Making our industry look good!
Friday, March 28th, 2008
I recently read and got a few good laughs about the drama with Video Professor from a few months back. The basic gist is that Video Professor is suing more than 100 anonymous Internet posters over derogatory comments that they made about Video Professor’s business. That’s right, suing anonymous internet posters on the site infomercialscams.com. From arstechnica:
The company’s federal complaint is a strange read, since it does not identify even a single false and defamatory statement; it simply asserts the existence of such statements somewhere on The Interwebs. Despite that, the company was able to obtain a subpoena to obtain the information it is seeking.
Unfortunately it is instances like these that can certainly propagate the image of infomercials (and the products behind them) as non-legitimate business. It certainly signals a problem when a company gets a lot of negative feedback on the web (and 615 complaints with the BBB, albeit most of them resolved) and can often hurt other marketers using the same medium.
So what ARE marketers to do about anonymous web feedback? For starters you can play defense - respond to every complaint, constantly monitor via search engines what boards are messaging about your product, and actively seek to make the wrongs right. For long term success though you have to play offense - that means having a great product, building a great brand that meets a consumer need, and empowering your employees to build lifetime customers. It’s easier said then done but probably better than finding yourself in the position of the founder of Video Professor:
“I personally do not believe that you can be anonymous and bash people and get away with it under the First Amendment. I will stay with this case, and I will get the names that I am requesting. I will pursue this until the Supreme Court tells me I can’t get them.”
Personally I think heading all the way to the Supreme Court to “get them” is not quite the ideal customer relationship dynamic I’d be hoping for.







infomercial you are very clearly choosing to do so. So why do people choose to watch these often ridiculous selling pitches? Entertainment and Education. Who doesn’t get a kick out of the shows like the