This is one from awhile ago, but the topic has been coming up a lot lately, particularly in light of the post on click farms. So I thought it might be time to re-heat it, here you go -
I guess this is a bit of an open appeal to the watch brands out there to NOT continue to do business with the online magazines, blogs, and "influencers" that require financial reimbursement for coverage. One of these outlets has at least indicated that a certain news piece or review was "sponsored" but think about that for a minute - a brand is PAYING money to have their watch reviewed by someone who refuses to do the review UNLESS THEY KNOW THEY WILL GET PAID BEFORE THEY EVEN WRITE IT?!? How in God's name is that even remotely going to be an honest review? And does this mean that although a brand might have news, if the services weren't paid for, it won't be covered? It's an interesting question -
I guess this is a bit of an open appeal to the watch brands out there to NOT continue to do business with the online magazines, blogs, and "influencers" that require financial reimbursement for coverage. One of these outlets has at least indicated that a certain news piece or review was "sponsored" but think about that for a minute - a brand is PAYING money to have their watch reviewed by someone who refuses to do the review UNLESS THEY KNOW THEY WILL GET PAID BEFORE THEY EVEN WRITE IT?!? How in God's name is that even remotely going to be an honest review? And does this mean that although a brand might have news, if the services weren't paid for, it won't be covered? It's an interesting question -
"If a brand has a new release but they didn't pay blogger/instagrammer/influencer X, did it really happen?"
Little inside tip for you folks running the brands and making
PR/Marketing decisions, most of us who cover you know which blogs,
"instagrammers", online magazines, "influencers", etc. CHARGE fees to
cover you. In fact, we even know the amounts because they have been so
"professional" as to create pricing sheets. And most of us find it
funny that you continue to not only fund these knuckle-heads, but to
listen to you crow about this purchased coverage as if you'd just won
some sort of award of excellence.
In fairness, for better or worse, the watch business is a business. I
got involved out of irrational, uncontrollable, often unrequited love.
And to this day that is what keeps my going. NOT the all-expense-paid
trip to the Hamptons, NOT to learn to surf in Hawaii, NOT to stick it to
some young entrepreneur trying to launch his/her watch by charging
him/her thousands of dollars that he/she can't easily part with in
exchange for just a mention on my blog.
It is NOT supposed to be this way. It is deceptive, and it is dishonest. And you have the power to stop it.
So watch brands both big and small, I've been told that perhaps I have
an irrational desire to see things a certain way. To want people to at
least attempt to operate in an honest, and straightforward manner. And
in complete truth - had I been the first puppy at the feeding dish
getting fat while the runts died from malnutrition, I might live in that
same ethical place that the people you bankroll do, swanning about to
your events, demanding payment for "service", playing the game. But if
I'm honest, I think that deep down you are all better than this. And
your brands are better than this. So may I suggest that just as we say
when you visit a national park in the US that you "Please don't feed the
bears". And we change it to:
"Please don't feed the Hipsters"
As I said in a previous post - paying for advertising, the occasional
press junket, and goodwill swag? Fair enough. Brokering coverage in an
online magazine, blog, etc.? That is not real coverage. And like any
abusive relationship, the longer you keep giving in to the bully, the
longer they will be able to manipulate and bully you.
I would like to leave you with a quote from one of my favorite all-time
movies - Millers Crossing. In this scene, Johnny Casper is complaining
about paying to "fix" a boxing match, and having his fixed fight become a
losing proposition because another person will "sell" the information
to another group regarding the fixed outcome of the fight. I use this
example because I personally feel that it is endemic to the watch
business. And frankly, it shouldn't be.
"It's gettin' so a
businessman can't expect no return from a fixed
fight. Now if you can't trust a fix, what can
you trust? For a good return you gotta go
bettin' on chance, and then you're back with
anarchy. Right back inna jungle. On account of
the breakdown of ethics. That's why ethics is
important. It's the grease makes us get along,
what separates us from the animals, beasts a
burden, beasts a prey. Ethics. Whereas (insert person you paid for coverage) is a horse of a different color ethics-
wise. As in, he ain't got any."
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