Like many
bloggers I write partially for my own amusement (keeps me out of mischief, sort of thing), but also because I like to think I have something relevant, and of interest, to say on my chosen topics of beer and travel.
I started the blog back in the
autumn of 2008, so later this year the site will be celebrating its 10th anniversary. During the past nine and a half years, I have written just over 900 posts, so I should hit the
1,000 mark later this year; especially as since
2015 I have aimed to write a minimum of 10 posts a month.
This isn’t always easy, given that I am still gainfully employed running a busy
quality control department in a company which manufactures
medical devices. I also have other interests apart from beer, pubs and travel, and these include walking (sort of travel, I suppose), home-improvements plus the odd spot of gardening. Then of course there’s the family, and all the domestic stuff associated with family life.
As I intimated at the beginning, the blog is something of a labour of love and is not written for financial gain or for other inducements, such as goods in kind etc. I intend to cover the latter area in more depth shortly, but it is worth mentioning that several beer writers I know, who started out writing blogs have gone on to bigger and better things. In their various ways, all three have made successful careers within the beer industry, either directly or indirectly.
Good luck to them, and I wish them all well. Although I’m sure they wouldn't have minded me mentioning their names, I will refrain because I don't want to be accused of name dropping, but I have watched one person with particular interest and seen him start out from involvement with his university beer club, before blossoming out and writing his own blog.
He has now achieved a full time position working for the
Morning Advertiser. The reason for my interest is I happen to know his father, who is chairman of my local
West Kent CAMRA Branch.
Now I will name drop briefly, as due to my
Membership of the
British Guild of Beer Writers, I have had the pleasure of meeting and spending time with esteemed beer writer,
Martyn Cornell, and I was also briefly introduced to the famed and prolific beer historian
Ron Pattinson.
Right, back to the main point; goods in kind or for want of a better word,
“freebies”. This word covers a multitude of different items from the odd bottle of beer sent for review, books or even in some cases an all-expenses paid trips abroad.
These items – gifts in kind are normally sent with the expectation that the receiver (beer writer or blogger), will review them in a favourable light; normally on their site or blog. The same will also apply in the instance of travel experiences.
Some writers will eschew such
“freebies” altogether, whilst others will make a big point of declaring them. One well-known pair of beer bloggers even have a separate area on their site disclosing all the items they have received. Whether or not you think this is necessary depends on your own individual conscience and how you feel about accepting such items.
Some might say that you are more likely to give a favourable review for something you received for free, than you would if you had to buy it. Personally I am quite happy to receive bottles of beer, beer-related books, or even the odd all-expenses paid trip , and whilst I fully accept I might be more likely to review such items favourabley , this is more because I tend to look for the positives in something, rather than singling out the negatives.
However, were I to receive something particularly bad, it is unlikely that I would write anything at all. Instead I would contact the supplier to check whether I’d been sent a faulty item. If it was a beer I didn’t like, then I would review it, as objectively as possible, but would say it was not to my taste.
Like many beer writers I have been invited to various product launches, the majority of which are normally held in London. It is easy for me to travel to the capital by train, providing the function takes place at a reasonable time, and does not interfere too much with my day job.
The main problem here is that, in my experience at least,
PR companies tend to leave things to the last minute and then assume everyone else runs their life the same way. It is no use emailing me on the day of the launch asking if I want to attend an event the same evening. I prefer several days notice, a fact which probably hasn't gone unnoticed and may explain why these invites have more or less dried up.
Right, I've laid my cards on the table and come clean that I'm quite happy to accept all the freebies sent to me. After all, you have to take these opportunities when they come along, as it's not often you get something for free.
Or do you? Surely everything comes at a price, and just recently we have seen some of the worst examples of human greed, particularity in public life. A few years ago we had the
"cash for questions" saga in parliament, and more recently there were the well-publicised cases of MP's fiddling their expenses.
In industry, the supply of
"gifts" from suppliers at Christmas time has substantially reduced. My company takes the eminently sensible, and fair practice of raffling these items (mainly chocolates or bottles of booze) off to the work-force (management are deliberately excluded).
As well as
"gifts" being slow in coming, we have also noticed a particular reluctance on the part of people such as auditors, in accepting even a sandwich, and some even flinch at the offer of a a cup of tea! The auditors I am referring to here, are assessors from our
"notified body", and they are on site to conduct
"surveillance audits" to ensure our certification in respect of the medical devices we manufacture and sell, continues. Without this we would not be able to
CE Mark our products and export them all over the world, so it is a pretty serious matter.
It used to be standard practice to take the auditor to the pub at lunchtime for
"a pie and a pint". Nothing too excessive and nothing, apart from a possible fuzzy head, or relaxed frame of mind, which could sway the outcome of one of these audits in our favour. A former colleague, who worked for a while in pharmaceuticals in the
Irish Republic, told me it used to be the case that come audit time, the
Medicines Inspector expected, and invariably received, what was euphemistically described as a
"good lunch".
Of course those days are now long gone and today, as I mentioned earlier, even the offer of a sandwich from the local shop is usually rejected, for fear of being seen as accepting
"bribes". I ought to mention that the company has to pay for these audits, and the cost is not cheap. One year we clocked up a bill running into tens of thousands of pounds, so bodies such as
BSI, LRQA, SGS and
TUV might be thought as doing alright out of them. When the audit runs over several days, we even have to foot the auditor's hotel bill!
There is however, one exception, and that involves the man (or woman) from across the pond. Every six or seven years we receive notice that the
United States Food & Drug Administration (FDA), wish to come and audit us. No-one and I repeat no-one, relishes these visits, as they are disruptive, extremely thorough, very probing and normally take place over a four day period, but where the
US Government is concerned, they will pick up the tab.
Prior to the proposed visit, the
FDA will ask us to arrange hotel accommodation nearby and also transport to and from our premises. They forward details of what they expect to pay for a hotel room and meals, and we then book accordingly. The auditor then pays his or her bill and
Uncle Sam covers the cost.
I have probably over-laboured this point about auditing, but I wanted to get across how the world has changed when it comes to ensuring complete objectivity and total impartiality when monitoring company
Quality Management Systems, and in the wake of previous scandals (think silicone breast implants), this can only be a good thing.
So returning to the main theme about writers and bloggers accepting the occasional few bottles of beer, or an invite to a product launch. Is it ethical to accept such goodies, and if you do, should you declare them? My own view is there is a world of difference between accepting a few bottles or cans of beer and writing favorably about them, and turning a blind eye to defects in a company's quality system; especially as the latter could have serious public health or safety implications.
On the rare occasions I do receive products for review, I always declare this in my write-up, as by doing so I feel I can present a more balanced view to my readers. For me it is not so much a question of ethics as one of transparency, so whatever your viewpoint, I feel this can only be a good thing.