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- Outlook '09
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- Ballmer sets loose Windows 7 public beta
Trust me, I'll connect the dots.
About 10 days ago, someone at Circuit City spots a Mad magazine parody of his beleaguered company and dashes off an e-mail demanding that all copies of the periodical be purged from the electronics chain's shelves.
I already know that you're thinking two things: Mad magazine still publishes? And it's sold at Circuit City?
Seems both are the case. The missive from corporate read: "Immediately remove all issues and copies of Mad Magazine from your sales floor. Destroy all copies and throw them away. They are not inventoried, and your store will not incur shrink. Thank you for your immediate attention to this."
Little did the exec know that the directive would wind up on a rat-out-the-rats Web site called The Consumerist. It did, which
sent me to Circuit City public relations looking for an explanation. Here's what I received from company spokesman Jim Babb:
"I became aware of this situation only this morning, and I have sent a note today to the editors of Mad magazine. Speaking as an embarrassed corporate PR Guy, I apologized for the fact that some overly sensitive souls at our
corporate headquarters ordered the removal of the August issue of Mad magazine from our stores. Please keep in mind that only 40 of our 700 stores sell magazines at all. We apologize for the
knee-jerk reaction, and have issued a retraction order; the affected stores are being directed to put the magazines back on
sale."
But Babb wasn't done there:
"As a gesture of our apology and deep respect for the folks at Mad magazine, we are creating a cross-departmental task force to study the importance of humor in the corporate workplace and expect the resulting Powerpoint presentation to top out at least 300 pages, chock full of charts, graphs and company action plans. … In addition I have offered to send the Mad magazine editor a $20 Circuit City Gift Card, toward the purchase of a Nintendo Wii ... if he can find one!"
That's about the best you can expect, as damage control goes.
Which brings us around to Barbara Streisand. Did you know there's a name for this phenomenon — increasingly common — of seeing the effort to suppress some bit of embarrassing or proprietary news backfire on the suppressor? It's called The Streisand Effect. (Yes, that was a new one on me, too.)
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Metzler on CIO Priorities
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Metzler on Application Delivery
How to eliminate the stovepiped or siloed nature of application delivery from both an organization and a technological perspective.
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Metzler on Network Troubleshooting
Overview of network troubleshooting that provides an assessment of where we are, and where we need to be relative to the complexities of today's IT challenges.
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