed suit.

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  13. err i meant microsoft stock to dive:) But i guess that was clear enough.

    I’m annoyed by people who have been picking on you

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  14. err i meant microsoft stock to dive:) But i guess that was clear enough.

    I’m annoyed by people who have been picking on you

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  15. One of the biggest issues is identity, after all I could claim to be Bill Gates in a personal blog. If I build a blog over a period of time then I could possibly become an influencer without any authority!

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  16. One of the biggest issues is identity, after all I could claim to be Bill Gates in a personal blog. If I build a blog over a period of time then I could possibly become an influencer without any authority!

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  17. you are an authoritative source for microsoft. your authoritiy comes through content, traffic, audience. it’s interesting for us europeans to see this experiment going live in the u.s., where releases are almost written by legal rather than pr. and now you go live as a very important speaker for microsoft – and you are not being controlled at all. and yes: this is a microsoft blog. but the strategy is defined by yourself. and you are getting a lot of personal branding value out of it, isn’t it? very interesting combination of personal and corporate marketing intermixed. new potential. new risks (for both parties).

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  18. you are an authoritative source for microsoft. your authoritiy comes through content, traffic, audience. it’s interesting for us europeans to see this experiment going live in the u.s., where releases are almost written by legal rather than pr. and now you go live as a very important speaker for microsoft – and you are not being controlled at all. and yes: this is a microsoft blog. but the strategy is defined by yourself. and you are getting a lot of personal branding value out of it, isn’t it? very interesting combination of personal and corporate marketing intermixed. new potential. new risks (for both parties).

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  19. Robert, I still don’t really understand what it is at Microsoft that you can provide official comment about.

    When you reply to accusations made in the media on your blog, do you speak on behalf of the the entire company?

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  20. Robert, I still don’t really understand what it is at Microsoft that you can provide official comment about.

    When you reply to accusations made in the media on your blog, do you speak on behalf of the the entire company?

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  21. Instead of fighting the phenomenon, a smart PR team would help the bloggers handle this new role. Give them some communications training. Not command/control training with approved corporate speak and message points. Simple training on how to get your point across and not get tricked into revealing more than you intended. It would help the bloggers better handle their quasi-public roles, and be a lot better for the company than trying to clamp down/control everything.

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  22. Instead of fighting the phenomenon, a smart PR team would help the bloggers handle this new role. Give them some communications training. Not command/control training with approved corporate speak and message points. Simple training on how to get your point across and not get tricked into revealing more than you intended. It would help the bloggers better handle their quasi-public roles, and be a lot better for the company than trying to clamp down/control everything.

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  23. No doubt, fact check anyone’s ass. However, Robert, you make the invite in this entry but other entries (in the recent past even!) when you’re questioned and people actually do fact-check your ass, you get a little… how shall we say… crotchety?

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  24. No doubt, fact check anyone’s ass. However, Robert, you make the invite in this entry but other entries (in the recent past even!) when you’re questioned and people actually do fact-check your ass, you get a little… how shall we say… crotchety?

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  25. Aaron: name one time that you called our PR departments and they didn’t agree with what I wrote?

    Dominic: my blog is not vetted, approved, checked, edited or otherwise controlled by anyone but myself. So, no, I’m not speaking for the company if you want “the company’s” point of view.

    Now, the Xbox team blog (which also called that “60% rewrite story” horsefeathers) +IS+ an official source of news. It was vetted, approved, checked before it was published.

    Also, when I quote Frank Shaw, he +IS+ an official source of news from Microsoft (he is one of our top spokespersons). I quote him very accurately. So, anytime you see him quoted here, you can assume that that is an official company reaction. Same as if I quote Bill Gates or Steve Ballmer or Ray Ozzie.

    Several official sources now have said that that story is false now. If you need more, I’d be happy to get you in touch with our PR folks.

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  26. Aaron: name one time that you called our PR departments and they didn’t agree with what I wrote?

    Dominic: my blog is not vetted, approved, checked, edited or otherwise controlled by anyone but myself. So, no, I’m not speaking for the company if you want “the company’s” point of view.

    Now, the Xbox team blog (which also called that “60% rewrite story” horsefeathers) +IS+ an official source of news. It was vetted, approved, checked before it was published.

