370 likes | 484 Views
E Dealing with Intense Media Scrutiny During a Business Crisis. For Washington RIMS By Joan Gladstone, APR, Fellow PRSA President and CEO, Gladstone International, Laguna Beach www.gladstonepr.com. Some Cases. County of Orange files for bankruptcy Suzuki sues Consumer Reports
E N D
EDealing with Intense Media Scrutiny During a Business Crisis For Washington RIMS By Joan Gladstone, APR, Fellow PRSA President and CEO, Gladstone International, Laguna Beach www.gladstonepr.com
Some Cases • County of Orange files for bankruptcy • Suzuki sues Consumer Reports • Labor strike stops SoCal homebuilding • Toxic chemical spills into groundwater • D.A. arrests college coach for sexual misconduct • Military discovers cyber hack of personnel info …and many others
What are the consequences of negative media coverage?* *Surviving and Thriving in Uncertainty
The Good NewsBusiness crises usually provide warning signs, giving you time to planWith good planning, you may avert or mitigate media coverage of the crisis
Three elements of crisis communications planning The MediaThe MessageThe Messenger
The Media Uncontrolled & Controlled
You can influence, but not control: • Traditional journalists • Print and broadcast • Strive to be fair, accurate and balanced • Citizen journalists • Twitter, Facebook, YouTube • Promote personal opinions, dialogue and sometimes, controversy
YOUR Media • Corporate website • Social media • Email • Phone calls • Internal media
Use a mix of media To quickly provide persuasive, factual information
Product Recall • Website • “Dark” crisis page • Consumer/dealer letter • Coordinated news release • Social media • YouTube “how to” video Tell it once, tell it fast
Social Media • Build Facebook, Twitter audiences before a crisis • Post updates & website link • Monitor your social media reputation • Develop internal social media guidelines
Messages= Persuasive “Quotes” Emphasize Factual information Authoritative opinions Concise explanations Empathy statements (as needed)
On Easter Sunday, a customer told a restaurant manager that he found a “foreign object” in his soup
Immediate Response • Apologize for customer’s experience • Discard all but small sample of soup • Keep track of all actions • Request object for testing • Retain independent investigator to interview employees • Conclusion: no employees at fault
Stand-by Media Statement We have found no evidence to support any of the allegations in a complaint filed by Mr. (name) against (restaurant). ….continued with actions taken… We do not believe the lawsuit has any merit and will fight this allegation.
Six weeks later, the plaintiff’s attorney emailed the complaint to all Southern California media “He has had many sleepless nights…he may have contracted any number of life threatening diseases or illnesses… His wife claims damages for LOSS OF CONSORTIUM…”
That afternoon, the Orange County Register called for comment. We: 1. Provided our statement 2. Posted it on the company website 3. Informed managers
Next, two TV stations call Should a company spokesperson do the interviews?
KTLA segment Dirty Dish – truth or a way to make money? KABC cancelled “Your statement validated why we should not run the story.”
Outcome • Conan O’Brien joke • National reader, blogger comments – 85% supportive • Story died in one week • Restaurant sales unaffected • Settled case one year later
Develop a Q&A Goal: Consistency
Media Questions in a Crisis • WHAT happened? • WHEN did you find out? • WHO was responsible? • WHERE did it happen? • WHY did you chose the course of action? • HOW will you resolve the situation?
Interviews vs. Written Responses • Evaluate the wisdom of answering reporter questions in writing • Reduces risk when communicating sensitive or litigation-related matters • Yet when public health and safety is at stake, spokespersons offer credibility and build trust
Spokesperson: A Definition A spokesperson is a person who speaks for an organization
Choose the Right Spokesperson Former BP CEO Tony Hayward
In a crisis, a good spokesperson Provides reassurance Offers critical facts/clear instructions Exhibits confidence
Strategist Team Leader Spokesperson Risk Mgt Legal PR HR Other Resources Crisis Communications Team
Crisis PR professionals can help you balance many priorities and meet difficult communications challenges
Crisis PR Consultant Capabilities • Crisis communications plans • Meets insurance requirements • Specific issue crisis counseling • Insurance pre-approval • Spokesperson media training • Media liaison/spokesperson • Media monitoring
Thank you. Questions?