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.

Aftonbladet accidentally reveals winner of blog award

The Swedish tabloid Aftonbladet and the blog portal Bloggportalen.se are hosting the “Stora Bloggpriset” gala event tonight in Stockholm (“the Grand Blog Award”). A series of awards were handed out to the most popular blogs in categories like fashion, politics and technology. Many prominent Swedish bloggers were present at Nalen tonight to find out who won the different awards. But one winner had already been known during the day when Aftonbladet accidentally published the winner in the sports category at lunch time. The story that Marcus Birro won the award showed up in Google News and in RSS readers several hours before the event even started.

Screendump found here.

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Forget microblogging – here comes the nanoblog

Sometimes the craziest thoughts you have are the ones that become reality. In December 2006 I posted a tongue-in-cheek post with predictions for 2007. My ambitions were to do a similar post with predictions for 2008, but I never got around to finish it. But the initial thoughts are still lying as a draft from Jan 2, 2008.

Here is the first of my predictions:

January: the microblogging platforms Twitter and Jaiku see a dramatic drop in the number of users when they migrate to the latest hype – nanoblogging platform Quark Xpress, which allows users to post supershort messages that are 14 characters or less. The nanoblogging trend lasts only a couple of weeks until the picoblogging platform Antiquark is launched, and by then messages have become so short that no-one understands each other anymore and instead people start talking to each other IRL.

And now, a year later, a Swedish nanoblog has been launched, simply named nanoblogg.se which only lets you blog one word. Now, how long will it take before someone launches the picoblog?

I am also waiting for this prediction from 2007 to come true, or maybe it already exists?

* Linden Labs launches Third Life within Second Life, in which the avatars of Second Life are able to create digital 3D representations of themselves, so called avatars. This is the first Third Life to be launched within Second Life. The currency of Third Life is called London dollars, which causes an uproar among English avatars.

Update: A discussion on the microblog (!) Bloggy reveals that picoblogg.se may already be on its way.

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Ruined in a day, or how the conversation left Jaiku

“Listen
I may be wrong but you’re missing
There’s something wrong you could say
Ruined in a day”

The lyrics above are from Ruined In A Day by New Order, a tune that quickly sprang to mind when I watched the development of the micro blogging service Jaiku today. You see, I believe something has changed over the course of the weekend. A few days ago a new Swedish micro blog called Bloggy opened up for the public and the timing just could not have been better. With Google abandoning Jaiku and a wave of interest among both users and media for micro blogging in general, the market conditions were perfect for a local challenger to Twitter. And let’s face it, Google hasn’t done much to please us Jaiku lovers since they acquired the service in 2007. jaiku_logo

Now, I’m quite aware that Sweden is not the center of the social media universe, but the community that has grown around Jaiku has been very local and we affectionately call it “the bubble”. Our little bubble has been able to keep together and hold up well against the Twitter invasion, although many of us have chosen a schizophrenic approach with presence in both worlds. That is, until now.

During the weekend, Morris Packer, one of the influential Jaiku users in our bubble, suddenly proclaimed that he wanted to move from Jaiku to Bloggy. With the help of several positive articles about Bloggy in mainstream media, a flood of users joined Bloggy on Sunday and today, or at least they started following each other’s feeds in large numbers. That wouldn’t be any problem, but it seems that the transition to Bloggy has already had an effect on Jaiku. It has been very quiet today and instead of the usual buzz and commenting we have seen that people started to cross-post from Bloggy to Jaiku (notice the “bloggy.se” at the end of each post) and many of these posts are entirely without comments in the Jaiku feed. My guess is that people left comments on Bloggy instead but I have no proof to back up my claims.

bloggy jaiku

Of course it is still too soon to pull the plug on Jaiku but Jonas Leijon, the entrepreneur behind Bloggy, is completely integrated with the Swedish social media crowd and listens to the wishes of the users. A stark contrast to the absent owners of Jaiku.

Maybe it is just a sign of curiosity and people are trying out the new service. So I hope that I’m wrong because I’m not ready to move to a new service just yet. But if the trend continues I don’t see I have much choice, especially since Bloggy is developing rapidly with a bunch of nice features that Jaiku is lacking.

Either way, today Jaiku has been an empty shell. Will people return? Whatever the answer is, it is fascinating to study how little it takes for a whole community to shift to a new and cooler place.

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Strategies for choosing Twitter handle

twitter logo

Micro blogging has really taken off in Sweden the last month, with both political parties, brands and traditional media joining Twitter. A Swedish micro blog service called Bloggy.se also opened up for the public recently. With more people signing up to for example Twitter – the total number now somewhere around 6 million users – it will become increasingly difficult to find a good username, or “Twitter handle”. And since micro blogs rank high in Google, your personal brand will benefit from putting some thought into your user names. As an example, in a Google search for “kullin”, three of the top ten hits are my micro blog accounts. In other words, time to sign up to Twitter now, if you don’t want to be know as “3bob_68” in the future.

Here are some advice about how to choose Twitter handle, gathered from the blogosphere.

1. One name
Services blend together and with a growing friends list it will be hard for your followers to remember if your handle is “joesmith” on Twitter and “j_smith” on Jaiku. Try to choose a name that is available in most of the services you sing up to. Of course, that makes it even harder to find a handle that is available, but if you do, your friends will instantly recognize you across the web.

2. Real name
Your full name or a variation of it will make it easier for people to recognize you at a conference or event. It also treats your name like a brand. Every time you tweet, you promote brand awareness for your brand. [Taken from Hubspot]

3. Short is sweet
With only 140 characters to use, every letter is valuable. It’s not generally an issue but when people want to reply to you or retweet your posts, the handle “shel” is way better than “matsandersson”. At least five of my friends have changed their Twitter handles recently and without knowing their reasons for doing so, I noticed that they have all chosen shorter handles.

4. Avoid numbers and underscore
Underscores and numbers give the impression that your first choice was taken, or it gives the appearance that you aren’t putting enough thought into your username to think of something unique. [Taken from Flyteblog and Hubspot]

5. Your blog name
If you already have a blog with a name that is well known in your community, using it as a Twitter handle makes Twitter a natural extension of your blog (like “problogger”).

6. Continuity
If you already have a nickname that your are known by on forums or other networks, it might be the best choice to keep it also on Twitter.

7. A combination of your name and your company
If you will be the only person representing your company on Twitter—and you do not plan to make a company Twitter account—this is a great way to represent you and your company at the same time. [Taken from Hubspot]

8. A combination of your name and your industry
Use this type of handle if you would like people to remember the industry in which you work. This way people will always associate you with your specialty, and it’s a good baseline to develop thought leadership. [Taken from Hubspot]

The good thing with Twitter is that you are able to change your handle after signing up without losing your network.

And finally, it’s ok to pick a handle with attitude, but if you want to be known as “keyinfluencer“, be prepared that the fall will be dramatic if you don’t act like the social media expert you position yourself as. The Ketchum/Twitter story is quite amazing.

Footnote: I am @kullin on Twitter.

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IKEA brings change to the oval office

Just in time for the presidential inauguration of Barack Obama on Jan 20, IKEA yesterday opened up their Embrace Change website. It cleverly piggybacks on the historical moment when Obama will be sworn as the next president of the USA. On the site you can furnish the oval office with IKEA furniture and then send your suggestion to the White House. Very clever. And doesn’t it look great with a bunk bed in the oval office?

embracechange

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