    Also, when I quote Frank Shaw, he +IS+ an official source of news from Microsoft (he is one of our top spokespersons). I quote him very accurately. So, anytime you see him quoted here, you can assume that that is an official company reaction. Same as if I quote Bill Gates or Steve Ballmer or Ray Ozzie.

    Several official sources now have said that that story is false now. If you need more, I’d be happy to get you in touch with our PR folks.

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  27. Dominic: >Robert, I still don’t really understand what it is at Microsoft that you can provide official comment about.

    I can pass along official information. I can comment on that. I can give my personal opinion. I can go and videotape someone and give you their opinion (which becomes an official statement if it’s on Channel 9 because it’s checked/vetted before being released).

    If I quote someone, like Bill Gates, you can assume that’s accurate cause if I misquote my bosses chances are I won’t last too long around here.

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  28. Dominic: >Robert, I still don’t really understand what it is at Microsoft that you can provide official comment about.

    I can pass along official information. I can comment on that. I can give my personal opinion. I can go and videotape someone and give you their opinion (which becomes an official statement if it’s on Channel 9 because it’s checked/vetted before being released).

    If I quote someone, like Bill Gates, you can assume that’s accurate cause if I misquote my bosses chances are I won’t last too long around here.

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  29. Bloggers can indeed be authoritative sources, or they can be fuzzy-microfiber Marketing Evangelists sing-songing and playing bad-audio shaky-cam games all the live day long. The ‘blog’ itself conveys no additional authority. The message is the message, not the medium. The blog is but html reworked into a de-evolutionary affordable CRM cycle for the masses. Having a blog means you have a blog, no additional authority is granted whatsover.

    Or in legalese…

    The blogger hereby waives, all other conditions, representations, and warranties, express or implied by usage, custom of the trade, statute or otherwise, including without limitation, the implied warranties of authority accrual or merchantability for any particular purpose.

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  30. Bloggers can indeed be authoritative sources, or they can be fuzzy-microfiber Marketing Evangelists sing-songing and playing bad-audio shaky-cam games all the live day long. The ‘blog’ itself conveys no additional authority. The message is the message, not the medium. The blog is but html reworked into a de-evolutionary affordable CRM cycle for the masses. Having a blog means you have a blog, no additional authority is granted whatsover.

    Or in legalese…

    The blogger hereby waives, all other conditions, representations, and warranties, express or implied by usage, custom of the trade, statute or otherwise, including without limitation, the implied warranties of authority accrual or merchantability for any particular purpose.

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  31. Robert, thanks for the clarification. It is clear, clear, clear.

    I hate to say it, but the media is part of the problem here. There were some “media” that quoted you and then turned it into “Microsoft” denied the report.

    They should have been specific. They should have said things like this:

    “Robert Scoble, a prominent Microsoft employee with the title “technical evangelist,” said he had spoken with the company’s PR firm who told him that it wasn’t true.”

    Or “A member of Microsoft’s Xbox team, in a blog post, denied that anyone was moving from the team to work on Vista.”

    Or “Frank Shaw, a Vice President at Microsoft’s PR firm Waggener Edstrom Worldwide, denied the report had any basis in fact. “It’s all rubbish,” he said.”

    You see how if we properly attribute sources, it helps people to judge the authority of who is making the statement.

    Taken together, the different sources add up to a stronger denial than the official company comment or one blogger’s personal views alone.

    The problem with the Vista-SmartHouse debacle was that there wasn’t an official company comment that people could point to.

    Live and learn.

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  32. Robert, thanks for the clarification. It is clear, clear, clear.

    I hate to say it, but the media is part of the problem here. There were some “media” that quoted you and then turned it into “Microsoft” denied the report.

    They should have been specific. They should have said things like this:

    “Robert Scoble, a prominent Microsoft employee with the title “technical evangelist,” said he had spoken with the company’s PR firm who told him that it wasn’t true.”

    Or “A member of Microsoft’s Xbox team, in a blog post, denied that anyone was moving from the team to work on Vista.”

    Or “Frank Shaw, a Vice President at Microsoft’s PR firm Waggener Edstrom Worldwide, denied the report had any basis in fact. “It’s all rubbish,” he said.”

    You see how if we properly attribute sources, it helps people to judge the authority of who is making the statement.

    Taken together, the different sources add up to a stronger denial than the official company comment or one blogger’s personal views alone.

    The problem with the Vista-SmartHouse debacle was that there wasn’t an official company comment that people could point to.

    Live and learn.

