January 28, 2006

"chatroom rubbish"

zzzzzz7654223.jpg

So one of the people over at Stormhoek told this to me:

The Stormhoek boys were having a meeting with one of their largest customers, a UK supermarket chain.

After a long presentation explaining what they were trying to do with the blogosphere, an exec at the supermarket called it nothing more than "Chatroom Rubbish".

The guy obviously doesn't get it. So they sent him a paperback copy of The Cluetrain in the hope that it provides him some food for thought.

In supermarkets, everything is a commodity- the management, the products, the customers, the suppliers, the employees, and of course, the supermarket itself.

It's interesting to me that a exec in a commodity business would describe conversations between people who spend money in their stores as "Chatroom Rubbish".

Interesting, but not surprising.

I call this phenomenon "Running up against the Commodity Wall". We bloggers are already very used to it.

Posted by hugh macleod at January 28, 2006 11:05 AM | TrackBack
Comments

Yes, we had similar experiences. Hopefully this guy isn't in a position to torpedo the whatever deal is in the offering permanently.

It's interesting that you refer to supermarkets as being in the commodity business. If I remember correctly, UK supermarkets have long been trying to introduce value added private labels, to overcome just this problem. Here in Canada Loblaws, the equivalent to Tesco's, pushes 'President's Choice.

Of course, shelf space is and always will be a commodity and stuff that doesn't sell will go. This is why supermarkets offer only the illusion of choice. They might sell 100 different makes of white wine, to stay with Stormhoek, but they can only sell what sells. This is where the internet comes in and speciality producers now have a chance to build their own customer base without having to put up with the restrictions of wholesale.

Posted by: Andreas Duess at January 28, 2006 12:44 PM

I actually don't have a problem with commodities per se. Nothing wrong with popping into Wal Mart to buy a new set of jumper cables, when you're driving through a small American town, after 2 days on the road etc.

Posted by: hugh macleod at January 28, 2006 1:08 PM

See the same thing currently happening with Jung von Matt in Germany because of the "Du bist Deutschland" campaign - he called bloggers the toilet walls of the internet.

I think this agency is learning at the moment, that those toilet walls are speaking to each other and communicating.

Next time those Stormhoek people talk to such management, perhaps they can tell them about me: I don't even like wine, but I do know this wine. And although I never looked at that part of the supermarkt in my life, I may be now.

And no, I still will not buy wine. But perhaps something else in that area which catches my eye. :)

Posted by: Nicole Simon at January 28, 2006 1:24 PM

Best quote I received from MSM, when trying to promote the Our Social World conference was "oh its like graffiti".....
As for supermarkets blogging is beneath their radar level at the moment ...

Posted by: Geoff at January 28, 2006 3:29 PM

Actually just thought - did they really say "chatroom rubbish" thats worrying, it means that they are now aware of online activity, so maybe blogging is now quite close to breakthrough!

Posted by: Geoff at January 28, 2006 3:33 PM

Nicole

Some years ago I was contemplating a life in Germany - due to love and all that. I had an interview with Jung von Matt in Hamburg. Never in my entire life have I met anybody who 'got it' less than the guy who interviewed me. I walked out of the meeting stunned. Not only had he not taken to time to prepare for the meeting, a common courtesy, he also had no idea about what is happening in the real world.

All he wanted to see were TV commercials, the last thing I was interested in showing - I wanted to see if JvM and I were singing from the same hymn sheet. In the end I terminated the meeting and walked out, figuring that, in my opinion, not only was the creative director I was talking to a dinosaur, he wasn't even a good ad man. He then had the nerve to berate the HR girl who got me the interview on why she wasted his time with meeting me.

With a bit of luck guys like won't be around for much longer in our industry.

Posted by: Andreas Duess at January 28, 2006 4:01 PM

Why send him the book? He will view it as chatroom rubbish and not deign to open it. They should be telling him the story in a way that addresses his scepticism, not just hoping he'll read the story.

Posted by: john at January 28, 2006 5:49 PM

Geoff

Perhaps it's not that blogs are below the radar for supermarkets at the moment but more a case of blogs being above their level of comprehension?

Posted by: Stuart at January 28, 2006 6:22 PM

Stuart - good point. I will raise it with my supermarket VIP next time I see her. I would imagine blogs just don't appear in supermarket focus groups, where people biggest concerns are about childless /able bodied people parking in their special places.

Posted by: Geoff at January 28, 2006 6:38 PM

Geoff - just think of what a public relations coup a supermarket chain might achieve if they started talking to people on a local level via a blog.

If Google wants to bring search down to the local level then why shouldn't big and small businesses be taking advantage of that and getting into conversation with the local community?

Posted by: Stuart at January 28, 2006 7:32 PM

Oh and a great response to Chatroom Rubbish would have been "Oh, you mean the chat rubbish amongst people that brought down the Berlin Way, that kind of rubbish?"

Posted by: Fraser at January 28, 2006 8:15 PM

Duh !! Berlin Wall.

Posted by: Fraser at January 28, 2006 8:17 PM

It reminds me of the typical thought of people who discovered the existence of blogs relatively late (in the last 12-18 months) and so identify _all_ blogs with the self-indulgent personal diary type. They cannot imagine that is only one way of blogging.

Posted by: Nia at January 29, 2006 8:07 AM

Spotted yesterday at BarCamp Dallas:

Stormhoek Wine!!

:)

Posted by: Mike Orren at January 29, 2006 3:47 PM

You're a true Gentleman. To send him the book as a polite way of introducing him to how the world is working now was a classy move, imho.

It goes without saying, but I'll say it anyway: You've already proven the global influence of blogging...it might have been overkill to publish his name and that of the supermarket chain, just to see how long it would take for word of his ignorance to get back around to him.

Anyway, kudos. And hi from Canada.

Posted by: Jordan at January 30, 2006 6:33 PM