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KSL

Social Media Profiles

by KSL on April 28, 2010

The Question: What happens when we die?

Part of what I do for clients sometimes is act as their social media “proxy”.  I share content with their community members and listen on behalf of organization, reporting common themes and distributing important questions to the right individuals within the organization for the swiftest response.  Often times I play this role while the members of an organization come up to speed on platform functionality and best practices for using social media to achieve their business goals.  After some time, I transition from managing their social media presence to simply being an adviser and reviewer of content and practice.  Yesterday one of my clients, who has made this transition successfully, called to ask me a question I hadn’t considered when we worked through their social media policy and plan.

What happens to these profiles when someone dies?

Unfortunately they have unexpectedly lost a member of their very close company family. This individual had created accounts on several social media platforms, at the initiation of the business, and now my client needs to know how to go about removing those profiles.  This is an unfortunate circumstance but it is one we must consider and prepare for when developing social media plans and policies, especially when we ask people to participate in these platforms for business purposes.

It should be clear in your policy what you will do in this event.  Will you notify, delete, deactivate, or memorialize social media profiles of deceased employees?  Will you leave that to their friends and families to decide?  Who owns that content?  If you delete it and the family of the individual wanted to keep it, can you be sued? These are questions that may not have precedent just yet.  Better for you to ask and answer them as a business, and in conjunction with the individuals that make up your organization, proactively.  These decisions may need to become part of your human resource information.  Your HR Manager may want to go so far as to document and record the discussion and agreement of these procedures with each employee.

In the unfortunate event that you need to remove social media profiles for a deceased business or family member, here are your options and links for action on each of the most common platforms.

Facebook

Facebook handles this well by providing options to deactivate, delete, memorialize or simply report on an account.

Deactivating your Facebook account basically turns your account temporarily “off”, meaning you’ll disappear on Facebook.  All of your information however is saved, so if you want to reactivate at some point everything will be just how you left it when you deactivated.  If you are going to do anything about someone’s Facebook profile, this might be an appropriate response while notifying friends, family, and community members of the situation as it still leave the information intact.

Deleting a Facebook account results in all personally identifiable information associated being purged from the Facebook database. This includes information like name, email, address, and screen name(s). Copies of some material (photos, notes, etc.) may remain on Facebook servers but it will be disassociated from the user profile and completely inaccessible to all Facebook users.

Memorializing a Facebook account prevents all login access to the account. It also means that certain information on an account will be removed like status updates and contact information. The profile’s privacy settings are changed so that only friends can see the profile or find it by search. The Wall remains up and accessible so friends and family can leave posts in remembrance.

There have been debates over who has the right to take of any these actions, so again I encourage to talk about this with employees and encourage them to discuss the situation at home. It will take careful consideration to determine the most appropriate response for your organization. If you choose to report the individual as deceased (anyone can do this) you can fill out this form but keep in mind the consequence of that action (family member will no longer see their loved one’s notes in feeds or threads, all notifications (like pokes) will disappear, videos and pictures of them will be gone etc.).

Linked In

On LinkedIn you can only close an account. To remove a profile from LinkedIn you’ll need to log into the account. Select “Close Your Account” from the “Settings” window and provide a reason for closing the account. Know that once the account is closed, there will not be any way to access to the account or the contact information contained in it. The only other option on LinkedIn is to notify customer service of the deceased member and they may remove the profile.

Twitter and Skype

I actually expected Twitter to have been more prepared for this question. So I was surprised when I searched Twitter Help Resources for information on notification of deceased members and came up empty. The only thing I found were rules and policy concerning inactive user names. I tweeted to @support but so far no response. I had the same experience with Skype. No information to be found in the knowledge base or forum and I’ve sent in a support question but no word from them yet either.

Twitter is interesting because a Twitter handle is a unique identifier, a brand really. The Twitter handle of an individual may represent the role in the business or may more truly represent the individual or even their family. It might even be that I pass my handle on to my daughter when I die so she can continue to share my life’s work with my followers (#itcouldhappen).

Please Share

If you’ve had to work through this experience, I’m sorry for your loss. I hope you’ll add your advice to this post to help along those of us who may have to find our way through this in the coming months.

KTF
-KSL

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I’m teaching Social Media this summer and today in class we talked about Twitter. The students were not Twitter users, until today. I’ve found that many people have the same questions about tool.

  • Why does anyone care that I did laundry last night?
  • Why do I care that someone is making bread?
  • Who has time for this stuff? I can barely keep up with email and Facebook.
  • Does Twitter even matter?

To help them understand, I’ve developed another KSL’ism. (KSL’isms are what happens when I over simplify a situation and use an unlikely metaphor. Those of you who’ve worked with me are all too familiar. :o )

I explained that Twitter is like a hammer. One tool, with two very distinct purposes.

When you think of a hammer you probably think, like most people, that it’s for driving nails. But a hammer has another job, the claw end of the hammer does significant work and shouldn’t be overlooked. It can extract a nail driven deeply, with ease, exerting great leverage to pull it out of a tight binding.

Twitter is a tool much like that. Twitter is one way to drive your brand or push information. Every tweet, every link shared, every Re-Tweet, reflects and further defines your brand. But Twitter can be used to extract hyper-relevant pieces of information too. Information that might otherwise not have had the leverage, in the great online content world, to bubble up to a level of visibility that could be helpful. Without Twitter it would be very difficult to extract these pieces of information.

To demonstrate to class I typed into a Twitter search “Social Media” and “Business” or “Enterprise”, selected only posts from within the past 24 hours, and only from people within 100 miles of Boston, people we could meet. Then we used google advance search to execute the query, without the location constraint b/c we can’t do that easily there. Here’s the results.

Which do you think did a better job of extracting actionable content?

Keep the faith. -KSL

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My heads spinning a little, the new Facebook feed has lent to some fantastic thoughts about the potential consequence of accidental eavesdropping. Yesterday a wall-to-wall conversation between two friends was brought to my attention in the Facebook stream. Something I would have previously not seen or thought about was now front and center in the middle of my screen.

Their conversation was about trading stock and who bought what, when, and other ideas about what to buy and why. It occurred to me at that moment ‘what if they or other people were talking about things that I shouldn’t know about?’ (Enter images of Martha Stewart) I mean ImClone founder Sam Waksal, was arrested for informing friends and family to sell their stock, and attempting to sell his own. How many conversations on Facebook might equate to a similar to situation? What if I never meant to see it, but someone shared something they shouldn’t have and now I know? Could I be trouble?

So I settle down and think that people “in-the-know” of that kind of insider information would surely be savvy enough to not post it on a social network and likely wouldn’t even use email.

But then…I started to think about the speed at which information travels in these new platforms, specifically Facebook and Twitter. And about what kind of an effect that rapid information disbursement could have on the stock exchange. I mean who’s to say some group couldn’t just agree to buy company “X” stock one day – all within minutes of each other get the word out to buy,…and then sell six hours later after the price has jumped due to the high influx of interest. I imaged Bud Fox Tweeting “Blue Horse Shoe Loves Anacot Steel.” and everyone in the Twitterspehere buying. At very least we have the makings of a great new version of Wall Street.

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