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.

 

Head of MI6 has fotos placed on Facebook by social networking wife. Social media guidelines for staff do not always extend to family…

 

Your mission – go to the social network Twitter, write a haiku about English summer (or their approximation there of), tweet it, with the hashtag (label) of #kingsplace.  From Kinsgplace website: Twitter Welcome to the Great British Summer Haiku Competition! Dear Visitor, Kings Place has teamed up with Network Rail to create the world’s first ‘mobile poetry competition’, focused on neighbouring Kings Cross Station. People travelling into Kings Cross in the mornings are invited to submit Haiku-style poems on the subject of the British Summer from their mobile phones, using Twitter, and gain a chance to see their work displayed on the largest digital advertising Continue Reading…

 

s’not often you see ‘cocktails’ in a header image I managed to wrangle a VIB pass to Media08. VIB stands for Very Important Blogger. Media08 don’t call me that – I’ve given myself that title – let’s call is a ‘user generated title‘? heh. The organisers of Media08 have been nice enough to treat me like a real journalist. Which means I should probably take up smoking cigarettes and drinking whisky, getting into fights and accepting cash for… oh ok, lets play nicely. Here’s an email from the organisers, God bless their little cotton socks: Hi Laurel, a quick note Continue Reading…

 

Happy Valentines Day! Please send chocolate! Mars gift application to launch on Facebook by Julia Buchanan LONDON – An application allowing users to send vouchers for Mars confectionary to friends on Facebook is to launch on Valentine’s Day in the UK. The application, named Celebrate, means Facebook members can buy a Mars product using Paypal and send a message to a selected friend. The recipient receives a request for their mobile number and they are then sent an SMS containing a unique voucher ID. Vouchers can be scanned and redeemed at participating retailers with PayPoint. Celebrate is being hailed as Continue Reading…

 

Are you going? Media 08 Australia’s Annual Report for Digital Professionals. Friday 7th March, 9.00am – 5.30pmJones Bay Wharf, Pyrmont, Sydney Australia’s leading digital media organisations, Fairfax Digital and X|Media|Lab, bring you a one-day executive briefing on all you need to know about digital media for the year 2008. “Media ’08″ brings together world leading experts from the UK, the US, India, China, Australia, the Middle East and Korea, to present on the most significant trends and innovations happening or about to happen across the spectrum of digital media: The Media and The Message; Generation Cellphone; Video and Interactivity; Platforms Continue Reading…

 

If that’s my avatar on the phone, tell ‘em I’m not in. Vodafone in Second Life: Vodafone has launched a mobile operation in Second Life enabling users to connect real life with the virtual world. Vodafone Inside Out, which launched yesterday in beta, will only be advertised in the virtual world through Second Life newspapers The AvaStar and Metaverse Messenger. The service will enable users to call other Second Life avatars and connect the call to mobile phones in the real world.The service will enable Second Life friends to speak to each other offline when one is online. Users can Continue Reading…

 

Bit of a silly article from The Times: Facebook suicide: the end of a virtual life Can online friendships ruin real-life relationships? Some users of a very popular social networking site believe so – and that’s why they’re taking drastic action, says Emma Justice Stephanie Painter’s death was swift and painless. At 9.10pm on February 11 she bid her 121 Facebook friends goodbye with one last “poke” (mood: sorrowful), then left the virtual world peacefully with a quick click of the mouse. “It was hard to kill the profile I’d spent so long creating, but I felt it was the Continue Reading…

 

For the Brits: Job Details Company Pricejamieson (more jobs) Salary GBP 27,000 – GBP 27,000 Employment Type Permanent Location Central London and West End Country England, United Kingdom Job Reference 16180/1 Job Specification Our client is an exciting leader in their field who is looking to hire an Online Communities Editor.Your aim will be to consistently develop their interactive online community through timely content and good editing.The role will involve commissioning, writing, editing and uploading content for the site and e-newsletters following the editorial plan.The role would suit a results orientated web professional who has strong experience in online marketing Continue Reading…

 

Versus Before you go cuddling up to Anson, it’s not our WebJam. Some, no doubt vastly inferior imitation, other WebJam. I didn’t go too far into it, just signed up really but it actually doesn’t look too bad – sort of a Ning.com competitor, with drag and drop blocks (blogs, forums, and so on): A London-based start-up founded by Yahoo! veterans, Webjam, provides individuals and communities with an innovative and versatile platform to create, aggregate and share contents online. The investment from French early stage venture capital firm I-Source Gestion will fuel further product development and global expansion. London, UK; Continue Reading…

 

This one is gonna be right up someone’s alley (my italics): Head of Content (Digital) At Lonely Planet we live to travel. Everything we do is designed to inspire and enable travellers to get out there and connect with the world beyond personal and geographical boundaries. Across all areas of Lonely Planet, we look for talented people who share our passion.We are currently looking for the Head of Content for our Digital team. Based in our Melbourne office this opportunity is offered as a permanent role. The Head of Content (Digital) has primary responsibility for the quality, timeliness and appropriateness Continue Reading…

 

Yep, a nice easy way to create content on mobiles other than fotos. I said that already. If you want to create a community in the mobile space that generates content in a MySpace way, make it easy. Which segues me into this article about a potential MySpaceMobile-type environment. What’s needed for the perfect mobile MySpace. Why is MySpace such a runaway success? Because it’s a jack of all trades, apparently. This, at least, was the message from Frederick Ghahramani of technology firm AirG, speaking at today’s MEX conference in London.He was talking about mobile communities, but took time to Continue Reading…

 

Some little bloglets for you to munch on. Small, tasty and digestible. Enjoy! Bloglet #1 From the Network Unbound, article by Anya KamenetzThen, on Tuesday, April 4, 24-year-old Sandi Thom signed a £1 million, five-album deal with RCA/Sony BMG out of her basement in London, live via Webcast. She had just finished 21 straight nights of live performances–also Webcast from her basement. By the end, Thom was pulling in a nightly audience of 100,000 listeners. In both cases, the “audience,” whether of pissed-off students or besotted roots-rock fans, was drawn together, at least in part, by word of mouth on Continue Reading…

 

I picked up the book by blogger Belle de Jour around Xmas. Interesting account of a London call girl. Very amusing and a little sad. An “at the coalface” account of the ins and outs of the sex trade. Because of her blog, Belle has won awards, the publishing contract, and now writes a column for a Brit newspaper. She has left one of the oldest professions for an much more tacky one. Heh. I started reading Baghdad Burning today – the book from “Girl Blog From Iraq” Riverbend. Very sad and a little amusing. A human eye account of Continue Reading…

 

Julian Lee at The Sydney Morning Herald had this to say: DOES the launch of Channel Ten’s service allowing viewers to SMS, MMS or email live video footage, pictures and text messages direct to its newsroom herald the start of a boom in user-generated content? Based on a trial during this week’s cyclone in Queensland and on the volume of content that flowed into London newsrooms following the bombings last July, Ten believes citizen journalism is the way forward. The London service they are talking about is Scoopt, I think. A great blog, if you want more on Citizen Journalism, Continue Reading…

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