"All Press is Good Press" is No Longer True
To some,
this headline may be a "no duh" moment. But, just the other day
I heard someone say it. After the stunned feeling wore off, my
thought was "Whoa! Maybe, it's time we back up and cover some
ground." Additionally, I still see instances every day of
companies that haven't caught on yet. Everyday, I run into cases
of bad service, shoddy products and "like it or lump it"
mentalities. And, for this reason I know there are still many,
many companies out there that don't know the score - that don't
know that the customer is now 100 percent in the driver's seat
and that the power of the Internet makes their reach
exponential.
We've
reached a Darwinian moment in time in which the corporate
landscape has dramatically shifted in just a few short years.
Let me talk through where we came from to where we are now.
When I
first got into PR, everyone, not just practitioners, knew that
virtually "all press is good press." With the exception of
really, really Exxon Valdez-ish sort of bad news, we knew that
most mentions of a company would be remembered as just that a
few weeks out, a mention. People would recall that they heard
something about company X, but usually wouldn't remember if it
was good or bad. With traditional print and broadcast media,
things came and passed, clearing through our consciousness like
a passing cloud. Mind you, I'm not speaking of OJ Simpson-type
news which could slice through the clutter of our memories and
stick like a bloody glove.
Now,
let's take an OJ-style leap from his trial in 1995 to 2005, when
Jeff Jarvis, a single blogger, publicly lamented about poor
service he had received from Dell, coining the term "Dell Hell."
The term resonated with the online community and caught fire on
the Internet, resulting in irreparable damage and millions of
dollars spent by Dell to shore up their customer service. The
result has had some good results for the company. It brought
back Michael Dell to the helm and the company now has a strong
social media presence. Yet, the term 'Dell Hell' still lingers
on the net. I just googled it and got more than 30,000 results
with the term in quotes and more than 1.3 million without using
quotes. As I saw wisely put on Twitter the other day, "Social
media is like a tattoo; it can fade, but it's still always kind
of there."
Jumping
closer to date, Dominoes is still reeling from Internet backlash
of the two idiot employees who in April of this year filmed
disgusting acts with food in a store's kitchen then posted it to
YouTube. Even though the video was taken down quickly, over a
million people viewed the video in a matter of several days.
Because many people downloaded the video, it can still be found.
And, social media-bad press is the yicky fruitcake that keeps
re-gifting for Motrin. They still have a headache over an
ill-conceived "Motrin Moms" video campaign that did not resonate
well at all with many mothers. And, of course, we can't leave
out the 'United Breaks Guitars' video that screamed through
Twitter and arouund the Web last week.
Back in
the early 90's, I was aware of a printing company that
consistently missed deadlines, up charged clients to death and
basically delivered poor quality work when mistakes were made
and deemed 'too costly' to fix. I use to marvel at how in the
world they had stayed in business for so long, 20+ years. The
reason is, back then, we - the consumer - felt too insignificant
to do anything, and frivolous law suits over subpar service or
quality issues seemed too big a hassle. So, we mostly took our
lumps and went on. We didn't have a social media network with
which to share our laments and unite. We do now.
Long
story short, 'All press is good press' no longer holds what so
ever. You can experience a social media flash fire that can do
worlds of hurt to your brand. The Internet has a memory and it
is where we all reside. Now is the time to become better than
you've ever been before and for all the right reasons. Here are
some things you can do to prepare:
1.)
Board of Directors, if you have a CEO who does shady things, let
him/her go and replace them with someone of high integrity. I
was talking with the founder of Pizza Patrón the other day who
said, "I would never do anything shady in front of my employees,
because they would then think it is okay to do likewise."
There's a trickle down effect. Your troops take their signals
from the top line. Make sure yours is all about delivering value
to your customers.
2.)
Monitor what is being said about your brand on the Internet.
This is easy to do with a number of tools. Some good ones are
Google Alerts or Blogpulse, and I love checking Addictomatic
each day to see what is being said about the clients we
represent. It gives a quick snapshot of the Internet.
3.) Have
a crisis management plan in place to deal with anything and
everything under the sun.
4.) Be
proactive and reach out to your audiences through social media.
And,
good press to all ...
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SBellPR CEO, traditional and online PR, blog writer, social
media networker.
Specialties include: Public relations, media relations,
social media marketing, social media optimization, media
training, grass roots marketing, buzz/awareness building,
building brand communities, event promotion, social media
maintenance. Find her at
http://blog.sbellinc.com or
http://www.sbellinc.com |
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