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  33. That’s not the way the journalism world works. If a journalist comes up to you at a party, identifies him/herself and says I’m working on a story, then everything you say from that point on is on the record and can be used.

    It’s why most companies forbid their employees from speaking to the press.

    Blogging changes all that cause I’m speaking to the press every day (and you, and my mom, and Maryam, and etc). I’m always on the record as a Microsoft employee. Which really freaks PR people out. (I’ve been quoted in dozens (maybe even hundreds now) of newspaper articles, many of which I never was contacted for).

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  34. That’s not the way the journalism world works. If a journalist comes up to you at a party, identifies him/herself and says I’m working on a story, then everything you say from that point on is on the record and can be used.

    It’s why most companies forbid their employees from speaking to the press.

    Blogging changes all that cause I’m speaking to the press every day (and you, and my mom, and Maryam, and etc). I’m always on the record as a Microsoft employee. Which really freaks PR people out. (I’ve been quoted in dozens (maybe even hundreds now) of newspaper articles, many of which I never was contacted for).

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  35. Yes, you are on the record, but on the record as “Robert Scoble, a prominent Microsoft employee with the title “technical evangelist.

    You are not on the record as “Microsoft.”

    Right?

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  36. Yes, you are on the record, but on the record as “Robert Scoble, a prominent Microsoft employee with the title “technical evangelist.

    You are not on the record as “Microsoft.”

    Right?

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  37. Robert,

    Maybe you and all other corporate bloggers need some kind of statement on their blogs which says something like

    How to quote from this blog in media articles.

    This could give some clear language on how comments should be attributed in news articles.

    I see you have something on media interviews, but that’s not the same as reporters quoting something from your blog.

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  38. Robert,

    Maybe you and all other corporate bloggers need some kind of statement on their blogs which says something like

    How to quote from this blog in media articles.

    This could give some clear language on how comments should be attributed in news articles.

    I see you have something on media interviews, but that’s not the same as reporters quoting something from your blog.

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  39. Isn’t part of the problem that readers sometime take opinion as fact? And bloggers don’t necessarily make clear whether what they are saying is opinion or fact? Robert, you said: I “don’t check with others before I write my opinions.” Why would you as long as it’s clear that you are expressing an opinion? As far as “sources” go, I think they are also being confused with the “channel”. I’m just not sure if the bloggers aren’t part of the problem; commenting on things that aren’t in their purview, stating opinions as fact. Blogging as a medium is very generous with credibility so if a blogger says it, many people are going to assume it’s fact (rather than opinion), especially if it’s a well-known blogger. I think it’s the blogger’s responsibility to distinguish between them. It’s tempting to adopt the role of “know-it-all” and it’s also tempting to write it off as “bad media”, but at the same time, don’t you think the bloggers can be more careful about what they are stating as opinion and fact?

    Of course, this is just my opinion ; )

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  40. Isn’t part of the problem that readers sometime take opinion as fact? And bloggers don’t necessarily make clear whether what they are saying is opinion or fact? Robert, you said: I “don’t check with others before I write my opinions.” Why would you as long as it’s clear that you are expressing an opinion? As far as “sources” go, I think they are also being confused with the “channel”. I’m just not sure if the bloggers aren’t part of the problem; commenting on things that aren’t in their purview, stating opinions as fact. Blogging as a medium is very generous with credibility so if a blogger says it, many people are going to assume it’s fact (rather than opinion), especially if it’s a well-known blogger. I think it’s the blogger’s responsibility to distinguish between them. It’s tempting to adopt the role of “know-it-all” and it’s also tempting to write it off as “bad media”, but at the same time, don’t you think the bloggers can be more careful about what they are stating as opinion and fact?

    Of course, this is just my opinion ; )

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  41. Looks like Dominic is the new Christopher. Or maybe Christopher has multiple personalities (or IP addresses, at least). Man I gotta quit reading blog comments.

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  42. Looks like Dominic is the new Christopher. Or maybe Christopher has multiple personalities (or IP addresses, at least). Man I gotta quit reading blog comments.

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  43. Wow Dominic is still beating the 60% re-write dead horse. Think of how much time would have been saved if Dominic had realized that the 60% story was horseshit on reading it and thus not needing confirmation or disavowal. Oh and comparing Dominic to Christopher doesn’t work as Christopher isn’t a one note bore.

