Crisis of Trust: Five Ways to Recover Relationships with Key StakeholdersBad Press Nobody wants to hear these much-dreaded words, yet virtually every type of company has been tested to see if they can weather the firestorm after something goes terribly wrong. A poorly managed crisis can have dire consequences. Customers may decide to leave the company's product on the shelves, Wall Street might lose interest in the stock, and employee morale may sag. Today's short news cycle and diffused media environment only complicate matters. "Effective crisis management can minimize the damage and in some cases allow an organization to emerge stronger than before the crisis" (Crisis Management and Communications,12.07, IPR). As a PR professional, how then do you douse the fire and regain key stakeholder trust? On their own, precautions and pre-crisis strategy planning will only take you so far. As obvious as they may seem, universal best practices can be your strongest allies.
Facebook: The case for timeliness and transparency
Facebook launched a social advertising feature that would allow a user's friends to see what purchases they had made and receive an advertising message. However, at launch, Facebook described the program as a service to "allow users to share information from other websites for distribution to their friends," by combining "social actions" with the advertising message of an affiliated company. The actual service was less benign. In truth, a user's network of contacts would receive an advertising message each time the user made a purchase or other transaction from a participating advertiser. Facebook set the default so the user's entire friend network would get the onslaught of advertising messages, making it cumbersome for users to "opt-out." Soon users began protesting. They formed Facebook groups such as, Facebook: Stop Invading My Privacy! MoveOn also joined the fray, petitioning for a conversion to a system that required users to give their permission proactively before the information could be shared. Facebook claimed MoveOn misrepresented how social ads work, pointing out that information was "shared with a small section of a user's trusted network of friends, not publicly on the Web or with all Facebook users," and that users were given multiple options to choose not to share the information. Yielding to the backlash, Facebook eventually changed the default to an "opt-in" setting and later announced the creation of a privacy control allowing users to turn it off completely. Facebook CEO, Mark Zuckerman apologized for the mistakes made in building the feature and for "taking too long to decide on the right solution." (Case based on BurrellesLuce analysis, as appearing in PRWeek, 12.19.07).
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