Christian Retailing

Donald Miller Campaign Draws Unexpected Controversy Print Email
Written by Staff   
Friday, 12 June 2009 04:01 PM America/New_York
“Lies,” “deception”.....strong words for a marketing campaign, especially one from the world's largest Christian publisher, Thomas Nelson. Warranted or not, the accusations are flying on company CEO Michael Hyatt's blog over a viral marketing campaign where readers can generate a fake news page to present themselves as co-authors of best-selling author Donald Miller's new book, A Million Miles In a Thousand Years, releasing in September.
Some of the comments:

“Personally I don't think it's creative or ingenious, I think it's deceptive.”

“What a neat and creative way to drive an audience to the book via social media. Genius!!”

“Interesting, unique, and mildly funny, but I believe deliberately posting lies on the Internet is not an idea of merit, especially for Thomas Nelson.”

“I just did it and the huge congratulations are flooding in. Hopefully I'm not ruining my credibility as an unknown! “

The campaign is similar to a viral video “prank” circulated before the election where users could submit their own names as presidential candidates, complete with a news report. Hyatt, who called the promotion “brilliant,” said it's just “one of the way’s that we are aggressively experimenting with social media marketing here at Thomas Nelson.”

So what do you think? Is there any cause for alarm? Actually, the harsh allegations surprise me a bit but perhaps it's because I frequently appreciate the brand of humor the campaign is using. I suspect they wouldn't try this with your grandfather's favorite author.

DeWayne Hamby,
co-author of A Million Miles in a Thousand Years
(this page says so!)