Aaron
Rester
Aaron
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Can a Hashtag Get You Sued?

September 10, 2010 Aaron Rester 0 Comments
Digital Miscellaneous
social media

Alternative title to this post: “How Not to Use Twitter as a Business Tool, Vol. 842”

A colleague of mine recently expressed, via his personal Twitter feed, dissatisfaction with a product that he is required to work with as part of his job. The tweet included a hashtag inferring that the product in question was, in effect, utter garbage. Since my colleague has expressed a desire not to bring further attention to the situation, I won’t mention the name of the product or the company that produces it, but suffice it to say that this is a company that goes out of its way to cultivate customers in the higher ed world, sponsoring networking and social events — and, indeed, social networks — specifically for the higher ed web community.

Now, everyone knows that good social media tactics include monitoring the Twitterverse for mentions of your brand or product, and responding to those mentions. The companies that do it best take criticism on Twitter (Twittercism?) as an opportunity to apologize to a frustrated user and get feedback about how their product or service might be improved.

So how did this company respond?

With an email and multiple phone calls at his work number, threatening legal action if the offending tweet was not removed or retracted.

This “strategy,” if you can call it that, is really nothing short of insane. The backlash that could result from such bully tactics could very quickly destroy the goodwill that this company has spent a lot of time and money trying to build in the higher ed web community. Let’s hope they come to their senses.

2 comments on “Can a Hashtag Get You Sued?”

  1. Anonymous says:
    September 11, 2010 at 1:39 am
    Reply

    As the President and CEO of offending company, I’d like to say plainly, we screwed up. OmniUpdate has no “bullying strategy”. I’ve personally and publically reached out to the individual who is the subject of this post and offered my apology for the series of events that took place today. The apology was accepted (thank you), and many lessons were learned. Welcome to the rapid-paced new world of PR!

    OmniUpdate welcomes product feedback from all sources. Historically, we have taken constructive criticism very well. And, yes, like many companies, we occasionally have a hard time dealing with Twittercism. We’re learning from our experience just like everyone else.

    If any of our customers are reading this, feel free to reach out to our product teams directly with your concerns and product suggestions. We’ve only gotten to where we are today because we listen. We would love to talk with you. And, if you tweet about us, we’ll try to reach you with the intention of learning everything we can to improve our products and services. In this case, we went about things the wrong way, and corrective measures have been taken to prevent it from happening again.

    Again I’d like to apology to the individual who is the subject of this blog post, and thank you for your acceptance and understanding. We would like nothing more than to build the product you want to use.

    Lance Merker
    President/CEO
    OmniUpdate

  2. Aaron Rester says:
    September 11, 2010 at 4:49 pm
    Reply

    That's wonderful news, Lance. Thanks for taking the time to reach out to the community, and to the individual involved.

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