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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
It's been a crazy couple of days in ESPN land, but I did read this when you tweeted it out. A couple of thoughts from an avid tweeting employee...
ESPN released the separate employee policy today, which is really an extension of our company blog policy. A little dusty perhaps, but nothing too shocking.
There are a good little crew of us here at ESPN that tweet every day about ESPN life. I've been tweeting as ESPN_ProdGirl for a while now, and everyone here is aware that I do. So based on the policy, I definitely CAN talk sports, ESPN life, and anything else that common sense dictates when you are staff at a company.
But I have a dark secret...I don't really know that much about sports. I don't follow the MLB, I can't tell you stats and scores, and my coordination level is sub-par. You'll find I'm very very very low on sport tweets, and if I ever don't reply to your in-depth stats question, you know why.
What I will tell do is show you what it's like here at ESPN in Bristol, CT. I post lots of pictures from around campus, tell people what athletes I see in halls, and pass along killer pics my producer friends take from the top of the X Games Big Air ramp.
The connection--direct connection--to our fans is vital to our business. I try to reply to almost all that write to me. And if I can't get them an answer, I'll ask someone who can. There's a bunch of us here that do the same: @Crystal_ESPN (ESPN Mag, RISE), @mlo84 (X Games coordinator), @ESPN_Homecoming (Assoc. Producer Melissa Panzer on the road for the show), and @Rlking (our ESPN.com editor-in-chief).
We are learning as we go, along with everyone else right now. And yes, we do have plenty of sports-related Twitter accounts. But if you're ever burned out on actual sports coverage, find me on Twitter. I'll be sure to post pictures of the crowd at the ESPN cafe on chicken parm day.
I love sports... have for all my life. But I find those that can only speak "sports," even on a sports network, extraordinarily tedious (the Schwab show really exemplifies this idea for me and actually makes me like sports less). Sports are a part of life, and as such, should be framed against it.
Definitely plan to start following you... sports content or not.
But what do I want? I want to follow you, and Crystal and any other who has a real account. I get my stats where I want them and that's not on Twitter. I want to know what its like behind the scenes and I want to know the people that are there. Who are they? How did you get a cool job at ESPN? Even though it's in Bristol, CT. Don't lie, you are right next to the ghetto! I have friends that live there.
I thinks it's great when someone working at a place at huge as ESPN can, and is allowed, to talk about their day and not have to constantly sell. It is you guys that are bringing ESPN into the future.
Human at a distance, you know...
Yesterday, Sports Illustrated's Peter King wrote about his internal struggle on whether he should Tweet about some breaking NFL news or report it to SI editors. He decided to Tweet it instead. Here's the story: http://bit.ly/otGAQ (The Twitter part is the bottom section). A reader wrote in to his Mailbag to thank him here: http://bit.ly/ybY0I (again, at the bottom of the page).
SI seems to get it and it's helping them. ESPN seems to put up a "hip, cool" facade, but in reality they want control. The times are a-changin', ESPN!
Tom O'Keefe
@tomokeefe1
Exclusivity is a fast track to generic from a content perspective. Personality, connection, inclusivity are ways to rise above the fray and give people a reason to come back. Most people don't care whether they watch a game on ESPN, FOX Sports or Versus and most people don't care how they find out who won the game - but if happen to care about a particular writer's perspective, they'll check in - especially if there's more than a ghost of a chance at garnering a response from the writer.
This attitude in the sports industry toward the public is why writers like Bill (@iwocpo on Twitter) over at the Abel to Yzerman blog: http://www.kuklaskorner.com/index.php/a2y/ are able to quietly cultivate real community while sites like ESPN struggle to stifle conversation with fans.
(Yes, he writes about the NHL Detroit Red Wings - I do have a little connection there) :-)
Good on you for pointing this out. The sports industry needs to start allocating a bit of the spotlight it typically reserves for players and give the fans some love.
Another company that really does a great job of interacting and being social, while rarely actually shilling their products is @SEGA. They respond to a great deal of tweets directed at them, they give away cool prizes every Friday, they help promote other video game-related tweeters (like @OCRemix) and bring a lot of personality to their tweets (a lot of talk about being a ninja).
