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Monday, March 3, 2008

Check Out The Evil Plan


I used to work for evil. I drafted contracts and plans that lured the unsuspecting into a lifetime of product or brand servitude. I devised stealth programmes to mine information from hapless victims which can and was usually used against them. I plotted to manipulate their perceptions and muddy their sense of reality for the gains of corporate parasites. I taught megalomaniacs and supervillains how to use word, sight, sound and touch to enrapture and destroy.

Such was my great shame when I saw the light that I would only use my powers of evil for a few less malignant organisations upon my retirement.

But still, occasionally, I would read or hear of something and the diabolical puppet master in me would rear up and go, "oooh, fun!"

Such was my response when I read this article about Walmart's blog, Check Out. Very, very clever. Extremely effective. Superbly positioned to launch an all-out evil master plan for world domination and chaos. Fabulous. Every villainous trait in me is tingling with excitement. Bet the Walmart evil minions are having a ball. 

March 3, 2008
Wal-Mart Tastemakers Write Unfiltered Blog
The New York Times


By MICHAEL BARBARO

Microsoft is one of Wal-Mart’s biggest suppliers. But that did not stop the Wal-Mart employee in charge of buying computers from panning Microsoft’s newest operating system, Vista.

“Is it really all that and a bag of chips?” he wrote on his blog. “My life has not changed dramatically — well, for that matter, it hasn’t changed at all.”

His public burst of candor was not isolated. On the same blog, a video game buyer for Wal-Mart slammed a “Star Wars” film as a “debacle” even though Wal-Mart still sells the movie.

Known for its strict, by-the-books culture — accepting a cup of coffee from a supplier can be a firing offense — Wal-Mart is now encouraging its merchants to speak frankly, even critically, about the products the chain carries.

This unusual new Web site, which was quietly created during the holiday shopping season, has become a forum for unvarnished rants about gadgets, raves about new video games and advice on selecting environmentally sustainable food.

Corporate blogs are nothing new — General Motors, Dell and Boeing have them — but Wal-Mart’s site, called Check Out (checkoutblog.com), turns the traditional model on its head. Instead of relying on polished high-level executives, it is written by little-known buyers, largely without editing.

The result is an intensely personal window into the lives, preferences and quirks of the powerful tastemakers at Wal-Mart, the nation’s largest retailer, who have spent years shielded from public view.

Their decisions about what makes it onto Wal-Mart’s shelves have enormous impact, earning (or costing) vendors millions of dollars. It was a blogger on the Check Out, after all, who first disclosed last month that Wal-Mart would stock only high-definition DVDs and players using the Blu-ray format, rather than the rival HD DVD system. The decision was considered the death knell for HD DVD.

On the blog, Marvin Deshommes, a merchandise manager in the lawn and garden department, tells readers that he belongs to the Christian Live Cathedral Church. His favorite quote from the Bible is Luke 12:48 — “To whom much is given, from him much will be required.”

Joe Muha, a video game buyer, discloses that Ayn Rand is one of his favorite authors. Danielle Pribbernow, a toy buyer, talks about her cat, Sierra.

Wal-Mart says the Web site helps buyers solicit quick feedback from consumers on the merchandise — and shows a softer side of the giant company, which has 5,000 stores, 1.2 million workers and annual sales of nearly $400 billion.

“We are real people, and that gets lost in the to and fro of business,” said Nick Agarwal, a Wal-Mart communications official who helped develop the blog. “It puts real personality out there in a real conversation.”

But all that uncensored rambling has its potential drawbacks, like irritating suppliers or consumers. Mr. Muha, the video game buyer, may have ventured into dangerous territory, for example, when describing Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare.

“The bad guys are the usual Middle Eastern extremists. I guess they are the new Nazis for the modern era,” he wrote.

This is not Wal-Mart’s first plunge into the blogosphere. Several years ago, when the retailer’s public relations problems began to mount, it turned to the Web for relief. It created one blog, Working Families for Wal-Mart, to trumpet the chain’s accomplishments and ding its critics. It created another, Wal-Marting Across America, to highlight the good deeds and productive careers of Wal-Mart employees.

Critics dismissed both as thinly veiled extensions of Wal-Mart’s P.R. department, and Wal-Mart shut them down.

The lesson seemed clear: create an authentic blog or don’t create a blog at all.

Wal-Mart employees began developing Check Out (subtitled “Where the Lanes Are All Open”) a year ago and recruited a handful of buyer-bloggers last fall, giving them rudimentary training on how to post their writing, upload videos and create hyperlinks.

The focus of the Web site, the novice bloggers decided, would be electronics, given the reliable appetite for gadget reviews and news on the Web, with a sprinkling of posts on the environment, toys and furniture.

After heeding the lessons of Wal-Mart’s earlier blogs and consulting with several well-known bloggers from sites like the Huffington Post, the buyers decided the site would succeed only if they wrote in their own voice, free from censorship and corporate review.

“Readers can tell if people are being genuine or monitored,” said Alex Cook, the merchandise manager for Wal-Mart’s entertainment division, who blogs about computers and electronics (and who wrote the lukewarm review of Windows Vista).

Anil Dash, a blogger at Six Apart, which makes blogging software, said the evolution in Wal-Mart’s thinking about blogs was typical. “You start with this total lockdown, suits read everything, one post a month model,” he said. “Then you evolve. A year later, you get one that is more open. A year after that, they start to do something that is far more authentic.”

Mr. Dash said Wal-Mart’s decision to let buyers do the blogging reflected a growing recognition that “trying to control who can speak and what they can say does not work.”

Mr. Agarwal said the company had no problems with any of the posts so far. “If you are a vendor and you talk to your Wal-Mart buyer all the time, you are going to know their likes and dislikes anyway,” he said.

Like every blogger, the buyers at Wal-Mart are finding the biggest challenge is not figuring out what to write, but making room in their schedules to write it. “Finding the time to blog,” Mr. Cook said, “is hard.”

So far, the Check Out receives about 1,000 hits a day, a relatively small figure. The closely watched Blu-ray news temporarily bolstered traffic in mid-February.

By and large, however, the site is filled with less urgent musings on products and trends. Mr. Cook, the entertainment merchandise manager, recently wrote about his love of desktops and his wife’s passion for laptops.

“My wife mocks me as she parades around the house with her laptop,” he wrote. “Lip-synching ‘Freedom’ by Jimi Hendrix while on iTunes. Checking her e-mail from the couch. Browsing the Internet while lounging on top of her bed.”

In an interview, Mr. Cook said he did not worry about sharing information about his life or writing a dismissive review of a product Wal-Mart carries, like Vista.

“It was not any different than what I said to Microsoft” when he met with company officials, he said, and added, “If it was something that would be a surprise, it might be different.”

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