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  44. Wow Dominic is still beating the 60% re-write dead horse. Think of how much time would have been saved if Dominic had realized that the 60% story was horseshit on reading it and thus not needing confirmation or disavowal. Oh and comparing Dominic to Christopher doesn’t work as Christopher isn’t a one note bore.

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  45. Robert: I am taken aback by your statement that I should fact check anything you post. I can take your posts with a grain of salt and I am mature enough (well…some would disagree) to form my own opinions about your opinions but I don’t want to double check any of the facts you mention. Ok, bloggers aren’t journalits but I expect professionalism from an A-List blogger like you (this is not an accusation!). This includes that YOU check your facts for the readers. And that doesn’t just apply to stuff relating to Microsoft.

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  46. Robert: I am taken aback by your statement that I should fact check anything you post. I can take your posts with a grain of salt and I am mature enough (well…some would disagree) to form my own opinions about your opinions but I don’t want to double check any of the facts you mention. Ok, bloggers aren’t journalits but I expect professionalism from an A-List blogger like you (this is not an accusation!). This includes that YOU check your facts for the readers. And that doesn’t just apply to stuff relating to Microsoft.

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  47. Tina: I was forced to say that by our PR department. 🙂

    But, I’ve found incorrect facts in the New York Times, so it’s good to have SOME skepticism about everything you read.

    One thing with blogs is you can watch what everyone else says too.

    If I say the “sky is blue over Redmond today” you can see whether or not everyone else agrees with that. I’ve made errors here before and I’ve found that within a few hours that my readers jump in and correct me.

    I do do my best to check facts out before publishing them. For one, I don’t like to be jumped on, and for two, I care about my reputation and credibility (if I didn’t, I doubt I’d last very long at a public company in a highly visible public role).

    When I said that I was specifically talking about journalists. When journalists are writing about Microsoft it’s a really good idea to check in with the PR team and verify facts as well as giving them the opportunity to get you even more sources or a more complete picture.

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  48. Tina: I was forced to say that by our PR department. 🙂

    But, I’ve found incorrect facts in the New York Times, so it’s good to have SOME skepticism about everything you read.

    One thing with blogs is you can watch what everyone else says too.

    If I say the “sky is blue over Redmond today” you can see whether or not everyone else agrees with that. I’ve made errors here before and I’ve found that within a few hours that my readers jump in and correct me.

    I do do my best to check facts out before publishing them. For one, I don’t like to be jumped on, and for two, I care about my reputation and credibility (if I didn’t, I doubt I’d last very long at a public company in a highly visible public role).

    When I said that I was specifically talking about journalists. When journalists are writing about Microsoft it’s a really good idea to check in with the PR team and verify facts as well as giving them the opportunity to get you even more sources or a more complete picture.

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  49. >You are not on the record as “Microsoft.”

    In a perfect world, that would be the case, yes. I would be quoted as “Robert Scoble, who works as a technical evangelist at Microsoft, says…”

    But, it’s not a perfect world. Heck, we have “journalists” making up headlines about us, and I’ve been quoted as representing all kinds of things.

    The way I look at it is I’m always on the record and I have absolutely no control how my words will be used for or against me. It’s part of the risk of living a public life.

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  50. >You are not on the record as “Microsoft.”

    In a perfect world, that would be the case, yes. I would be quoted as “Robert Scoble, who works as a technical evangelist at Microsoft, says…”

    But, it’s not a perfect world. Heck, we have “journalists” making up headlines about us, and I’ve been quoted as representing all kinds of things.

    The way I look at it is I’m always on the record and I have absolutely no control how my words will be used for or against me. It’s part of the risk of living a public life.

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  51. >Isn’t part of the problem that readers sometime take opinion as fact?

    Yup, and also that sometimes I’m not clear in my writing. Even in the past week I thought I was writing something clearly funny (it was to me, but then I have a demented mind) but my readers took it seriously.

    That’s a failure on my part to communicate what I was thinking properly with you.

    Translation: that’s like a software bug. Those are the kinds of errors that are harder to correct.

    Saying the sky is blue when it’s actually gray is pretty easy to verify.

    Making a mistake in tone or voice or only giving some of the story (quoting someone out of context) is far more damaging and harder to correct.

    That’s why journalists are taught to get multiple sources so that they have a more complete look at the picture. It’s also why the PR folks like journalists to call them as well as get information off of blogs. That way you’ll get a more complete picture. You might end up not using them, or their information, but you’ll have done your homework and if your story is questioned at least you’ll have a confirmation from someone in an official position to back it up.