What concerns me even more about the way the request is worded in your post, however, is that it sounds as though ESPN might actually be trying to limit what their employees say in their own personal Twitter accounts. That's frightening.
Interesting that while social media is making the real sports stars more accessible, ESPN and their pseudo-stars are moving in the other direction. Too bad.
Just imagine what Bill Veeck would come up with if he had social media to play with!
What can you expect? They are only ESPN, not the NFL channel!!
Dr. Letitia Wright
The Wright Place TV Show
http://wrightplacetv.com
www.twitter.com/drwright1
Either way, I agree they'd be wise to re-evaluate their stance. It's hard for me to support you or be an advocate for you if I don't know anything about you. Furthermore, people usually promote their peers with a story about said person. The less personality someone is allowed to show, the harder time we have coming up with that story.
What's most disturbing about this news is that many people look to ESPN as a leader in whatever ventures its people pursue. So there is a good chance some folks will see ESPN employees use Twitter this way and copy that example. That alone is reason enough for us to RT this post and help spread the word about what kind of engagement we're looking for on Twitter.
Thanks for helping us start that conversation, Chris.
I tend to think of our 'voice' as that of the same casual voice I'd use when talking to a customer in the airport - Ask a formal question, get a formal answer... but if I get a read that I can have a bit of fun with someone - or many someones - you can bet I'll go for it!
http://nosenseoftime.org/2009/08/espn-is-doing-...
Thanks for the shout-out, for reading the post and getting the word out about this.
Let's try and make you like working here. Crazy concept, huh? ESPN is great, but not worth every second of my life.
I say separate your business form personal accounts. But LET them use their personal accounts. One person/team for the @espn account and everyone else should just be proud to work for you.
http://thebiglead.com/?p=16916
It reads to me as if ESPN thinks that their employees can somehow completely separate their personalities that most have worked incredibly hard to develop, from their professions?! Isn't social media, in part, about the interweaving our our lives and work? Unless of course you work for ESPN!
We hear a lot about business transparency - it's a kinda pet topic with me - big fan! - and sometimes to appear human, you have to give it warts n all approach.
There's nothing wrong with corporate guidelines - e.g no swearing, please and thank you etc but individuality (unless it speaks ill of the company, its employees or its products and their customers) shouldn't be stifled.
We're having great fun on our Twitter account and I think starting to see a 'real following' - its taken time but that's the great thing about it - you only get out what you put in and those that can't be bothered usually don't stick around too long.
Thanks Chris.
Jonathan.
http://twitter.com/fabphotogifts
Perhaps it is because any one of those big personalities could leave tomorrow and not skip a beat. Simmons could take his 500,000+ twitter followers and his 1-2 million average column readers to any site on the net (including one of his own making) and probably prosper even more than at ESPN (and when his contract expires in 2010, we're likely to see this put to the test). The same is true for all the rest.
ESPN has become a victim of its own making, but trying to clamp down and control it now isn't going to help. Like your high school girlfriend who you helped coax out of her shell only to discover that in college she’s now the hottest thing around, trying to exert control is only going to push her away faster. Instead, ESPN should embrace the power of each of these personalities and give them a chance to use the power given to them through social media to drive traffic to the site and eyes to the set.
More to come.
Angela | @communitygirl
Katja Presnal always says "people don't do business with companies, people do business with *people* inside companies" -- a lesson ESPN seems to be missing there.
The main problem is that it's not very well written. To say "don't tweet about what you say or write for ESPN," and then follow with "if you wouldn't say it or write it for ESPN, don't tweet it" doesn't make a whole lot of sense without some parsing.
ESPN did this because they didn't want news breaking off the site...what they don't realize is that the casual fan doesn't care that Chad Ford heard about a hot rumor...the casual fan will continue get his sports news from the website.
If I were Sports Illustrated, I'd encourage my writers to break their stuff on Twitter - and when they do, I'll be listening.
These are the types of policies we see when attorneys get involved in social media strategy. What a shame.
And I tweet with Crocs guy and I'm sending him a picture of the brand new Crocs I just bought my daughter - cause I saw a link to their new (and totally cute) line of little girls Crocs.