Corporate Social Media Case Study: Rubbermaid
Rubbermaid launched a site, EasyFindLids.com, for people to share stories about food storage information. The Easy Find Lid is a leftovers container where the lid clips on to the base so that the pair is never separated. Most of the submissions are stories about misplacing containers or lids as well as disorganization in general. In addition to sharing the stories on their website, Rubbermaid has decided to post them on Facebook.
Each week, Rubbermaid awards five people a set of the new containers and at the end of October, plans to award a $500 grand prize to whomever they select as having the best story.
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Disclosure: Rubbermaid is a Social Media Business Council member (and an awesome one at that!), but even if they weren’t, we’d write about them anyway.
Forrester came out with a report today on trust and corporate blogging. We won’t mince words: it’s tough.
According to the report (authored by Josh Bernoff, who co-wrote Groundswell), only 16% of US adults trust corporate blogs. We can’t say we’re all that surprised. The themes of trust and transparency have been core issues for the Blog Council since its founding. Earlier this year, we released the Disclosure Best Practices Toolkit as a resource for helping companies establish their own policies and ensure corporate social media is conducted honestly and ethically.
What’s clear is that while there is a lot of work still to do, corporate blogs do work. The report specifically highlighted some examples of corporate blogs that are trustworthy — Dell, Rubbermaid, and Microsoft (all Blog Council members, by the way) — because they put their customer first and exist to help solve their problems. We completely agree. In fact, every single one of the speakers at BlogWell in September indicated that the purpose of their blogs first and foremost was to listen to their customers and help make their lives better.
Here are some other examples of trustworthy blogs, too (and yes, they are all Blog Council members):
The Blog Council encourages everyone to support ethical, honest, transparent corporate blogging.
Learn more:
Josh Bernoff’s blog post about the report
Get a copy of the report