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SocialMedia.org Video Case Studies Andy Sernovitz Social Media Ethics Briefing: Staying Out of Trouble This video is from BlogWell San Francisco June 20, 2011 socialmedia.org/blogwell SocialMedia.org Case Studies This presentation is from BlogWell Boston October 22, 2013 socialmedia.org/blogwell

BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

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In his BlogWell Boston presentation, SocialMedia.org CEO Andy Sernovitz shares his recommendations on how to stay safe and ethical in social media. Andy covers the latest FTC updates, the fundamentals of proper disclosure, and how to make sure your agencies and vendors comply with your standards.

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Page 1: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

SocialMedia.orgVideo Case Studies

Andy Sernovitz

Social Media Ethics Briefing:Staying Out of Trouble

This video is from

BlogWellSan FranciscoJune 20, 2011

socialmedia.org/blogwell

SocialMedia.orgCase Studies

This presentation is from

BlogWellBoston

October 22, 2013socialmedia.org/blogwell

Page 2: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

Social Media

Disclosure & Ethics

for Big Brands

Page 3: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

The secret to success

in social media:

Trust

Page 4: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

The difference between

honesty and sleazery:

Disclosure

Page 5: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

THIS IS THE LAW

Page 6: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

and it's not new

Page 7: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

3 + 1 Rules for

Safe Social Media Outreach

1. Require disclosure and truthfulness in social media

2. Monitor the conversation and correct misstatements

3. Create social media policies and training

+ Don't pay for it

Page 8: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

10 Magic Words

I work for __________________, and this is my personal opinion.

Page 9: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

Who are you?

Were you paid?

Is it an honest opinion based on a real experience?

Page 10: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

Clear and Conspicuous to the Average Reader

Obvious disclosure

Up front

Don’t lie to your mom

Page 11: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

2013 FTC Warning

Stop ignoring us

Stop faking it

If you can’t be honest, don’t do it

Page 12: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

Fake disclosure fails

#spon = #bs

bit.ly/ad_12

“Native Ads”

fake.url/teenytinyinfo

Page 13: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

Brands are 100% liable

Page 14: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

Training and Education

The Biggest Risk

&

A Safe Place

Page 15: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

Disclosure Best Practices Toolkit

socialmedia.org/disclosure

• Checklists for every

situation

• Customize for your team

• Disclosure of Identity

• Personal and Unofficial

Participation

• Truthfulness

• Advocacy Campaigns

• Agency/Contractor Disclosure

• Vendor Questionnaire

• Policies and Training

Page 16: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

We have a chance to do something good

Page 17: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz
Page 18: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

Save your brand

Save your reputation

Save your job

Page 19: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

Brand Pride

Page 20: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

Raise your standards

Anything that makes an ad look like a

not-ad is wrong

If you have to disclose it, it's probably deceptive

Page 21: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

FTC says: The need for a disclosure is really a warning

sign that [it] may contain some element of

deception. Rather than focusing on ... the whole

disclosures rigmarole, how about stepping back

and ... get rid of the need for a disclosure in the

first place? We’re not sayin’. We’re just sayin’.

Page 22: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

If you have to ask, the answer is no

It’s easier to be honest

Pass it on

Page 23: BlogWell Boston Social Media Ethics Briefing, presented by Andy Sernovitz

Learn more about past and upcoming BlogWells

socialmedia.org/blogwell

This video is from

BlogWellSan FranciscoJune 20, 2011

socialmedia.org/blogwell

SocialMedia.orgCase Studies

This presentation is from

BlogWellBoston

October 22, 2013socialmedia.org/blogwell