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March 28th, 2007

The real question: How to keep Microsoft on the transparency track

Posted by Mary Jo Foley @ 6:28 am

Categories: Corporate strategy

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The April Wired Magazine cover story on "Radical Transparency," with its case study on Microsoft's Channel 9 and blogging initiatives, is making some waves, but for the wrong reasons.

Some media members are simply shocked that Microsoft's PR team keeps dossiers on the reporters and bloggers who cover the company. That's old news, folks. And not even very interesting news.

A few years back, I had a chance to see my "dossier," which Microsoft's PR team inadvertently sent to another reporter, who forwarded it to me. (Thanks, Dan Gillmor!) Initially, it was alarming to see what I considered to be punishment plans for various stories I'd written. But nothing in my file was all that surprising. Among their other duties, PR people are paid by their clients to get stories placed — and, if negative, hopefully killed — on behalf of their clients.

(If I had reason to create my own PR dossier, detailing the my dealings with various Microsoft marketing-communications and public-relations team members, my ratings and payback plans would be far more dastardly.)

The more thought-provoking piece of Wired's package, at least to me, is the saga of how Microsoft's blogging and video-casting strategy came to be. Several Microsoft execs — from the recently retired head of Platforms and Services Jim Allchin, to Corporate VP of Developer & Platform Evangelism Sanjay Parthasarathy — championed the transparency concept. They encouraged their employees to blog and allow the Channel 9 team to record interviews with some of Microsoft's best known developers.

I read the thousands of Microsoft MSDN and TechNet blogs and (less happily) spend hours watching these videos on a regular basis. Sure, there's some fluff, as well as some indecipherably geeky bits, in there. But many of them have been invaluable in helping me — and, I'd wager, Microsoft partners and customers — better understand Microsoft.

The real question, to me, is whether Microsoft employees will be encouraged to continue being transparent.

With many of Microsoft's old management regime retiring/quitting/moving on, will Microsoft employees be allowed to keep blogging as openly as they have been? Will self-policing set in? Or, worse, will bosses start cracking down on employees who dare to acknowledge the existence of a service pack, a manager's resignation or a shift in strategy? Will Microsoft attempt to extend any kind of blogging/transparency crackdown to its Most Valuable Professionals (MVPs), featured communities and other constituencies, claiming that it's for everyone's best? I've heard and seen things that lead me to believe these things are already starting to happen.

I'd argue that corporate transparency — just like the idea of "giving away" news for free on the Web — is one of those concepts that turns accepted thinking on its head, but ends up being the right and logical choice.

What do you think? Is Microsoft's transparency campaign destined to be a short-lived experiment that will gradually fade away?

Mary Jo FoleyMary Jo has covered the tech industry for more than 20 years. Don't miss a single post. Subscribe via Email or RSS. You can also follow Mary Jo on Twitter.

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Related Discussions on TechRepublic

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  • Most Recent of 15 Talkback(s)
Blog on SeanO
And he's not kidding. As "over my dead body" as I am about the need and requirement for MVPs to be independent.. SeanO inspires me to ensure that line in the sand is very exact and straight.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Bitzie Posted on: 03/29/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
I have concluded there is a new monopoly strategy afoot  WinnebagoBoy | 03/28/07
Interesting idea, but communication monopolies get busted too  YinToYourYang-22527499 | 03/28/07
Microsoft has grown wise to the legal dangers of Monopoly  WinnebagoBoy | 03/28/07
The wages of transparency  jcg_z | 03/28/07
Using blogs to "trounce" Microsoft  Mary Jo FoleyZDNet Moderator | 03/28/07
I thought transparency was forced by the DOJ  YinToYourYang-22527499 | 03/28/07
um, no...  BFD | 03/28/07
depends on how MS cynical one is  WinnebagoBoy | 03/28/07
MS Bloggers: Quality vs. Quantity  Mary Jo FoleyZDNet Moderator | 03/28/07
Sure  BFD | 03/28/07
I hope transparency remains  stevecla | 03/28/07
Blog on MVPs...Blog on!!  seanod@... | 03/28/07
Blog on SeanO  Bitzie | 03/29/07
MVPs should speak up  craig@... | 03/29/07
The owner of the blog site at www.msmvps.com would like you to know ...  Bitzie | 03/29/07

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