Showing posts with label Gilbert Gottfried. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gilbert Gottfried. Show all posts

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Corporate Death By Twitter

Looks like the Death By Twitter curse has crossed over from Hollywood celebrities to corporate America.  The Wall Street Journal reported this week that the CFO of fashion retailer Francesca’s Holding Corp., Gene Morphis, was fired for his social media musings.
It is not clear if there is a certain company policy that Mr. Morphis violated with his tweets.  What is clear, however, is that the company was unhappy enough to fire him as he “improperly communicated company information through social media.”
The culprits?  Tweets from his account @theoldcfo (which is still live, by the way) including:
-          Earnings released.  Conference call completed.  How do you like me now Mr. Shortie?
-          Board meeting.  Good numbers=Happy Board.
-          Roadshow completed.  Sold $275 million of secondary shares.  Earned my pay this week.
-          Dinner w/ Board tonite.  Used to be fun.  Now one must be on guard every second.
The scariest thing about this Death By Twitter is that none of the tweets are THAT bad.  True, some give financial numbers, reference the board, and don’t ask me who “Mr. Shortie” is; but nothing is horrendous.  Twitter firings we’ve seen in the past have typically been overtly offensive.  Remember Gilbert Gottfried being fired as the Aflac voice due to tweets joking about the tragic tsunami in Japan?  Or, perhaps you recall CNN’s senior editor Octavia Nasr being canned after tweeting her respect for the deceased Sayyed Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah, who the AP called “staunchly anti-American and linked to bombings that killed more than 260 Americans”.
What we learn from Morphis’s tweets is that it doesn’t take malicious intent or blatantly provocative commentary to constitute corporate Death by Twitter.  Sometimes, it happens by slow, insidious over-sharing. 

Friday, April 15, 2011

Death by Twitter


How is it that a career can live or die in 140 characters?  In the last few months we have seen several celebrities torpedo (to use a Charlie Sheen phrase) their own careers in as little as 1 tweet.  Recently American Psycho author, Bret Easton Ellis dropped the Twitter bomb "I like the idea of 'Glee' but why is it that every time I watch an episode I feel like I've stepped into a puddle of HIV?" I have a feeling his book sales are going to be dropping faster than his tweets.

Gilbert Gottfried is another casualty when he was fired as the spokesperson of Aflac after he tweeted extremely horrible jokes after the tragic earthquake and tsunami hit Japan.  Even though he took them down and apologized... death by Twitter.

Today films, actors, books and music all live and die by public opinion.  Because of social media, the media has lost control of the media.  I was having a conversation with a prominent reporter the other day who was upset because her paper's website allows comments under her articles and people... oh my gosh wait for it... have different opinions than she does!

And then there's Charlie Sheen.  He is the exception to the rule... every rule has one.  His #winning, #TigersBlood and #troll rants should have brought him down, but it revived his spiraling career for a tour of crazy!  Unfortunately some of the stuff he said and tweeted about Warners, CBS and Chuck Lorre have made his chances of returning to Two and a Half Men a million to one, but he managed to grab the public.

And that's the secret to social media.  It's not some deep rooted mystery.  It's about grabbing the attention of the public and well, entertaining them.

The rest:
Taco Bell = death by Twitter
Dominos = death by YouTube via Twitter (to be revived by new recipe)
Lindsey Lohan = multiple deaths by Twitter (Twitter zombie)
Chris Brown = death by Twitter (and his general craziness)