Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 07, 2011
Social media redux
I'm certain that by now, everyone knows about Congressman Anthony Weiner, his social media behavior, and yesterday's press conference. I'm not going to discuss Weiner's immoral and, dare I say it, despicable behavior in his online actions and the ensuing attempt at a coverup. What I do want to mention is that this serves to reiterate one of the important points I mentioned in yesterday's blog post: that anything you say or post is there forever. If you would not want something on the front page of your local tabloid, don't post it anywhere on the Internet. Of course, if you always attempt to behave appropriately, chances are you won't get into such a mess to begin with, but as we say in the business - that is out of scope for this discussion.
Monday, June 06, 2011
Social Media guidelines specific for (re)insurers
With social media here to stay, and many of us (actuaries, cat modelers, and other (re)insurance company personnel) actively involved in the social media on both personal and professional levels, it behooves us to remember certain social niceties. Everything that you post on the Internet is pretty much there for posterity; 50 years from now, the wayback machine will very likely be able to retrieve that one time you posted a picture of yourself at the holiday party—after spiked eggnog #7. My personal, primary rules, whether it be on twitter, linkedin, facebook, wikipedia, or some random bulletin board are:
Mairi Mallon, founder and managing director of rein4ce, and @reinsurancegirl on twitter, has recently authored a detailed post on her blog about this very topic (from which I shamelessly stole the idea). I very highly recommend anyone even tangentially involved in social media read it. Better yet, subscribe to her blog (which can be found in the blogroll at the side of this post). I think her summary is important enough that it bears repetition:
- Never post anything on-line that you would be uncomfortable saying to someone's face in public.
- Never post anything on-line that you would be devastated seeing on the front page of the New York Times.
Mairi Mallon, founder and managing director of rein4ce, and @reinsurancegirl on twitter, has recently authored a detailed post on her blog about this very topic (from which I shamelessly stole the idea). I very highly recommend anyone even tangentially involved in social media read it. Better yet, subscribe to her blog (which can be found in the blogroll at the side of this post). I think her summary is important enough that it bears repetition:
Engaging the social media can be exciting and rewarding, both on a personal and a professional level; make certain that you don't hurt yourself, your image, your integrity, and your future when you do so. Everyone wants to be the next Richard Branson; I'm less certain about who wants to be the next Aleksey Vayner.
- Know and follow our (INSERT LINK TO OWN CORPORATE GUIDELINES) corporate guidelines . The same rules apply online.
- Users are personally responsible for the content they publish on blogs, Facebook LinkedIn, Twitter or any other form of user-generated media.
- Identify yourself—name and, when relevant, role within the organisation—when you discuss company or company-related matters. You must make it clear that you are speaking for yourself and not on behalf of the company.
- Respect copyright, fair use and financial disclosure laws.
- Don’t provide our or another’s confidential or other proprietary information. Ask permission to publish or report on conversations that may be deemed to be private or internal to the company.
- Don’t cite or reference clients, partners or suppliers without their approval. When you do make a reference, where possible link back to the source.
- Don’t use ethnic slurs, personal insults, obscenity, or engage in any conduct that would not be acceptable in our workplace (Mallon 2011).
References:
Mallon, Mairi, “Social Media guidelines — a freebie for insurance and reinsurance bods.” Weblog entry. Reinsurance girl's blog. June 6, 2011. June 6, 2011 (http://www.rein4ce.co.uk/blog/?p=315).
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
R-bloggers
As I decided to try and blog a little more often now, and touch on "R" every now and then, I decided to take R-bloggers up on their standing offer to include R-related feeds at their site. So, everything I tag with "rstats" (you can guess where that came from) should flow through to them. I've added them to my (tiny) blogroll at the side of the blog, but if you just cannot wait to see what they are all about, and I recommend it, you can just go here.
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