About


  • NevOn
    NevOn is the archive weblog of Neville Hobson, a British business communicator based in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, a record of commentary and conversations from December 2002 until 22 February 2006. This site is no longer updated - please visit www.nevillehobson.com.
  • About Neville Hobson
  • Gmail email

Podcast

  • For Immediate Release
    For Immediate Release: The Hobson & Holtz Report - A bi-weekly podcast for professional communicators from Neville Hobson, ABC, and Shel Holtz, ABC.


    Subscribe to podcast RSS feed


    Subscribe via iTunes


    Subscribe via Yahoo! Podcasts


    Enter your email address* and click "Vote" to cast your vote for FIR at Podcast Alley:

    *email used for vote verification.

2006 Public Speaking

  • Delivering The New PR – How Blogs, Podcasts and RSS Can Work For You - Manchester, UK, February 15, 2006

    New Communications Forum 2006 - Palo Alto, USA, March 1-3, 2006

    Blogging for Business - London, April 4, 2006

    Summit for the Future on Risk 2006 - Amsterdam, May 3-5, 2006

    IABC International Conference 2006 - Vancouver, Canada, June 4-7, 2006

2005 Public Speaking

  • Les Blogs 2.0 - Paris, December 5-6, 2005

    IABC EuroComm 2005 - Paris, Nov 30 - Dec 2, 2005

    Melcrum workshop on New Media - London, November 29, 2005

    Making the News: Blogging, Really Simple Syndication and The New PR - Sunderland, UK, November 18, 2005

    Emerce E-Day - Amsterdam, October 12, 2005

    Global PR Blog Week 2.0 - September 19-23, 2005

    PodcastCon UK - September 17, 2005

    The Communication Directors' Forum

    New Communications Forum 2005 - Napa, USA, January 26-27, 2005

Corporate Blogs


  • Comprehensive list of corporate blogs on The New PR Wiki. Also there: list of CEO blogs, product blogs, podcasts and more.

Blogroll


Connections

  • Listed on BlogShares
  • Blogarama - The Blog Directory
  • The British Bloggers Directory.
  • FeedDemon RSS & Atom Reader
  • Kinja, the weblog guide
  • Get Firefox!
  • Powered by TypePad
  • We're Not Afraid
  • Download iPodder, the cross-platform podcast receiver



« Podcasting described simply | Main | Hidden dangers with public Wi-Fi »

21 January 2005

Taking a stand on ethics

This morning, I left a lengthy comment on Jay Rosen's blog in his Bloggers Are Missing in Action... post on ethics in PR that generated lots of blog posts and comments on posts yesterday (go to Rosen's post to see the many comments there, and see my post yesterday for a recap on what this is all about).

In my comment to Rosen's post, I said:

[...] What surprises and disappoints me is the absolute lack of meaningful comment from any of the professional associations. The PRSA or IABC, for instance (I don't count as 'meaningful' any statement made so far by the PRSA). Organizations like these are the "ethical glue" that binds the profession together (yes, a bit like The Force) to provide a framework for how people in the profession behave professionally. As with any grouping of people, there will be bad apples, in which case it is one of the profession's responsibilities to weed them out.

I've already been accused of being naive with such an opinion (which is fine: I blog, so I have a thick skin), but if our professional associations don't take a clear stand on behaviours that run counter to the codes of ethics those associations stand by, why should anyone else? Indeed, what's the point of ethics codes if some don't abide by them - and then get away with it. Worse, they're clearly seen as getting away with it.

I've been a member of IABC for over 15 years. I will continue to be a member and a highly committed one at that. Each year when I renew my membership, I have to re-affirm my commitment to IABC's code of ethics - which, in my view, is a benchmark standard. I actually do read it each time. (Which also makes me wonder - is anyone at Ketchum an IABC member? I haven't checked but, if so, how does what the people concerned did gel with IABC's code?)

What I want to see, and very soon, is a clear stand by my professional association on this ethical issue.

Also this morning, I read Jeremy Pepper's post late yesterday on this sorry affair.

In his post, Jeremy says:

[...] As already noted, PRSA put out a tepid response against Ketchum, the Council of PR firms defended Ketchum ... and IABC said nothing. These are the three biggest PR associations, but they are not doing it for PR.

Now, IABC is just suprising. The chairman of IABC, David Kistle, has a blog. The Ketchum story broke two weeks ago in USA Today, but Kistle's most recent blog post reads like a church newsletter. We have new accredited PR people! We're doing a webinar! Aren't we neat!

The chairman of IABC has a venue, a forum to speak out on industry issues. Why didn't he use that venue to speak out against the first big issue affecting public relations in 2005?

It's a good question, Jeremy. Perhaps this post on Wednesday in the Business Week Tech Beat blog might lead to an answer.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8345591f769e200d8343a756053ef

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Taking a stand on ethics:

Comments

Just to continue the dialogue on this subject, I add another blog, which is addressing something similar. Joho the Blog posted a thread today called "Blogs as a Moral Presence" - http://www.hyperorg.com/blogger/mtarchive/003591.html.

He's has put this thought out there: If we do not comment or make a statement, are we also making a statement by not responding?

Thanks. Colby.

David Weinberger's points are indeed thoughtful. His qualifier on someone not commenting is a good one, I believe:

"[...] Maybe you had nothing to say, maybe you're on a plane, maybe you just don't feel like it, maybe you're feeling too confused or too sick at heart. Even so, the blank blog is staring back at you."

And re his conclusion -

"Blogs call forth moral presence."

- I'm not sure whether many in the PR business would, from a practical viewpoint, see blogs that way, though.

Just reading through some other posts on David Weinberger's blog, I came across these comments he made a week or so ago (nothing at all directly related to this issue):

"[...] Codes of ethics are great for professionals. For the rest of us (even professionals in their off hours), our lack of explicit, codified sets of ethical principles governing our every activity doesn't mean we're unethical. It just means we humans generally do what's right and resort to ethical discussions when we go wrong or get confused."

He has a point.

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been saved. Comments are moderated and will not appear until approved by the author. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until the author has approved them.

New Blog

  • Go to www.nevillehobson.com

Google Search Nevon


Swicki Search

Corante Network

Content Syndication

Affiliation

  • Verified Member of the AttentionTrust

Advertising

Flickr


Copyright Info

Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 07/2004