There is a new
price tag for failure,
approximately $21.5
billion.
That's the amount
financial analysts say
the Tiger Woods PR
debacle has cost the
companies who had hired
Tiger as a spokesperson.
The personal loss of
credibility goes far
beyond affecting the
$100 million man, and
has substantially
affected the value of
the companies who
depended on his image to
sell their products and
services.
In a vacuum, his misstep
has caused a ripple
effect that is costing
jobs and may actually
wind up closing
companies. The terror
for firms large and
small is that it's nigh
impossible to predict
when a crisis is going
to happen - but that
doesn't mean it's
impossible to prepare
for it.
Crisis public relations
is more than just the
practice of damage
control. In fact, it is
one part prevention and
one part containment,
aimed at curtailing or
even eliminating the
damage from a public
relations crisis. The
problem with most
companies is that they
don't typically see
crisis PR as a proactive
measure, and they simply
react when a crisis
strikes.
The first way to protect
yourself against a
crisis media disaster
taking the rug out from
under your company's
feet is to have a crisis
media plan in place,
just like OSHA requires
you to have an
evacuation crisis media
plan in case your office
catches on fire.
Companies need to have a
written procedure to be
executed either in-house
or by their crisis media
agency to immediately
contain and control a
Crisis media.
The core of this crisis
media plan should be a
two-fold approach of
silence, and then
disclosure. When a
Crisis media strikes,
it's important to be
sure that no one in your
company speaks to the
media immediately, at
least not without a
crisis media plan or a
statement approved by
management. Second,
management needs to
assess the damage of the
story, and prepare not
only a written response,
but offer a spokesperson
to speak to the press. A
perfect example of this
occurred in the 1980s in
Tampa Bay. One evening,
not too long after the
Los Angeles race riots,
a white sheriff's deputy
shot and killed a black
teenager during a
robbery investigation.
The suspect wielded what
looked like a gun in the
darkness and pointed it
at the deputy, prompting
the deputy to fire on
the suspect. After the
suspect was down, it was
discovered what the
deputy thought was a gun
was a piece of wood
carved out to look like
a gun.
This was a potentially
explosive story. A
banner front-page
headline could have
touched off local riots
and raised tensions in
the community to the
boiling point.
From the circumstances
involved, it was what
the police community
calls "a righteous
shoot," justified from
the thread of events of
the evening. Police are
permitted to fire on
suspects when they
believe their safety or
the safety of others is
in imminent peril. The
suspect, believed to
have a weapon, had both
motive and opportunity
to fire and had the
"weapon" aimed at the
deputy. The public
information officer (PIO)
for the Hillsborough
County Sheriff's office
at the time was Jack
Espinosa, the first
civilian PIO in the
country. When he heard
of the incident, he got
in his car and called on
his car phone (at that
time, cell phones and
car phones were very
rare) every crime beat
reporter in the city,
and asked them to meet
him at the crime scene.
He also called the watch
commander and advised
him not to speak to a
soul until he arrived at
the scene. Once there,
he collected all the
information about the
incident, and then
brought the senior
officer on scene in
front of the gaggle of
press he had called. He
held an impromptu press
conference and answered
every question from
every reporter, making
clear every detail of
the incident.
The end result was that
the reporters, and their
editors, came to the
same conclusion as the
investigators - while
tragic, there was
nothing the deputy could
have done to change the
outcome of the evening
without having placed
himself in what he
believed was mortal
danger. Also, the
reporters had no
suspicions that there
was any kind of cover-up
in place, as they were
given access to the
crime scene and the
commanding officer on
the scene.
The next morning, news
of the shooting hit the
papers, but not as a
banner headline.
Instead, it was a brief
in the back portions of
the papers, and one of
the major dailies
decided it wasn't worth
covering at all. A
crisis media disaster of
life-threatening
proportions was averted
by first controlling the
flow of information, and
then opening the
information flow in a
professional manner,
with a communications
pro as the gatekeeper.
Espinosa, who later
became known nationally
for his skill, had a
crisis media plan in
place on how to handle a
crisis. He executed it
instantly, controlled
the story and served the
press in such a way that
it muted the story and
its impact before it had
a chance to balloon into
a full fledged crisis.
Companies need to make
such a crisis media
insurance policy a
mission-critical task,
and part of their
overall marketing
strategies and tactics.
Source: Marsha J
Friedman
link
How Do You Plan For
the Unexpected? Why
Crisis Media Can Save a
Company