Two companies with very different results use Twinterns – interns who Twitter. I guess there is a point in using (temp) interns – they are young, presumably social media savvy, cheap, and bring a wealth of customer service, sales and pr experience with them. Oh wait…. anyway:

Case 1: Pizza Hut

Despite a lack of in-house experience—she worked for only one day in a Pizza Hut restaurant—Robinson pizzahutseems to be doing a fine job thus far. She has increased Pizza Hut’s Twitter followers from 3,000 to more than 13,000 and successfully executed a sales promotion over the Fourth of July weekend. And despite having only been on the job for a month, she seems well-informed about the company offerings. In response to a customer inquiry, she tweeted on Tuesday: “Currently the Stuffed Pizza Rolls are only available with pepperoni. I’ll keep you posted if anything changes.”

Case 2: Habitat

How much trouble can 140 characters really stir up? A lot, it turns out. In London, a twittering intern for home-furnishings retailer Habitat got in big trouble last month after he sent out misleading tweets that included commonly searched words related to the protests in Iran. He added keywords—called “hashtags” in Twitterspeak—such as Iran and Mousavi to messages so that people who searched for information about the protests would see his employer’s ads instead. His bosses were not pleased. “This was absolutely not authorised by Habitat,” a representative said in a statement. “We were shocked when we discovered what happened and are very sorry for the offence that was caused.” Habitat has since deleted the tweets and vowed to “do better for the Twitter community.”

You might want to be behind Door 1 not Door 2!

Read the full article at Reuters including;

“By letting an intern determine this, you’re putting your brand and reputation in the hands of someone who has no experience.”Some companies have gotten the message. Jet Blue’s (JBLU) official tweeter is its manager of corporate communications. McDonald’s (MCD) leaves its official tweeting to higher-ups as well. Starbucks’ (SBUX) Twitter feed isn’t manned by an executive but a former barista, who has presumably developed a good sense of what its customers are seeking.

not that I think CEOs make any more sense than interns, even on a good day.  Anyway, staff are on social networking sites, talking it up, whether you know about it or not. See 40+ Social Media Enterprise Guidelines for Staff.

 

DirkTheCow on Twitter just linked to ThisIsHerd blog post on Vancouver film students who blog. 3rd largest country for blogging.Iran: A nation of bloggers from Mr.Aaron on Vimeo.It’s just a shame that they don’t mention that the President of Iran blogs President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran Blog It’s not that the video is wrong, it’s just that knowing the President of a country – especially Iran – blogs, adds something to the story. He even has comments turned on. Not the type we have in the West but presumably honest and valid in Middle Eastern culture: Dear and honorable president Continue Reading…

 

… is one of my all time favourite movies. The next time I get married (I try to do that every few years) it will be Bollywood style, I swear. From my fave Indian online newsletter, Alootechie. Online matrimony market in India expected to touch Rs 90 croreWhen: 1/10/2007 8:05:04 AMBy Rajesh Barnwal The size of the online matrimony market in India is expected to grow by more than 50 per cent this fiscal, to touch about Rs 90 crore against the estimated Rs 58 crore in 2005-06. “Online match-making has assumed industry proportions and is growing at a good Continue Reading…

 

More scaremongering, this time from USA Today (article by Kasie Hunt): Al-Qaeda sympathizers are using Orkut, a popular, worldwide Internet service owned by Google, to rally support for Osama bin Laden, share videos and Web links promoting terrorism and recruit non-Arabic-speaking Westerners, according to terrorism experts and a survey of the sites. It then goes on to discuss Reporters Sans Frontieres, online terrorist videos and bans of the Orkut community by Iran. Reporters Without Borders, a press freedom advocacy group, notes in a recent report that Internet use has grown faster in Iran than in any other Middle Eastern country, Continue Reading…

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