Wait!
Before you hit the send, reply, submit or post buttons, ask yourself this question? Do I want the whole world to see this?
While the “whole world” concept may seem a bit dramatic, if something you’ve written gets in front of the wrong set of eyeballs it will certainly feel as though the whole world has seen it.
While it is never our intention to flat out embarrass ourselves, plenty of people do it everyday and I think it can be avoided rather easily.
How you might ask? By operating like a public official. As a journalist, I know that I can submit a Public Records Request and get copies of emails received and sent by anyone whose salary is paid by taxpayers. So, even though my salary is paid by a private company, I operate as if I’m accountable to the masses.
As the Managing Editor of an online community my written words are often shared publicly and I am extremely aware of that. What that does is make me communicate very carefully and with an amazing amount of tact, even when the situation may warrant a different type of response.
If a member attacks me in an e-mail, I respond professionally even when it kills me. What I’ve found is sometimes my response prompts them to change their tune and a real conversation often follows. That isn’t *always* the case but it happens often enough.
I received an email from a member a few days ago about a woman she thought was attempting to scam the community with fund raising efforts for her terminally ill son. She had conducted quite a bit of research and shared the results in the email.
I didn’t bash the woman but I did indicate in my reply that I was going to remove the blog from the homepage immediately, investigate further and remove her from the community completely if she was running a scam.
Well, the member who emailed me posted my entire response in a blog warning the community to be leery about the woman in question. I didn’t know she would do that because it was an e-mail between the two of us and quite honestly I was not thinking about it when I responded. But boy am I glad that I’ve programmed myself to be careful with my responses. That could have been ugly.
The point of this post is simply to raise your awareness. You never know where your words will end up, so be careful.
Reputation management should start with you.
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9 comments
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March 28, 2009 at 4:19 pm
Renee
I love your comment that “reputation management begins with you”. It is fabulous advice. It should be the social network motto. I agree; be careful with your email because email is often personal. However, most social networks are public and can introduce you to anyone in the world. It is a chance for you to be the person that you really want to be.
Again, great advice in your post. Thanks for raising the awareness that you are what you write.
March 28, 2009 at 5:55 pm
Jeremy L
Great article. I’m guilty of this more often than I’d like to admit. I am usually very professional, but sometimes you’re accused of things that are so absurd you have to do everything in your power to be civil! As hard as I try to bite my tongue, little bits can slip through. I’ve even been accused of making ‘threats’, when all I felt I was doing was laying out facts of actions I would be taking. Live and learn…
Careful is the key. You never know exactly how your words will be taken!
March 28, 2009 at 6:41 pm
maryann
good points…I have seen many people “mistakenly” react quickly to an email and regret it later. Thanks for the reminder
March 30, 2009 at 6:41 pm
Scott Meis
Great post Angela and so very true. We hear about these incidents of tweets gone awry or emails ending up in the wrong recipient’s inbox. Excellent advice, treat every tweet, blog, email, video, photo, status update or other form of online published content as if it’s going to rank #1 in a Google search forever. We’re all human, we all make mistakes but use common sense before pushing send or post and you should remain safe.
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