Guy Kawasaki: How Will His “Ghost Writers” Impact His Personal Brand Image?

guykawasaki

The word is out: former Apple evangelist / best-selling author / venture capitalist Guy Kawasaki doesn’t write all his Tweets! The world is coming to an end… or is it?

According to DaveFleets blog, “Bottom line: Guy Kawasaki, creator of Alltop and Truemors, has three other people writing through his Twitter account on his behalf.”

Almost anyone who regularly uses the internet these days know all about Twitter. If not, it is a relatively new (just turned three!) service that has exploded in popularity, allowing you to update your “status” with 140 characters to tell your friends what you’re up to, thinking about, reading, etc. (Businesses are also using Twitter for marketing and PR).

As web 2.0 has evolved, so have the ways interact online. Twitter is at the forefront of this evolution. But as with all forms of online communication, you don’t always know whether a user’s posts are actually coming from that specific person. Who knows what goes on behind the scenes?

Guy Kawasaki is a celebrity in the blogger community, which is why this is such huge news – some have even called it a scandal. With over 90,000+ followers on twitter, a lot of people feel betrayed. While this may be the initial feeling from most of the online community, I feel that most people will come around. This may be more common than we think. But how will this affect Guy’s personal brand today?

Let’s go back a few years to the writers strike. Does anyone remember how many shows went off the air and had re-runs during that time? I do, because it happened to most of the major TV shows. But why is that? A strange phenomenon seems to take place when someone becomes famous: they become a puppet. Not literally of course, but because so many people are counting on them and so many more watch their every move, the person pulling the strings may not be the one who actually did the work.

For example, I recently found out from my little brother that Lil’ Wayne doesn’t write all his songs. My brother who loves his music was really taken back by this at first. It’s a letdown to realize that your favorite artist doesn’t write all his own music. If you think about it, it isn’t humanly possible to do everything that these figureheads do without help from someone else. Now this isn’t a bad thing if the figurehead is honest about it, like Guy was. When confronted about it, Guy openly admitted “…there are people who tweet on my behalf.”

While this strategy may not work for everyone, this is how Guy has always been, up front and to the point. We know him as a straight shooter, who has always been honest with us. Immediately after this situation got out of control, he updated his bio on twitter to include the other people who tweeted for him. No lies, no smoke and screens, just the Guy we knew and loved with a new twist: complete transparency.

So how does this affect his personal brand? Perhaps after the “scandal,” we have more trust in Guy because he’s been so open about it. Even after the original wound was opened (the Tweets coming from Guy aren’t coming from Guy!), his personal brand shouldn’t take too much of a hit because of his swift response.


Trace Cohen
Author: Trace Cohen

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About Trace Cohen

I am currently a senior at Syracuse University double majoring in Entrepreneurship and Marketing at the Whitman School of Management with a minor in Information Service Techology (IST) in the iSchool. I chose Syracuse for their business school which was brand new and state of the art when i applied and enrolled. The undergraduate entrepreneurship program in Whitman is ranked #2 nationally and the ischool is ranked #1 nationally which is something I am very proud to be apart of.
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  • http://www.designedbyanderson.com Lawrence Anderson

    Very glad that he was open about it when confronted. However, I hope that other figureheads like Guy will start openly revealing that they use ghost writers without having to be confronted.

  • John

    Speaking of honesty and transparency- why is AIG one of the tags for this post?

  • http://Brand-Yourself.com Trace Cohen

    @Lawrence Anderson

    Couldnt agree more, honesty is the best policy.

    @John

    Thanks for that catch, no need for it, it’s gone!

  • http://ithinktowin.blogspot.com Josh Wong

    Uh… I’m actually surprised this hasn’t happened sooner.

    This is incredibly common for celebrities or politician’s who “write” correspondence letters en mass to the public. All of those letters are usually written by junior staff members from form letters (customized for your inquiry).

    Especially with the internet obscuring people’s identities, it is as likely to be an 80 year old man as it is a 14 year old girl.

    There are actually a host of companies that “manage online profiles” for busy executives who don’t have time (things like Linkedin)

  • http://factor77.tv @factor77

    Trace, it’s all about being transparent when building your personal brand. Gary Vaynerchuk has called out brittany spears, and obama for not tweeting themselves.

    He should keep his tweets to himself and pay someone to build the @alltop account

  • http://tv.factor77.com Jared O’Toole

    I really don’t think it matters. As long as your honest about it. Most of Guys tweets are about the new stuff on alltop anyway. There’s no way he spends his day making tweets about a new topic that was just added.

    As long as your content is good i will follow and enjoy. In the end just don’t make crappy content!

  • http://davefleet.com Dave Fleet

    I think you’re right. People are upset right now, but I was impressed with Kawasaki’s response. He did the right thing when asked, and I think that reflects well on him in the long term.

    I don’t follow him because I don’t really like the way he uses Twitter, but that’s a personal thing, it’s up to him and now that it’s clear who’s writing, I’m fine with it. Storm-in-a-teacup over, I hope :)

  • RaiulBaztepo

    Hello!
    Very Interesting post! Thank you for such interesting resource!
    PS: Sorry for my bad english, I’v just started to learn this language ;)
    See you!
    Your, Raiul Baztepo

  • http://Brand-Yourself.com Trace Cohen

    @John Wong
    Couldn’t agree more. I think it is widely speculated and accepted that most figure heads dont write their own material or speeches. Happens way to often.

    @factor77
    Im happy to hear that he has called them out, as im sure he has to a lot of other people too.

    @Jarad
    It was a little suspicious but Content is King!

    @Dave
    Thanks for reading and leaving your two cents as your post was the inspiration for mine!

    Trace

  • Rick David

    Well, Trace, nice “dance” you did around the question about the AIG tag.

    “Nice catch,” is all you have to say? That doesn’t answer the original question of WHY it was put there in the first place. Can’t be accident, AIG isn’t remotely related to the subject of this post.