Airlines, Shoes, PR, and Weblogs

Flying always has its problems and there’s always something to complain about. Most times, you just bitch to your friends about it. But it you have a weblog and you write about your experiences with an airline, or any product or service for that matter, it’s not just your friend who gets to hear the story.

Kristin is a Madpony Girl. What’s a Madpony girl, you ask? A Madpony Girl is a girl (two actually, sisters) who has a web site and writes about her life (college, her shoes, living in the South, etc). Kristin just took a Southwest Airlines flight from her hometown of Oklahoma City to Phoenix Arizona. Great flight. Good service. But when she landed, things didn’t go so well. The airline lost her bags.

Now, if you know Kristen, you know she has a lot of shoes. LOTS of shoes. She can’t live without her shoes. So, what’s a girl on a trip to Arizona to do without shoes? She begs Southwest to help her on her weblog while chiding the airline at the same time.

“now, i would imagine that you’re the kind of multibillion dollar corporation who really wants to know your customers, so let me tell you a little about myself.

i’m 5’8, i’m a college junior, I CANNOT SURVIVE FOR ONE WEEK WITH ONLY ONE PAIR OF SHOES.

makeup is easily replaceable. clothes are bit harder, but i am in scottsdale, the shopping capital of the american desert. i am skeptical of finding another perfect swimsuit, as that can often be somewhat difficult. but there is no way i could replace my collection of beautiful and exotic shoes and sandals.

please hurry southwest. i just don’t know what i would do without my cute little cobians. and my bc shoes. and my reefs. and my little esprits with the flowers and the maddens and the little black sandals and the nm70s.

(not so) patiently waiting,

kristin”

A sad story indeed. Innocuous? Maybe. But what happens when hundreds of thousands of people are publishing weblogs? What happens when an ad campaign becomes pointless because everyone can poke a whole in it because they all know the “real” story because they are all reading other people’sweblogs who have had first hand experience with the brand? Kristin was very polite in her criticism. But we all know most people are not that polite. It’s something to think about, marketers.

I’d link directly to Kristen’s story but her links are broken. Go the Madpony homepage and find the post for Monday, June,2 2003.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Psychology says people who reach their 60s without a large circle of friends aren’t lonely – they’re the ones who figured out the one relationship truth that emotionally intelligent people swear by, which is that which is that one person who truly sees you is worth more than a hundred people who only know your name

Psychology says people who reach their 60s without a large circle of friends aren’t lonely – they’re the ones who figured out the one relationship truth that emotionally intelligent people swear by, which is that which is that one person who truly sees you is worth more than a hundred people who only know your name

Global English Editing

Psychology says people who are deeply unhappy with their life rarely complain about it — instead, they display these 9 quiet patterns that most people mistake for contentment

Psychology says people who are deeply unhappy with their life rarely complain about it — instead, they display these 9 quiet patterns that most people mistake for contentment

Global English Editing

I worked 45 years, raised three kids, and built what everyone calls ‘a good life’ — but at 65 I find myself sitting in my car in parking lots before going home because those fifteen minutes of nothing are the only time I feel like I can breathe

I worked 45 years, raised three kids, and built what everyone calls ‘a good life’ — but at 65 I find myself sitting in my car in parking lots before going home because those fifteen minutes of nothing are the only time I feel like I can breathe

Global English Editing

7 phrases adult children use with aging parents that sound respectful but actually mean “I’ve already decided what’s happening and this conversation is a courtesy” — and the parent hears every one of them perfectly

7 phrases adult children use with aging parents that sound respectful but actually mean “I’ve already decided what’s happening and this conversation is a courtesy” — and the parent hears every one of them perfectly

Global English Editing

I’m 65 and my grandson hugged me goodbye last week and said ‘I love you, Grandpa’ — and I stood there frozen because in sixty years nobody in my family ever said those words out loud, and I didn’t know what my face was supposed to do

I’m 65 and my grandson hugged me goodbye last week and said ‘I love you, Grandpa’ — and I stood there frozen because in sixty years nobody in my family ever said those words out loud, and I didn’t know what my face was supposed to do

Global English Editing

Psychologists explain that people who go quiet during conflict aren’t shutting down. They learned in childhood that their words made things worse, so silence became the safest form of participation they knew.

Psychologists explain that people who go quiet during conflict aren’t shutting down. They learned in childhood that their words made things worse, so silence became the safest form of participation they knew.

Global English Editing