Disclaimer: I have NOTHING to
do with Samsung or any of its competitors. I have NOTHING to do with the tech
or professional blogging industry. Am
just a random blogger who has opinions on all sorts of things in this
world and does not usually keep his opinions to himself. You are most welcome
to disagree with my views – and I respect your right to do so. So, with malice towards none...
One of the hot topics doing the rounds on social media in the last few
days is about how two tech bloggers from India were sent by Samsung India to
Berlin to cover the IFA event there. There’s a lot available about this whole
sordid episode on the net – I will not therefore repeat the whole story. You
can catch more about it here .
In short, the two bloggers (one of them preferred to not be named, the
other who has raised a hue and cry is Clinton Jeff (CJ), apparently a
well-known tech blogger) clearly agreed to be sent by Samsung only in the
capacity of “reporters” and not “promoters” for Samsung. Once they’d reached
Berlin however, they were required to undertake various promotional activities.
When they refused, they were told that from that moment on, they were on their
own - Samsung would not arrange for their return flight / hotel accommodation.
Maybe I’m over-simplifying the whole thing – and like I said, more
details are available on the net – but I don’t want to add to the echo by just
repeating what’s already out there. Besides, I know nothing about the mobile
tech industry, nothing about tech blogging, not much about product marketing –
so, while common wisdom would suggest I should just keep my mouth shut, I do
think I know a bit about corporate behavior. And I do think, at a holistic level, this is
more about that than about any specific incident.
So here’s my high-level take on this, after reading a number of
blogposts on the subject (and hundreds of comments from people far more experienced in this
field than I am).
First of all, it is absolutely inexcusable that a company makes a threat
like this to anybody – to just leave the person high and dry, in a foreign
land. Not only is it thoroughly unprofessional, it is JUST NOT ON! At the very
least, if the company was unable to work it out with the bloggers in Berlin,
they could have taken action against them on their return to India. IF they
felt they had a case. That would have been the professional thing to do – I
give you a contract, you breach the contract, I sue you. Instead, they went the
“mafia” route. What is this? Godfather – Part 4?
Secondly, I do think Samsung does not even have a fig-leaf to cover
itself in this matter. For me the absolute clincher is that the bloggers (well,
CJ at least) made it very clear UPFRONT that they would go only as “reporters”
for the event and not as “promoters”. The moment they made that clear, Samsung
should have backed off.
But clearly Samsung, for some reason, WANTED them to go. So they, as is
very common in such situations, trivialised the difference between “reporter”
and “promoter”, effectively ignoring it (and, as anybody with any sense of
integrity will tell you, there is a BIG difference between the two).
Samsung knew all along what it wanted from these bloggers. It was not
the first time they were arranging this marketing programme – they knew exactly
what it involved. And if they didn’t, they should have. And they should have
communicated it in full detail upfront to the bloggers. If, after doing that,
the bloggers chose to still go ahead – and then backed out onsite – Samsung may
have had a case (even then the “mafia” treatment would not be on!). Without
this disclosure, Samsung really did not have much of a case – which may be one
reason why they went with the mafia approach. It could well have worked – when
you are in a foreign land (apparently at somebody’s mercy), you are more easily
malleable to demands from that party.
Unfortunately for Samsung, it did not work. CJ did not just “roll over”
– and from that moment on, it began going wrong for Samsung.
In typical corporate damage-control mode, Samsung will now be desperate
to save some face from this episode. It will become a PR case-study (maybe for
students in college too) – but to me this is more than just a public relations
issue.
This is an integrity issue. It is an issue of ethics.
Had this been a start-up, in its first product launch event, trying to
garner a bunch of guys to help market its products I may have understood a
goof-up like this. Start-ups often do not have systems in place, they don’t have elaborate
dos-and-don’ts or processes laid out, they make mistakes, they learn from them,
they hone their processes.
Samsung is hardly a startup. They are at the bleeding edge of consumer
products and consumer marketing. They must be having huge marketing budgets and
teams, they’ve done lots of product launches, this particular launch in Berlin
is not their first. In fact, they have this “Mobi!er” programme for a while –
so they must be considered veterans at this game.
That is why I absolutely refuse to believe that this was just a one-off,
unfortunate incident due to a “misunderstanding”. Ok, so this one came to light
– I wonder how many have not come to light at all? Either because a deal was
struck, or the concerned blogger caved in, or just didn’t bother to make an issue
of it. I think I’ve read something about a France-related Samsung incident too.
I don’t want to make this about Samsung alone. True, I may be coming down strongly on them here – but this is not to say that other
corporates do not indulge in such practices. Or even that they do. It is all about good and bad practice - and could happen to any company.
While on this, I find some arguments rather absurd. If you question one
company’s dodgy practice, you find comments saying “yes, but X company also
does it. Actually everybody is doing it”. As if that sort of legitimizes that
behavior!
I also came across comments blaming the blogger, saying he should have “expected”
to be promoting Samsung onsite seeing as they were sponsoring his trip. The “no
such thing as a free lunch” argument. I don’t agree with this because he did
make it clear upfront what he expected his role to be. If Samsung was ok with
this, how can the blogger be blamed?
