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Charlie Sheen - Not a Winner in Social Media

 

Charlie Sheen Social MediaMuch has been said about Charlie Sheen's manic rise in social media.

Perhaps, at some level we all have a little bit of Charlie Sheen in us - the simple need to have your position heard without any sort of filter.

Certainly, it's impressive that Mr. Sheen broke the Guinness Book of World Records for the most rapid accumulation of Twitter followers:

“Another record shattered,” the actor, 45, Tweeted Monday. "We gobbled the soft target that was 2.0 mil, like a bag of a troll-house zombie chow."

Of course, sheer quantity of followers does not always equate to quality of influence. And if you look beyond the Charlie Sheen media frenzy, there are some critical inbound marketing and social media errors that Mr. Sheen has made and may have trouble recovering from. 

Here are a few salient missteps:

  • It's About Charlie Sheen - Me, me, me. My goddesses, my money, my talent - the list goes on and on. Wrong, wrong, wrong. With his minions of followers, Mr. Sheen has the potential to create a true community of engagement where every member helps every other member. He's not doing that. He's using a one-way megaphone to whine and complain and sooner or later, people will grow tired of that. 
  • Badmouthing Your Employer - Clearly, Mr. Sheen has a bone to pic with his former employers at CBS. Whether your annual income is $20,000 or $20 million, nothing good will come out of a public and documented sparring match with your employer on Facebook, Twitter or anywhere else in social media. It's like wrestling with a pig - no one wins and you both get dirty. 
  • Hiring a Social Media Intern instead of a Social Media Agency - Mr. Sheen's search for a social media intern has received significant attention. Unfortunately, "the intern will take care of Facebook approach," is shortsighted and puts Mr. Sheen's new 'warlock' brand at risk. As John noted earlier this week, successful inbound marketing and social media efforts involve a wholistic team approach.

With his previous acting success and his current social media following, Mr. Sheen would be wise to wear a white hat and hire a trusted social media agency to guide his strategy. 

#TigerBlood

 


Comments

I disagree. The second he stops ranting and starts forming coherent tweets will be the second people stop following and RTing him. His brand is "I'm crazy" and that's what people expect from him, not carefully thought out engaging messages.  
 
Also, whether or not he will actually end up using an intern to handle all his PR is debatable, but the whole "intern hunt" ended up being a very successful ad campaign. As long as @charliesheen still has millions of followers waiting for the next crazy, memeworthy tweet, he will be a hot commodity in online advertising.  
 
Here's the article about the #TigerBloodIntern campaign results: 
http://ad.ly/2011/03/charlie-sheen-data-beats-emotion/
Posted @ Thursday, March 10, 2011 8:38 AM by Kendal Richer
Thanks for weighing in, Kendal. 
 
A recent repeat of 2 And A Half Men - garnered 10.2 million viewers. Mr. Sheen's online video viewership has peaked at 100,000 and has been decreasing, according to reports.  
 
My question would be how long can Charlie Sheen's brand "crazy" be sustained?  
 
Does brand crazy have more staying power than brand 2 and a Half Men?  
Posted @ Thursday, March 10, 2011 9:18 AM by Roman
While I understand that what you're really trying to do is tell your readers to do these things, I think Sheen is a bad example. 
 
He's not hiring a social media agency because he doesn't want one. He's not trying to start engaging with his fans, because he doesn't care about them. He doesn't want to be nice to CBS because he has millions of dollars and couldn't care less about his former employer. 
 
Oh yes, his notoriety will fade. But that's how it is in the world of Hollywood. Someone acts like a total nutjob, gets a bunch of headlines, and then fades back into obscurity, only to be dredged up on days when there's no "real" news. 
 
Being controversial is a good way to get talked about. And obviously it's working, as you wrote a blog post about him, and I'm responding to it. I'm sure you're not the only marketing agency to do so.  
 
Maybe he's succeeding after all.
Posted @ Thursday, March 10, 2011 9:24 AM by Amy
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