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  52. >Isn’t part of the problem that readers sometime take opinion as fact?

    Yup, and also that sometimes I’m not clear in my writing. Even in the past week I thought I was writing something clearly funny (it was to me, but then I have a demented mind) but my readers took it seriously.

    That’s a failure on my part to communicate what I was thinking properly with you.

    Translation: that’s like a software bug. Those are the kinds of errors that are harder to correct.

    Saying the sky is blue when it’s actually gray is pretty easy to verify.

    Making a mistake in tone or voice or only giving some of the story (quoting someone out of context) is far more damaging and harder to correct.

    That’s why journalists are taught to get multiple sources so that they have a more complete look at the picture. It’s also why the PR folks like journalists to call them as well as get information off of blogs. That way you’ll get a more complete picture. You might end up not using them, or their information, but you’ll have done your homework and if your story is questioned at least you’ll have a confirmation from someone in an official position to back it up.

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  53. Anything Scoble posts can, possibly unfortunately or fortunatlely, for Microsoft be considered to be “on the record” for Microsoft, regardless if this is his personal blog. By having officially “outed” himself as a Tech Evangilist (wierd, scary title, BTW) for Microsoft, his comments can be taken as speaking for Microsoft.

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  54. Anything Scoble posts can, possibly unfortunately or fortunatlely, for Microsoft be considered to be “on the record” for Microsoft, regardless if this is his personal blog. By having officially “outed” himself as a Tech Evangilist (wierd, scary title, BTW) for Microsoft, his comments can be taken as speaking for Microsoft.

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  55. also, given that you and Shel are supposedly experts in this space, I would have expected your authoritative book to have the answers to these questions.

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  56. also, given that you and Shel are supposedly experts in this space, I would have expected your authoritative book to have the answers to these questions.

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  57. In my case, no. I never pretend to be. I’m speaking from both in and out of Warner Bros Records, but never on record as a “voice” from within the company. Its my job to be the technology go-to guy in our world of Burbank, but its also my passion to be involved in technology at all costs.

    My answer (and I blogged this) is that I blog because I blog. I do it at work, at home, on the road, etc. The voice of my blog is the same voice that is in marketing meetings, technical meetings, e-mail in the company and elsewhere.

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  58. In my case, no. I never pretend to be. I’m speaking from both in and out of Warner Bros Records, but never on record as a “voice” from within the company. Its my job to be the technology go-to guy in our world of Burbank, but its also my passion to be involved in technology at all costs.

    My answer (and I blogged this) is that I blog because I blog. I do it at work, at home, on the road, etc. The voice of my blog is the same voice that is in marketing meetings, technical meetings, e-mail in the company and elsewhere.

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  59. Companies and individuals have been facing these problems since the early 90’s. Its easier to publish and gather information now, so the volume of people doing it has grown.

    A reader need to build confidence in the source of information whereever it is from, from newspapers to TV news to corporate web sites and blogs. What we need to define is what the credibility signals are and how people see them.

    I ended up writing far too much about this and have summed it all up in the last comment :-7

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  60. Companies and individuals have been facing these problems since the early 90’s. Its easier to publish and gather information now, so the volume of people doing it has grown.

    A reader need to build confidence in the source of information whereever it is from, from newspapers to TV news to corporate web sites and blogs. What we need to define is what the credibility signals are and how people see them.

    I ended up writing far too much about this and have summed it all up in the last comment :-7

    Like

  61. Thanks Robert…from Boston, where the sky is blue today! I looked out the window, and it is indeed blue. I asked everyone in the office and they agree. Well, and since we’re all PR people here, the PR deparment also varified it.

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  62. Thanks Robert…from Boston, where the sky is blue today! I looked out the window, and it is indeed blue. I asked everyone in the office and they agree. Well, and since we’re all PR people here, the PR deparment also varified it.

    Like

  63. Robert

    I met you at the Chamber meeting in Seattle on Wednesday … I was so inspired that we want to add a blog to our home page. Now I need to sell the owner – Can you point me in the right direction?

    thanks – susan

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  64. Robert

    I met you at the Chamber meeting in Seattle on Wednesday … I was so inspired that we want to add a blog to our home page. Now I need to sell the owner – Can you point me in the right direction?

    thanks – susan

    Like

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