Best Swedish media blog

The blog award YABA – Yet Another Blog Award – was announced today during the Daytona Sessions in Stockholm. As you may know, this blog was nominated in the category Best Media Blog and the competition was really tough with several great blogs on the list. The winner of the category was Same Same But Different and a big congratulations to Sofia and Niclas. I’m very proud to be in third place and I think it’s quite fantastic that my blog, which is the only one written in English, managed to rank so high. The voting process was entirely in Swedish and the percentage of visitors to this blog that are non-Swedish is as high as 70%.

The entire list, Best Swedish Media Blog:

1. Same Same But Different – 165 votes
2. Mindpark – 149 votes
3. Media Culpa – 110 votes
4. Bisonblog – 109 votes
5. Vassa Eggen – 96 votes
6. Twingly – 54 votes
7. Martin Jönsson – 52 votes
8. Newsdesk PR 2.0 – 49 votes
9. What’s Next in New Media – 41 votes
10. Digmar – 19 votes

Best trend/web blog: Johan Ronnestam.

Best marketing blog: Please Copy Me.

Thanks to all readers who voted for Media Culpa.

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Company offered free breast enlargement to young female bloggers

This story is definitely a candidate for the Social Media Hall of Shame. Q-med is a listed biotech/medical company in Uppsala, north of Stockholm, Sweden that manufactures and sells medical implants. Two weeks ago the company sent a letter to 15 young Swedish female bloggers and offered them treatment during one year with the products Restylane and Macrolane in exchange for writing about the products on their blogs. In other words, Q-med offered young women breast and lip enlargements and treatments against wrinkles free of charge.

One 25 year-old model and blogger accepted the offer from Q-med. In a YouTube video you can see how her lips are injected with Restylane and the treatment is sponsored by Q-med, although that is not disclosed.

– I was contacted by Fredrik Möllersten at Q-Med on Facebook. I had done such a treatment previously which I had written abot on my blog and he asked me if I wanted to test Restylane again, the blogger tells Upsala Nya Tidning.

– Free is good. My readers are interested in this stuff and if Q-Med offer me to test their products for free doesn’t matter, she continues.

On her blog she has at least two YouTube videos of her getting Restylane shots, but nowhere does it say that Q-med pays the bill.

But other women who got the offer were offended. Beatrice Birkeldh is a blogger and a reporter at Expressen. She told UNT:

– I immediately told them that I would never go along with such a suggestion. I think that this is a detestable way to market these products.

Q-med are now backing away from the marketing stunt, after the negative publicity in both mainstream media and local blogs.

– We cannot stand for these offers. The email to these bloggers was an unconsidered initative, says Tommy Gullbo, Marketing Director of Q-med who adds that it will not happen again.

Beatrice Birkeldh published the email from Q-med on her blog and what is says is that she get to use both Restylane and Macrolane during one year but that she is required to write about them “regularly during one year”.

“Hej Beatrice,
Hoppas att allt är bra med dig. Jag jobbar som Global Internet Chef på Q-Med AB som tillverkar, marknadsför och säljer Restylane och Macrolane. Vi ska ta ut 10 personer i Sverige som vi ska sponsra under ett år. Du kommer att få prova Restylane och Macrolane under ett år mot att du skriver om behandlingarna och produkterna regelbundet på din blogg under ett år. Är detta något som vore intressant för din del? För mer information och om du har frågor så kontakta gärna mig.”


This is exactly how not to conduct blogger relations. Obviously it is hard to resist for a young girl when you are offered products worth thousands of kronor without any other effort on your part than to write a few lines on your blog now and then. If the blogger does not reveal that she is being paid to blog about products (Q-med does not mention anything about disclosure in the email), not only does it undermine any credibility the blog might have had, it is also against the Swedish Marketing Practices Act which states that any marketing effort needs to be indentifiable as such.

And when you market beauty products for lip and breast enlargements, of course you need to be extra cautiuos in your market efforts. Reaching out to young women is very likely going to backfire because you will have an ethical debate on your hands, which is exactly what is happening now.

A single shot with Restylane costs between 2,000 and 3,000 SEK and often a patient needs to come back for a refill after 6 months. So the blogger outreach program was at least worth 90,000 SEK for the fifteen bloggers all together, probably more. Money not well invested.

Disclosure: I once owned stock in Q-med, but have not done so for several years.

