Melvin G. Calimag

Pinoy Post

By Melvin G. Calimag

IT rantings from the Philippines


Objectivity and the rise of online forums

Posted in The Pinoy Post by Melvin G. Calimag on 2008/08/18 21:22:34

Last week, I met a guy who was operating an online car blog. What he told me during that meeting made me reflect how online forums, or Web 2.0 technologies in general, are affecting the way consumers buy and the way the media deliver information to the public.

Prospective car buyers, he said, are flocking in huge numbers to online discussion rooms to fish out vital information on the car they are planning to buy instead of just relying on automobile reviews written by motoring journalists.

"People are not stupid to buy something that it is worth millions of pesos just because someone had written in a newspaper or magazine that this car is good because he or she had driven it for a few days," he told me.

Consumers, he added, are now are more discerning and want to get the opinion of a larger number of people. "They put a premium on the feedback from the actual owners of the car models, because it is them who can give an objective appraisal of the advantages and disadvantages of the product," he said.

At the risk sounding like a hypocrite and incurring the ire of fellow journalists, I should say that I concur with what the car blogger told me. This is also the reason why I've also stopped reviewing IT gadgets for about four years now. Now, I usually do just a write-up of a product and let others get or try it for themselves.

Even if I've been writing about technology for eight years now, I still feel inadequate in judging if a device is a lemon or not. I certainly don't want to project a know-it-all attitude when in fact, I'm just as ignorant as the guy sitting next to me.

Moreover, it's quite difficult to judge if this phone or that laptop is a five-star technology if the vendor of that product loaned it to me for just a couple of days. And of course, if you write something awful about it, there's always the possibility that you won't be able to lay your hands on a similar gadget again.

But hey, this is just my opinion. Perhaps there would still be a need for advance reviews for various kinds of products, including cars and technology products, to warn the public against cheats and purveyors of poor quality.

The only difference now is that we have online forums. And we should be thankful for that.





Disclaimer:
Views and opinions expressed in this blog are the author's, and do not necessarily represent those of ZDNet Asia.

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Talkback 3 comments

Objectivity and the rise of online forums
Online, there's another term they use collectively for that - it's called 'social media'. Good b*ll sh*t detector in this day and age.

Best. alain
Posted by friarminor on Thursday, August 21 2008 05:30 PM

Professionals will always be needed
While good information can be found in forums from actual users, there is also a lot of garbage. Moreover, amassing the information from dozens of users takes forever. I think there will always be a role to play for professional journalists, who may increasingly find that their job involves filtering the online information and writing it up into a concise and easily digestible package, in a magazine or newspaper. The online forums are not competition for journalists, but an added resource for them to utilize.
Posted by Nick Oba on Sunday, August 24 2008 04:07 PM

Objectivity and the rise of online forums
Hi Nick, You raised very good points. Thanks for the comment
Posted by Melvin on Monday, August 25 2008 07:22 PM

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About the blogger

Melvin G. Calimag

Melvin G. Calimag



Melvin G. Calimag currently writes for the infotech section of a popular English broadsheet in the Philippines. Prior to this, Melvin served as an assistant editor at Metropolitan Computer Times (MCT), the first IT publication in the Philippines. He is currently the vice president for internals at the IT Journalists Association of the Philippines (CyberPress), and also serves as a charter member with the Philippine Science Journalists Association.