The recent
collapse of a portion of
the Dallas Cowboy's
practice facility
illustrates once again
the importance of every
business having a
practical and up-to-date
crisis management plan.
As we have learned over
the past 24-years, a
business crisis rarely
occurs at a time
convenient for the
company or its
executives. The Cowboy's
facility collapse took
place on a Sunday
afternoon when most
offices were closed and
millions of Americans
were enjoying the
running of the Kentucky
Derby. But the news
media, which operates
24/7, almost immediately
began raising questions
about the design,
construction, inspection
and maintenance of the
building involved.
Scrambling to find a
public relations firm or
create a crisis
management plan after
the fact is a
prescription for a
crisis media relations
disaster.
Say nothing and there is
a good possibility that
a company's reputation
will be damaged by
inaccurate or incomplete
reports. While it may be
unfair, to the public
"no comment" often
translates to "we're
guilty." Once this type
of information migrates
to the Internet it can
live on forever. As
filmmaker Michael Moore
once said, "Give a lie a
24-hour head start and
the truth will never
catch up."
That was a potential
problem for one of our
clients when an employee
was run over and killed
after she followed some
customers out of a
restaurant after they
failed to pay their
bill. The news media
immediately raised the
issue of whether the
restaurant employee was
taking a risk because
she would be forced to
pay for the customers'
meals out of her own
pocket. Restaurant
executives responded
immediately correcting
that misinformation and
telling the media that
the employer's policy
called for the waitress
to tell a manager about
the problem not leave
the restaurant or chase
anyone.
Later, another
journalist was about to
report that the
restaurant could lose
its liquor license
because one of the
customers served was
underage. Quick
intervention corrected
that exaggeration of the
likely outcome of a
state investigation into
the matter.
A realistic crisis
management plan should
be drafted by experts
with experience in
actual crisis
situations. It should
outline likely issues
that could face a
company or organization
and detail as much as
possible how these
issues are to be managed
and who is responsible
for addressing them.
The crisis media plan
should have a clear,
simple-to-understand
crisis media relations
policy that makes sure
the media will receive
timely information
needed to do an accurate
story without creating
legal issues for the
client later on. In one
case recently, an
employee of a big box
retailer shared with a
reporter the fact that
company safety policies
were not being followed
when a customer was run
over by a piece of heavy
equipment at the
location. If the company
had a crisis media
relations policy, either
this employee was not
aware of it or did not
understand the
importance of following
the policy.
Many crisis management
plans we have reviewed
lack one or all of these
important components.
The crisis media plan
must be concise enough
to be of use during a
crisis.
The crisis media plan
must be applicable even
if the company's offices
are closed or key
executives are out of
position.
The crisis media plan
must take into account
public perception of the
company's actions.
The crisis media plan
must identify and employ
experts in crisis media
relations during crisis
situations.
The crisis media plan
must be flexible enough
to allow for
contingencies and
unexpected issues.
The crisis media plan
must be tested, updated
and rehearsed.
Finally, make sure your
crisis management crisis
media team includes
experienced experts who
are not afraid to give
you the hard facts "with
the bark off" as former
Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld used to say.
Your crisis media team
should include experts
in crisis media
relations who understand
how to contact the news
media quickly and
effectively 24/7 as well
legal counsel you trust
and understands the
importance of protecting
your reputation. Ninety
percent of lawsuits
never go to trial and
even vindication in a
courtroom will not help
mitigate damage to your
company if the trial
takes place years after
the incident.
Recently one of our
clients was accused of
doing substandard work
on a major construction
project. The information
was incorrect and
threatened to stop
others from doing
business with the
company. Working with
our client, we
identified the real
cause of the problem and
worked with the news
media to "update" the
incorrect story. The end
result was the crisis
ended as quickly as it
began with no adverse
impact on the client's
business.
Source: David Margulies
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