Blog network Feber launches new design

feber Feber is one of the largest blog networks in Sweden, which includes sites such as gadget blog Prylfeber, fashion blog Modefeber and Mac blog Macfeber. Feber has just implemented a totally new and cool redesign of all the blogs and if you are tired of seeing my little red icon everywhere you can check out Feber to see what I really look like. I am interviewed about the recent surge in Twitter users in Sweden along with Joakim Jardenberg and Fredrik Wass.

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Corporate blogging among listed Nordic companies

Burson-Marsteller, were I work, has surveyed the adoption of corporate blogging among listed companies in the Nordic region, with a market capitalization of more than 1 billion euro. We found that 9.1%, or 12 out of the 132 companies have at least one company sponsored blog. Four of those 12 companies with blogs have two or more blogs associated with the company.

Corporate blogging is much more common among the large corporations in Sweden than in the other Nordic countries. Ten of the 56 companies (17.9%) that are listed on the Swedish Large Cap list have one or more corporate blogs. That is an even higher percentage than the 14.8% of Fortune 500 companies with corporate blogs, identified in a separate survey done by Burson-Marsteller in February and March this year. Finland and Norway are lagging considerably with only one company each with a corporate blog (of 27 and 25 respectively) while in Denmark none of the 24 companies have a corporate blog.

corporatebloggingwhitepaper A white paper can be downloaded here (pdf) and graphs and more info found here (although the press release is in Swedish).

Other findings:
– Nine out of the twelve companies have commenting functionality enabled on at least one blog.
– Three out of the twelve companies have trackbacks enabled on at least one blog.
– Nine out of the twelve companies have RSS enabled on at least one blog.
– Two out of twelve companies have social bookmarks enabled on at least one blog.
– Industrials is the sector with most blogging companies (4), followed by Telecommunications Services (3), Information Technology (2), Consumer Discretionary (1), Financials (1) and Energy (1).

This research was conducted during August and Sept 2008 and studied proactive blogging activities within the Nordic Large Cap list which includes corporations with a market capitalization of at least 1 billion euro and that are listed in Denmark, Finland, Norway or Sweden (as of July 18, 2008).

* Tele2 and West Siberian Resources Ltd. have shut down their blogs since the research was performed.

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Old data in new study on Swedes and blogs

SOM-institutet, the SOM Institute at Göteborg University, has released the results of a study about blogging – “Bloggers – who are they?”. In my view, the researcher Annika Bergström has had a somewhat skeptic attitude towards the role of blogs in previous comments. In an interview in Dagens Nyheter in 2006 she said about our media consumption that “there are changes, but they are slow, there will be no revolution”. She also commented to IDG.se that the differences in blog adoption between Sweden and the USA is due to strong Swedish tradition to read newspapers.

– Swedes turn to traditional dailies online for information. And we don’t get more time just because new media appear.

A year ago she said that “not many people read blogs, and the ones that do are often the ones that blog themselves”.

This skepticism is visible also in the “new” study. I write “new”, because the data was collected during the fall of 2007. In the report, Bergström writes:

“The survey was conducted during the fall of 2007 and it is likely that the use of blogs have increased slightly since then, but if we look at what we know from the development of other areas of online behavior we should expect only small changes.”

The study says that only 2 percent of Swedes wrote a blog each week and that 15 percent read a blog weekly. Good for us then that the World Internet Institute the other day released it’s fresh report about how Swedes use the internet, so we have figures for 2008 to compare with.

WII says that 5 percent of the population blog and 26 percent read blogs, which according to me is more than just a “small change”.

When respondents in the SOM survey were asked if they had read a blog during the last 12 months, 39 percent said yes. Still the final comment in the report reads:

“The previously mentioned debate about the importance of blogs, is to a high degree about what a small portion of the population engage in. With that said, there is nothing that says that single blogs can have a larger influence in society.”

This old data seems to appeal to TU, the Swedish Newspaper Publishers’ Association. On its site TU comments on the “latest figures” on blogging like this:

“Nowadays it seems like everyone is blogging. But it is not entirely true. Two percent of Swedes blog each week. And 15 percent reads what they write. The so called blogosphere is, in other words, smaller than the impression we get from the media attention.”

Stats from WII suggests that 1.9 million Swedes read blogs so I think it is safe to say that blogs are starting to reach a significant portion of the population. In my view, this study is based on data that is too old to really have any real value, and it doesn’t do newspapers any good to take these figures as a sign that blogs and other online channels are no big threat to them.

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