echwa.com

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hci – search – arts – design

Which side of the consistency debate are you on?

Just when is it right to accept a free gift or money in exchange for an article or review on a website or a blog? Always, in my opinion, so long as you are open about that transaction and don’t dress your article as anything else than a paid piece of prose.

Michael Gray makes a challenge to the ethics of TechCrunch writer, Sarah Lacy, today in his post about the difference of ethics between types of writers; be they bloggers or journalists. Fair enough.

With spin being the staple of successive Governments and also of traditional offline PR, Media and Business it can hardly be that surprising that these same tactics are employed in the online environment. The sad reality is that payola in all of it’s guises is a publishing fixture and is likely to remain such so long as there are hearts, minds and importantly consumer spending habits at stake.

Aside from the potential infringement of numerous country specific regulatory controls regards honesty and integrity in communications it may not be immediately appreciated that a lot of good writing talent is forced to tow the line in creating biased copy.

The humble writer can be drawn into a murky world of paid constructions through their need to satisfy the ’style’ guidelines of their employer and even perhaps the ‘brand guidelines’ of a brand that may be sponsoring the writing.

Complicating the matter more in the online world is a lack of consensus from the traffic driving search engines in defining where the lines of bias lay, as they themselves are not always completely transparent about their commercial benefits that they relinquish for bias (of positioning, thinking paid inclusion (Microhoo)).

I have worked with a number of demanding clients over the years and it is often taken for granted that clients understand the implications of actions that they demand in an online world; but they seldom do and nor are they keen on listening. Clients are pressured by what their competitors are doing and a need to be seen by their own executives to be responding.

Considerations such as a penalty being applied by a search engine for flouting a search engines definition of acceptable are measured against the risk of being caught out. This is not anything new, search for “Max Clifford” in your favorite engine to see shocking examples of media and populous manipulation.

I also agree that we are well enough into the era of online to understand that there are certain rules that should be adhered to. I do not think that the determining point on this whole issue are for the search engines alone to release their next iteration of how they each respectively determine if a link is valid or not, paid for or not. The argument is far wider than that and consistency is needed:

  • across international law dealing with advertising standards,
  • search engine policy applicable to not just links but persuasive text,
  • search marketing professional adopting a code of practice, and;
  • client organizing groups that are willing to drive change

I beleive that these combined have the power to endeer change to us all. Of course there are more important issues facing us such as plastics in our oceans.

The dreaded first post

Wow, the day has arrived that my new blog design is is complete! Amazingly after so many months of thinking about having my own blog and planning it’s development; wondering truly what I would write it’s now that time!

I have read so many great blog posts over the last few years and have admired the writing prowess of many of their authors. Embarking on the creation of my own blog I thought that it would be a simple matter of picking a subject and writing about it.

That may be all well and good for the seasoned blogger but what about for the new kid on the block? What do you write about when your day job is not based in working in the written arts full-time?

Where did echwa come from?
echwa.com came about after being told a story many years ago, 1999 to be more precise, about a toneless neutral vowel sound in any language – Schwa.

Schwa is a funny non-word that means ‘toneless neutral vowel sound’ it’s origins are from Hebrew.

I really had no idea about how Schwa was meant to be spelled and so it is by humble ignorance that I registered echwa.com as my domain name of choice some years ago.

Soon after registering echwa.com I fell into a career in helping others use technology and discovered a passion for website design, search engine marketing and later for human interaction with technology. Unbeknown to me Schwa would turn out to be quite an important part of my career.

With this in mind I encourage you to start your own blog, even if you have not a clue as to what you will write about. As I see it this blog will provide me a place to keep public my feelings on any number of different topics: about anything that takes my fancy. I hope to post an eclectic mix of commentary and ultimately something to amuse or entertain you.