Conflict?

Update: Had a good chat with Daryl Wilcox, and it looks like we’ve come to a sensible com­promise that will allow Tim to do his job and Response Source to maintain its purity. All’s well, etc.

My staff writer at NMK — Tim Hoang — works for the PR company, Rainier, as well. That’s always some­thing we’ve made very clear. I was (and remain I’ve calmed down now — and DW was very charming.) abso­lutely furious to learn that he has been banned from using the Response Source service today on account of his PR background.

For those who don’t know, Response Source allows journ­al­ists to poll PR agencies for help — “do you know any experts on mobile apps?”, “got any case studies on busi­nesses making suc­cessful use of MySpace?”; that sort of thing, in our case.

One of our key anxi­eties in the initial decision to employ Tim — who is a paid & taxed employee of the University of Westminster in this role — was making sure that his PR job would not infringe on his duties as a reporter for NMK. It’s an issue we’ve dis­cussed and thought about for a long time, believe me. There are clearly oppor­tun­ities for abuse, but they’re ones that Tim and I are very well-​​aware of and per­fectly able to execute pro­fes­sional judge­ment over. Of the dozens of sources he’s used over the last two months, two were Rainier clients — to add dif­fer­en­ti­ation and sub­stance to stories, when he couldn’t find other people keen to comment. (Ironically, getting more of these other voices was one of the reasons he used Response Source). I agonised about both of them for a little while — I edit all his stories — but con­cluded that the extra comment had jus­ti­fi­able merit. In both cases, Tim informed me freely of the con­nec­tion; we were trans­parent about the con­nec­tion in the stories; and I approved it. After all, I have very little com­punc­tion about using people I’ve met in previous roles as sources: that’s what you do as a reporter.

The reason for the ban isn’t known to me in full and was not dis­closed, but RS has appar­ently per­ceived a conflict of interests, in response to com­plaints from some other PR agency(ies).

How exactly would this work? Tim polls other PR agencies for input into a story, and that would be a problem for them for what reason? Do they think that he wouldn’t include input from com­pet­itors? So why ask the question in the first place? That he would sneak ques­tions like ‘fancy a new agency?’ into his inter­views? I think the yellow-​​pages might be a better source.

One more thing annoys me about this. I am the editor and pub­lisher of NMK. Why didn’t anyone take whatever concerns they have to me, rather than a third-​​party? Or to my boss, the director of NMK?

F**king infantile. I will not use Response Source again while this situ­ation con­tinues. I have for­warded this info@dwpub.com — if anyone has a better contact, let me know.

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6 comments to Conflict?

  • Have either you or Tim tried to speak to Daryl Wilcox at Response Source. I’d be sur­prised if he approved of this. Besides I can think of other people who combine PR with some freel­ance journ­alism, espe­cially in spe­cialist trade mags. The key as you say is transparency.

    And in Tim’s defence he makes lots of efforts to pro­act­ively reach out to other PR com­panies to give them and their clients an oppor­tunity to comment on this stories.

  • Daryl has been in contact, and hope­fully we’ll be able to come to an under­standing on Monday.

  • Daryl Wilcox has been really good about it and i can under­stand why they have the rules in place. It’s just annoying that had other PR agencies not com­plained it wouldn’t have been a big issue. Hopefully this will be sorted out early next week as it saves me a lot of time and effort and helps give another angle to the stories i write.

  • Daryl’s one of the good guys so I’m glad it’s been resolved, and so promptly too — that’s a good case study in blo­go­sphere rela­tions.
    Seems someone tried to frame you guys up eh? Snarky b’stards! :)

  • It’s funny, tons of journ­al­ists do a bit of PR con­sultancy on the side. In fact, although it’s reduced a bit now, many used Response Source to advertise books, courses etc. Not that I’m com­plaining — it’s how it all works.

    I think that Rainier and Tim, in par­tic­ular, know how to exercise proper pro­fes­sional judge­ment. As long as NMK know who Rainier’s clients are, then there’ll soon spot if it’s looking a bit dodgey. As a PR who’s on Tim’s list, I trust the fact that he won’t try to sell to my clients. It’s in his and Rainiers’ interests. After all, repu­ta­tion is everything in PR :-)

  • Good point, Philip. I’ve done a couple of bits of PR work as a freel­ance myself.

    As you say, it’d make Tim look a complete char­latan if he tried to shill his clients on NMK. And us look like mugs. OTOH, it would seem over-​​zealous to pre­ju­dice *against* Rainier clients. We’ve just agreed to be subtle and sensible about it… Put the story first and then choose the most appro­priate spokespeople he can muster.

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