| Recent
Articles |
EU Fines Microsoft Record £680m 'To Close Dark... The European Union imposed a record €899m (£680m) fine on Microsoft yesterday for imposing unreasonable prices on rivals for access to its dominant Windows software. The company is considering an appeal...
Meet Mozilla's Chief Lizard Wrangler Mitchell Baker has one of the best job titles in computing: she's chief lizard wrangler at Mozilla, creator of the Firefox web browser, which has a reptilian mascot named after Godzilla. If I ever had a fancy dress...
Elderly to Benefit from 'Fuzzy Logic' Research Technology aimed at improving care and quality of life for the elderly will receive a boost with a major project looking at computational intelligence. Leicester's...
ID Cards: £1,000 Fine for Skipping Biometric Scans Penalties ranging from £125 for not notifying the government of the loss of an ID card to £250 for not applying for a card or missing an appointment...
|
|
|
02.28.08
Business Adoption Of Social Media
By Shel Holtz
Business adoption of social media: It's not about employee rights
A caller in a recent episode of "For Immediate Release" (via BlogTalk Radio) was something of a revelation. Evidently, there are those who believe the counsel I and other communication consultants give to organizations about the adoption of social media is based on a fundamental belief in an employees' right to do whatever they want.
Not so.
Like our caller, I believe that company management has the right to impose whatever rules on employees it believes are in the company's best interests (within the limits of employment law and other relevant regulations). The workplace is not a democracy. I also believe that companies should make decisions based on their best interests, which ultimately should accrue to the owners of the business (investors, for the most part, including those retirees whose pensions are tied up in funds managed by large financial institutions).
My job-since I became an organizational communicator in the mid-1970s and continuing through today-is counseling organizations on communication practices that will enhance their bottom lines. In short, I represent my clients. I am not an employee advocate.
However...
The leadership of organizations frequently want to make decisions that are not in the best interest of the organization. That is why companies employ counselors, either internally or externally. Lawyers counsel on legal issues. Public relations practitioners provide counsel on matters of reputation. Companies do business only with the consent of their constituents. If they lose that consent, constituents can create obstacles ranging from legislation and regulation to strikes and boycotts.
Public relations is the practice of managing an organization's relationships with those constituents. Companies pay communicators in order to help them figure out the best way to do that. Sometimes companies take that advice, sometimes they don't.
My position on employee engagement in social media is based on my belief that doing so will produce far greater benefit-in the form of enhanced constituent relations-than risk, particularly when it is managed strategically. There are many dimensions to these benefits, some of the most important of which include the following:
Contiue reading this article...
About the Author:
Shel Holtz is principal of Holtz Communication + Technology which focuses on helping organizations apply online communication capabilities to their strategic organizational communications.
As a professional communicator, Shel also writes the blog a shel of my former self.
|