July 16, 2009 Social Networking Etiquette: Who’s Responsibility Is It?
ESPN.com did a special four-part series examining the impact of online social networks on college athletics and Heather Dinich’s article, How much is too much online? looked at what colleges and universities are doing to help educate their student-athletes on their social networking interactions.
Dinich wrote about how several universities are reaching out to a third party for some guidance on social networking. According to the article, Sports Media Challenge “has helped universities and entire conferences embrace sites like Facebook and Twitter as marketing tools and ways of branding their athletic programs, but Sports Media Challenge president Kathleen Hessert also has been asked to help some schools set social networking guidelines for their athletes.”

Coaches and administrators are worried about what their student-athletes may post and often talk to them about what is acceptable and what is not. But is it the athletic departments job to educate and monitor their student-athletes? Or should the student-athletes be held responsible for their own actions?
Dinich highlighted Myron Rolle from Florida State who said “For me personally, what I did, I policed my own site. I wanted people to think of me as that upstanding scholar-athlete. Anytime someone was thinking about tagging a picture of me, I’d make sure I’d look at it first and say, ‘OK, is this picture OK? Would my mother appreciate this picture?…I didn’t put any status updates that had curse words or foul language or just wouldn’t be representative of who I am and who I want to be. As much as the school can do, each individual athlete has to look at himself and say, ‘What do I want out there, and what kind of person do I want to look like on these sites?’”
It’s unfortunate that not all student-athletes think like Myron Rolle, and I can see why he is a Rhodes Scholar! He clearly understands what Scott Monty, the Head of Social Media at Ford, meant when he said: “What happens in Vegas stays on Google.”
I honestly feel it should be up to the individual/student-athlete to monitor their own social content and interactions. The university can hold meetings, educate their student-athletes all they want, but ultimately it’s not the athletic department who’s going to be posting. It’s the student-athlete and it’s up to them to create their own image in which the public will view them.
So I ask you, social networking etiquette: who’s responsibility is it? The universities athletic department? Or the student-athlete?
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June 12, 2009 Gonzaga’s Inspired Season, Have You Seen It?
When you think about social media and why it has become so popular what’s the first thing that comes to your mind? If you’re like me the first thing that comes to mind is 1) people and 2) the technologies. The technologies are what enable people to socialize with one another and connect in a way that wasn’t possible before. But if you dig deeper, the main appeal with social media is the connectedness you become apart of.
Your connected to friends, people with the same common interest as you, thought leaders, businesses, organizations, etc. Social media has allowed you to become part of what Seth Godin calls a tribe. “A tribe is a group of people who are connected to one another, connected to a leader, and connected to an idea” (2008). What happens is you become apart of something that is bigger than you.
So what does all this have to do with social media and college athletics? Since creating this blog, I’ve been a strong advocate of having college athletic programs use social media to connect with fans in hopes that this will lead to a thriving online community, a tribe. It’s about making sure fans feel like they are apart of the program which matters, and I came across a site that was remarkable.
The Gonzaga Athletics Department launch an online campaign called, “Inspired Season.” Go ahead and click on this link and make sure you enter your first and last name, and your phone number (make sure your phone is near by). Do this now and come back to this blog when your done. I don’t want to spoil anything.
http://www.gozags.com/inspiredseason/

Here’s why I found this to be remarkable.
- It’s easy. The Gonzaga Women’s Basketball team needs your help to be inspired and all you need to do is provide your name and your number.
- It’s personal. When the assistant coach walks in with the clip board showing Coach Graves that you’re the only one missing, what does he do? He calls you and leaves a message telling you that they need you to go to the game. Coach Graves makes you feel like you are an important part of his team’s success.
- It’s different. Most of the time, when the athletic departments want to get people to the game they’ll offer discount ticket promotions, send out press releases, have the coaches speak in front of the media, etc. How often do you get a personal call from the coach telling you to go to the game?
Gonzaga’s “Inspired Season” got it right on so many levels and goes to show that with a little creativity, making people feel connected to your program can be fun and rewarding.
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April 15, 2009 NCAA vs. The Facebook Community
A good friend of mine, Yoda808, sent me a bunch of links about a situation that has taken place between the NCAA, N.C. State, the community, and Facebook.
A freshman at N.C. State started a Facebook group in hopes of attracting a top-ranked high school basketball player from Raleigh. According to the article, “After 700 people joined the group, this person received a cease and desist letter from N.C. State’s compliance director, Michelle Lee, warning of “further action” if he failed to take down the site since the Facebook group’s purpose violated NCAA’s recruiting policies, the Associated Press reported.
Here’s the article: NCAA Clamps Down on Facebook Group for Violating Recruiting Policies.
I’ve talked about this before on this blog about the NCAA restricting the use of social media. I personally think the NCAA needs to update their polices to include the use social media, and to be honest I don’t think they have a clue as to what to do. What if someone in the community, an avid fan of N.C. State who has no current affiliation with the school, created this Facebook page? Would this person still need to take down the page?
The reason why social media has gained so much traction over the years is because it gives the ordinary person a chance to voice his/her opinion and communicate with others. If you take away a person’s right to voice their own opinion doesn’t that violate their 1st Amendment and thus go against everything that social media is?
I’m looking at Facebook right now and I see a “Kentucky needs John Wall” fan page and this is what the description says: “This group is in no way attempting to promote Wall to UK but a group for UK fans to unite who agree that UK needs John Wall. Do not contact John Wall or any recruit in anyway, this is a recruiting violation.”
I see Duke, UNC, Florida State, Kansas, Memphis, etc. just to name a few, so why hasn’t the school and NCAA sent out cease and desist letters? I wish I had a chance to see the fan page.
The only reason why a Facebook fan page should be taken down, in this situation, is if there is personal contact information like a phone number, email address, IM screen names, etc. This makes sense because you need to protect the privacy of the player. Who wants to get 700 emails or phone calls?
Idk…to me as long as no personal information is disclosed, I don’t see why you would need to take a fan page like this down. Again I didn’t see the fan page so I have no clue as to the content that’s on there.
What do you all think?
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March 27, 2009 Looking For Ideas
I’ve been thinking about it for a while and I think I’ll take on the responsibility of creating a network for all Hawaii Athletic fans that want to figure out ways to create better experiences at games, but I need your help.
I’m looking for an identifiable name for all us fans. The students are the Manoa Maniacs, Duke has the Cameron Crazies, Fresno St. has the Dog Pound, Texas A&M has the 12th Man, etc. I’m looking for any suggestions as to what to call this fan club.
I guess the best example I can think of is Stephen Tsai’s blog readers. They are called the Tsaiko’s. Something along those lines so when people hear it they know exactly who we are.
Please let me know any suggestions you have and ask your friends to visit this blog and add their suggestion to. The more the better and it’s the first step towards launching this effort.
I really look forward to your response.
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