I just think in this very dog-eats-dog world, one can never be too
careful about intentions of the other party one is dealing with. However “big”
or “reputed” that party is.
We sometimes tend to equate company size, image, products and global
presence with integrity. Big companies LOVE that we do this - but we should
know that they are VERY different things! Surely we’ve seen enough examples in
recent times to make us wary of corporations and their integrity?
Also, it is always better to be safe than sorry. Especially in business
dealings. Get everything in black-and-white so that you have a case if somebody
tries to use/abuse you. Sad, but that’s the world we live in – and we need to
protect ourselves.
In this particular instance, I think what CJ could have done better (instead of just saying he wanted to go as "reporter" and not "promoter") is to ask Samsung to give him
in writing what specific activities he'd need to do on their behalf. Like
donning their uniform, attending their briefing session, representing them at
their stall as their spokesperson.
When you nail it down to this detail, you
get a better sense of the whole picture, there is less room for assumptions and surprises, you can make a better call. (I think I read a comment on one of the blogs saying that Samsung
does lay down, in detail, what they expect from “reporters” and “promoters”. Possibly, this was not shared with CJ. Maybe an oversight,
maybe not. It is not unusual that parties keep things vague, they obfuscate matters if it plays to their advantage.)
A final note – SCREAM if you feel you’re being wronged. Corporates HATE
negative publicity – their PR departments will go into overdrive to start
damage-limitation and issue “appropriate messages” to social media. But deep
down they know that the damage has been done already – and that is what we
should make them realize. So that they pre-empt situations arising, they
pre-empt bad practice, they weed out poor employees. Nothing like negative
feedback to galvanise corporates, to keep them on their toes. And thankfully
today we have social media to help us to reach the whole world with our voice.
(One of course is better advised to use this medium only if there is a genuine
case of injustice – otherwise this is a double-edged sword).
It is said that every cloud has a silver lining. That even from
something bad, eventually something good does come out of it. If, from this sordid
episode, there is a better awareness and understanding of how to deal with
corporates (especially if you are just an individual), then I’d say some good
HAS come out of this.
P.S: This piece may appear to be rather one-sided, or
not “balanced” enough. It may look like I’m coming down rather heavily on
Samsung and not enough on the blogger. That is deliberate. If somebody can put
up a credible defence for Samsung in this matter, I’d be happy to reconsider my
position. In the absence of such material, I’m sticking to my above take.
I’ve always believed that in most aspects of life, it is far more important to try to be FAIR than to be “balanced”. The job of a judge is to pass a FAIR judgment based on the evidence presented to him. If the evidence is overwhelmingly in favor of one party, it would be a poor judgment if, in the interest of “balance”, he patronises the other party. It would be unfair on the aggrieved party - and a lesson wouldn't be learnt by the offending party. The only balance a judge needs to ensure, in my opinion, is that both parties are given an equal opportunity to state their cases.
So, though I'm not a judge (I'm not even in that profession!), this is the principle I adopt in my thinking and writing. Yes, fairness is a matter of opinion, but then so is balance. So let’s leave the "balance" to our diets, our lifestyle and to our cricket/sports teams.
Let's first try to be fair in what is often an unfair world.
I’ve always believed that in most aspects of life, it is far more important to try to be FAIR than to be “balanced”. The job of a judge is to pass a FAIR judgment based on the evidence presented to him. If the evidence is overwhelmingly in favor of one party, it would be a poor judgment if, in the interest of “balance”, he patronises the other party. It would be unfair on the aggrieved party - and a lesson wouldn't be learnt by the offending party. The only balance a judge needs to ensure, in my opinion, is that both parties are given an equal opportunity to state their cases.
So, though I'm not a judge (I'm not even in that profession!), this is the principle I adopt in my thinking and writing. Yes, fairness is a matter of opinion, but then so is balance. So let’s leave the "balance" to our diets, our lifestyle and to our cricket/sports teams.
Let's first try to be fair in what is often an unfair world.
6 comments:
That is an excellent analysis of the blogger episode. When something like this happens, all sorts of opinions fly about, and it becomes difficult to keep a grip on the real issue. That is what you have done, Raja!
I hadn't heard a thing of it till now.
This is a big SCANDAL!!!!!!
I do tend to believe the bloggers in this case. And such human-trafficking is just not done!
I appreciate the integrity and bravery of these two bloggers!
Hats off to them!
I'll go and support them on their blog!
Nice Update Raja. Somehow this reminds me of the ugly bodyshopping that used to go on in IT at one time, I think during the early 90s.
it is not just the company involved. Often it is the social media agency which misrepresents the compnay to bloggers.
so the expectation of Samsung and the bloggers may have diverged simply because of the intermediary agency.
Yes, samsung behaved badly - but i have a hunch that they were led to believe that the bloggers will endorse their wares by thr agnecy
@Ava, thanks for your comments. This is just my gut feel, I could be way off base here.
@Harvey, thanks. This story does highlight for me the need to not take anything for granted in a business arrangement.
@Harini, thanks for your comment. That's an angle that's not come up till now in anything I've read on this. Am not sure there was even a social media agency involved. But you know more about these things than I do. If Samsung was misled by their social media agency, then they needed to sort it out with them, not with the bloggers.
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