Social Media Guidelines
These are the official guidelines for social media at CSN. If you're a CSN employee or contractor creating or contributing to blogs, wikis, social networks, virtual worlds, or any other kind of social media both on and off csnmedia.com—these guidelines are for you. We expect all who participate in social media on behalf of CSN to be trained, to understand and to follow these guidelines. Failure to do so could put your future participation at risk. These guidelines will continually evolve as new technologies and social networking tools emerge—so check back once in awhile to make sure you're up to date.
When You Engage
Emerging platforms for online collaboration are fundamentally changing the way we work, offering new ways to engage with customers, colleagues, and the world at large. It's a new model for interaction and we believe social computing can help you to build stronger, more successful business relationships. And it's a way for you to take part in global conversations related to the work we are doing at CSN and the things we care about.
If you participate in social media, please follow these guiding principles:
> Stick to your area of expertise and provide unique, individual perspectives on what's going on at CSN and in the world.
> Post meaningful, respectful comments—in other words, no spam and no remarks that are off-topic or offensive.
> Always pause and think before posting. That said, reply to comments in a timely manner, when a response is appropriate.
> Respect proprietary information and content, and confidentiality.
> When disagreeing with others' opinions, keep it appropriate and polite.
Rules of Engagement
Be transparent. Your honesty—or dishonesty—will be quickly noticed in the social media environment. If you are blogging about your work at CSN, use your real name, identify that you work for CSN, and be clear about your role. If you have a vested interest in something you are discussing, be the first to point it out. Transparency is about your identity and relationship to CSN. You still need to keep confidentiality around proprietary information and content.
Be judicious. Make sure your efforts to be transparent don't violate CSN's privacy, confidentiality, and legal guidelines for external communications. Ask permission to publish or report on conversations that are meant to be private or internal to CSN. All statements must be true and not misleading and all claims must be substantiated and approved. If you want to write about the competition, make sure you know what you are talking about and that you have the appropriate permission. Also, be smart about protecting yourself, your privacy, and CSN Confidential information. What you publish is widely accessible and will be around for a long time, so consider the content carefully.
Write what you know. Make sure you write and post about your areas of expertise, especially as related to CSN and our capabilities, services, processes, and technology. If you are writing about a topic that CSN is involved with, but you are not the CSN expert on the topic, you should make this clear to your readers. And write in the first person. If you publish to a website outside CSN, please use a disclaimer something like this: "The postings on this site are my own and don't necessarily represent CSN's positions, strategies, or opinions." Also, please respect brand, trademark, copyright, fair use, trade secrets (including our processes and methodologies), confidentiality, and financial disclosure laws. If you have any questions about these, see your CSN legal representative. Remember, you may be personally responsible for your content.
Perception is reality. In online social networks, the lines between public and private, personal and professional are blurred. Just by identifying yourself as a CSN employee, you are creating perceptions about your expertise and about CSN by our shareholders, customers, and the general public-and perceptions about you by your colleagues and managers. Do us all proud. Be sure that all content associated with you is consistent with your work and with CSN's values and professional standards.
It's a conversation. Talk to your readers like you would talk to real people in professional situations. In other words, avoid overly pedantic or "composed" language. Don't be afraid to bring in your own personality and say what's on your mind. Consider content that's open-ended and invites response. Encourage comments. You can also broaden the conversation by citing others who are blogging about the same topic and allowing your content to be shared or syndicated.
Are you adding value? There are millions of words out there. The best way to get yours read is to write things that people will value. Social communication from CSN should help our customers, partners, and co-workers. It should be thought-provoking and build a sense of community. If it helps people improve knowledge or skills, build their businesses, do their jobs, solve problems, or understand CSN better—then it's adding value.
Your Responsibility: What you write is ultimately your responsibility. Participation in social computing on behalf of CSN is not a right, but an opportunity, so please treat it seriously and with respect.
Create some excitement. As a business and as a corporate citizen, CSN is making important contributions to the world, to the future of digital technology, and to public dialogue on a broad range of issues. Our business activities are increasingly focused on high-value innovation. Let's share with the world the exciting things we're learning and doing—and open up the channels to learn from others.
Be a Leader. There can be a fine line between healthy debate and incendiary reaction. Do not denigrate our competitors or CSN. Nor do you need to respond to every criticism or barb. Try to frame what you write to invite differing points of view without inflaming others. Some topics—like politics or religion—slide more easily into sensitive territory. So be careful and considerate. Once the words are out there, you can't really get them back. And once an inflammatory discussion gets going, it's hard to stop.
Did you screw up? If you make a mistake, admit it. Be upfront and be quick with your correction. If you're posting to a blog, you may choose to modify an earlier post—just make it clear that you have done so.
If it gives you pause, pause. If you're about to publish something that makes you even the slightest bit uncomfortable, don't shrug it off and hit 'send.' Take a minute to review these guidelines and try to figure out what's bothering you, then fix it. If you're still unsure, you might want to discuss it with your manager or legal representative. Ultimately, what you publish is yours—as is the responsibility. So be sure.
Contractors & Endorsements
CSN supports transparency. We are committed to ensuring that our social media practitioners (including blogs, Twitter, forums and any other social media) clearly disclose relationships and endorsements, and that statements about CSN are truthful and substantiated.
Please remember that any social media experts contracted, seeded or in any way compensated by CSN must follow all of the CSN Social Media guidelines. As part of these guidelines, you need to disclose that you have been seeded or otherwise compensated by CSN. Your blog will be monitored for compliance with our guidelines and accurate descriptions of our products and claims.
Moderation Guidelines
Moderation is the act of reviewing and approving content before it's published on the site (This applies to social media content written on behalf of CSN, whether the site is on or off csnmedia.com). CSN does not endorse or take responsibility for content posted by third parties, referred to as user generated content (UGC). This includes text input and uploaded files (video, images, audio, executables, documents).
While we strongly encourage user participation, there are some guidelines we ask you to follow to keep it safe for everyone. In addition, CSN has put in place automated controls to combat spam and malicious content. Please note that content originating inside CSN is not moderated. This means we allow our blog authors to post directly without approval, as long as they have taken the required trainings.
Pre-moderation. Even when a site requires the user to register before posting, simple user name and email entry doesn’t really validate the person. So to ensure least risk/most security, we require moderation of all UGC posts before they are published (pre-moderation).
Community moderation. For established, healthy communities, group moderation by regular users can work well. This will sometimes be allowed to take the place of pre-moderation—it must be applied for and approved.
Balanced online dialogue. Whether content is pre-moderated or community moderated, follow these three principles: the Good, the Bad, but not the Ugly. If the content is positive or negative and in context to the conversation, then we approve the content, regardless of whether it's favorable or unfavorable to Intel. But if the content is ugly, offensive, denigrating and completely out of context, then we reject the content.