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A former Air Force officer and music industry project manager, Julie Marsh now resides outside Denver. At last count, she had one husband, three ch...
 
 
 
 

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When Bloggers Go Rogue: Toyota and Mommy Networks

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In late 2006, Kristen Chase and I formed Parent Bloggers Network. It was designed to be a means of connecting brands and bloggers in a mutually beneficial way. Four years later, there are now literally dozens of blogger review programs. Seems like a quick and easy way to get free stuff and make buckets of money, right?

Tsunami Evacuation Route Sign


No. Neither quick, nor easy. We worked our butts off, not to put too fine a point on it, and we dealt with our share of ups and downs. Working with brands and bloggers is certainly fraught with unexpected pitfalls, as Samantha Snyder -- the woman behind Mommy Networks -- discovered this week.

Snyder launched Mommy Networks last year because, as she wrote on her site, mommynetworks.org (which appears to have been taken offline), she wanted "to help get Mommies [sic] jobs and help them find routes to advertise." This week, Snyder attempted to jump-start her business by, as she put it, giving Toyota a little free PR at her own expense. She wanted "to base some outreach and case study development around this topic" -- specifically, around the Toyota recalls of last year and the recently released report that the problem was actually user error, not a manufacturing defect.

An email was sent by Tiffany Lewis on behalf of Mommy Networks to a group of mommy bloggers, offering them a $10 Amazon.com gift card in exchange for writing a post spreading the news about the Toyota report, along with tweeting and giving the "thumbs-up" dozens of links to pro-Toyota articles and videos online. Mommy Networks acted alone, not on the direction of Toyota or their PR firm, and the Internet called them on it -- but not without first placing blame on Toyota.

Blogger Crissy of Dear Crissy blew the whistle first. She posted about the pitch from Mommy Networks, who she thought then had been hired by Toyota, and expressed outrage at the demands of the campaign. Next, Shelly Kramer of V3 Integrated Marketing began digging for information and assembling the puzzle pieces, which really threw Toyota into a tizzy.

Toyota Mommy Networks tweet


Once Toyota disavowed any connection with Mommy Networks on Twitter, the magnifying glass was turned back on Snyder and her company. If Toyota didn't hire them, who did?

Nobody. As crazy as it may sound, the whole initiative was dreamed up and executed by one woman in an ill-conceived effort to get a piece of the brands and bloggers pie.

Last night, Snyder published an apology on mommynetworks.org. (Screenshot of Snyder's apology on Blogworld) It read in part:

To Crissy and Toyota, I am sorry …

I went into a realm that was not my own. I am not a PR person, I have a background in HR, and want to help get Mommies jobs and help them find routes to advertise.

I #FAILed.

What's worse -- yet sadly not surprising -- is how many people were so quick to assume that Toyota was at fault. Granted, big companies have been known to do dumb stuff, particularly in the realm of social media, but bloggers don't exactly have an unblemished track record either.

It stood to reason that they might be flying blind in a world that's becoming increasingly nuanced and difficult to navigate. (Read Lucretia Pruitt's discussion of brand agency and representation for a more complete breakdown of the business end of this mess.)

Snyder's debacle is a shining example of what not to do where it comes to brand-blogger relationships. But how can you get it right?

Observe others: Social media requires social skills.

It takes time to size up a community, understand how it functions, and carve out a niche for yourself. Doing a figurative cannonball into the shallow end makes a lousy impression. Take a seat on a lounge chair and spend some time looking around poolside before you dive in.

Do your homework: One super easy step that far too few people take.

If you want to work with brands, it's best to differentiate yourself. Start by googling your blog name and tag line ideas before you set up your web site and social media accounts. For example, my friend Liz has been Mom101 since 2006, and her Google alerts continue to turn up new bloggers who've adopted her name, most likely innocently. They aren't really hurting her -- she's well-established as Mom101. But they are hurting themselves by limiting their recognition right

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theDIYparent 5 pts

I'm a fairly new blogger so this post was really enlightening to me. I'm just now getting into all the logistics of having a blog and the monetizing that goes along with it.

Thank you for shedding light on this for all of us!

GeekMommy 5 pts

Julie, I was sure I had commented on this, as I think your takeaways are huge!
This is such a great addition to that whole bizarre incident - but it did leave us with some really valuable lessons about the need to approach these sorts of relationships professionally and with due caution.
Great wrap up!

Lucretia (aka GeekMommy) Raising a child in a digital world, still a digital girl

savingsmania 5 pts

Mommy bloggers take freebies all the time, write the slanted content but never "rat out" the company. Many "mommy bloggers" have a tainted track-record and this should be talked about too.

Visit us at http://www.savingsmania.com

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/savingsmania

sarafisher 5 pts

I've been following this quietly, and since I was a PR person before I was a social media person, this scares me deeply. It used to be that the relationship between brands and PR firms was so clear cut. Now, there are many intermediaries some for the better and some for the worse. And then there are some, like this poor woman who probably didn't know better, who unfortunately end up pushing our industry back even further. It's incumbent upon all of us to learn from case studies like this so that we can continuously improve and try not to let this happen again within our powers. We're all still learning, but one day soon it's going to be too late to use that as an excuse. Thanks for writing this, Julie!

Mom101 5 pts

Super smart wrap-up Julie. Pure gold: Connections are the social part, and content creation is the media part. Without that essential foundation, the rest of it's just a house of cards.

And Kimberly, I agree completely. I wrote about it this week

http://www.mom-101.com/2011/02/sordid-tale-of-fake...

And I also pointed out the commenters who described it as common practice. There is a serious, serious problems with brands right now in this space if this totally unprofessional, crazy pitch is being defended by so many as "plausible."

Mom-101 ( http://mom-101.com )

Cool Mom Picks ( http://coolmompicks.com )

Cool Mom Tech ( http://coolmomtech.com )

Julie Marsh 5 pts

As the space evolves, the issues do too. We can easily point to corporate missteps, but it's rare to see our community find fault with bloggers. Easier to criticize a monolithic corporation than to look inward.

Julie @ The Mom Slant ( http://www.themomslant.com )

kdc521 5 pts

I found it sad that Snyder thought that this was the way to eventually become an intermediary between brands and bloggers. (It speaks volumes regarding how she perceives blogger review programs are run.)

I found it sad that so many bloggers were so quick to believe the worst of Toyota when the story came out on Dear Crissy. It seemed "off" (but not impossible) to me because Toyota - along with many other auto companies - have spent so much money in the mom blog space recently. (Disclosure: one of my writers went on one of their trips on my site's behalf. I don't even drive...)

A few commenters on Crissy's post even noted that what Toyota did was "standard PR practice"(?!) Obviously there have been similar corporate mistakes in order for it to even seem plausible to so many.

In any event, there is still much work to be done in brand/blogger relations. This incident definitely served to highlight that point!

Julie Marsh 5 pts

But sadly, it is.

Too many people, even those whose job it is to know better, greatly underestimate the work involved in social media.

Julie @ The Mom Slant ( http://www.themomslant.com )

Melissa Ford 5 pts

This is such a crazy story.

I do think that brands need middlemen who actually know the blogging world because without those middlemen, you have the dumbass PR pitches I get daily. I write about infertility. I cannot tell you how many pitches I get DAILY for baby items. For pregnancy items. Ideally, with a middleman, that person would know their stable of bloggers and match people well -- with projects that are ethical and well-constructed.

Melissa writes Stirrup Queens ( http://stirrup-queens.com ) and Lost and Found ( http://lostandfoundandconnectionsabound.blogspot.c... ). Her novel about blogging is Life from Scratch ( http://www.life-from-scratch.com/ ).