Judy (not sure what her last name is, but her about page says she’s a PR person) makes a point that SAP confuses bloggers with journalists and that I only asked softball questions.
She’s right (about me).
I did only ask softball questions. Why? Cause I was still trying to figure out what SAP is all about. I don’t cover them day in and day out.
But, now that I’ve done my softball interview (it’s hard to get into any depth when an executive is only available for five minutes in between other meetings) I’ll be able to step up my game too.
I’m looking at the SAP coverage on Google News, though, and I don’t see too much controversy. Is it a journalist’s job to stir up controversy where there is none? Or is it to ask questions and report on what the answers are?
Not to mention they have open forums where you can see lots of controversial things discussed. I learned, for instance, that there was a recent controversy when SAP came out with a toolset for developing ABAP (SAP’s language) and it only ran on the new versions of SAP. But, even there the controversy ended well and SAP backported that tool.
Anyway, Bloggers got different badges than full-time journalists did (they had badges that say “press” on them).
Now, if HP invited me to a board press conference today, you better believe I wouldn’t be asking “softball questions.” But on my first five-minute meeting with an executive? What was I going to ask?
UPDATE: Charlie Wood is still at the SAP event (as a blogger) and gives more details.