There’s a thing about people who put their heart and soul into making a social media account work.
They go the extra mile, they’re pushing at the margins and they take a real sense of pride about what they are doing.
But there’s also something that connects them whether profile they are running whether that’s a town centre Facebook, a corporatel Twitter or an NHS Trust YouTube channel.
Because they put heart and soul into what they do their skin is that bin thinner when they face criticism of the organisation or service they front-up online.
Is it aimed at me? It feels like it…
“I used to go onto our social channel in the evening and answer questions,” one said to me recently. “I don’t bother now. When I’ve spent all day being told that I’m rubbish and the service we provide is dreadful I’m worn down. I just don’t want it in the evening as well.”
Of course, that person isn’t rubbish and the person making the complaint isn’t singling out that individual. They just happen to be the person operating the place where people can make a voice heard.
It’s a feeling I can relate to. A one-off project I helped run went well but the numbers we produced were lambasted by a lone voice in the early hours of the morning and that made me far more angry than it probably should.
That’s not to say that there should be no criticism or even that it’s always, always unwelcome.
We should just acknowledge that when a half brick comes flying towards an organisation’s social media it’s not meant for you but the organisation you work for. It’s rarely personal.
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