Effective crisis communication essential when health is on the line

Filed Under (Communication and media training, Crisis management, Crisis preparedness, Issues management, Risk communication) by Jonathan Hemus on 12-01-2012

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Concerns and coverage about potentially faulty breast implants produced by French company Poly Implant Prothese (PIP) continue more than two weeks after the story first broke.  This is a long time for a crisis to be in the media spotlight and indicates that crisis communication has been sub-optimal at best.

Indeed, a statement from the Independent Healthcare Advisory Services, the trade body which represents private clinics, accuses the government of communicating in a way which leaves people “feeling more confused and anxious now than before”.  It’s another reminder that effective crisis communication is essential when people are concerned for their health.

Women have been bombarded with mixed messages, which only increase their worries. While the UK authorities assert that there is no need to remove implants, countries such as France, Venezuela, Germany and Czech Republic have suggested that women have their implants removed as precautionary measures. According to the Lancet Medical Journal, it is ‘quite literally incredible’ for UK health officials to expect women not to worry.

The communication problem has been further exacerbated by the many and varied media spokespeople who have appeared on our televisions and radios over the last few weeks.  Everyone from the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) through to individual cosmetic surgeons, trade associations, agony aunts, celebrities, government and patients have had their say.

So what makes for an effective media spokesperson during a health scare? We investigated this subject a couple of years back when, together with the University of Wolverhampton, we conducted research into swine flu communication. We looked at a range of spokespeople and used focus groups to assess their effectiveness and the reasons for their success – or lack of it.

The research clearly showed that high profile spokespeople have enormous power to reassure and inform the public in the event of a health scare.  Equally, they have the ability to cause unnecessary confusion, distress and concern if they fail to communicate effectively.  They need to recognise that this position of power also brings with it responsibility

We also identified the personal ingredients which defined a successful spokesperson at the time of a health scare.  Expressed as an equation, they are:

CS + SA + PA + AA = Reassurance (where CS is Credible Spokesperson, SA is Serious Appearance, PA is Personable Approach and AA is Actionable Advice)

Equally, credible spokespeople – doctors, scientists, academics – who provide worrying insights without clear and actionable advice can cause significant public anxiety. Given the impact that this communication has on the public, there’s a strong case for saying that people who are unable to match up to this set of criteria should not be put in front of the media during a major health scare.

Media training can help to identify whether a spokesperson is up the job or not, but also requires the potential commentator to be honest with themselves about their capabilities – or have a colleague who’s sufficiently honest and courageous to tell them the truth.

Having the ability to communicate effectively with the media is important at all times, but when your communication skills can affect the decisions someone makes about their health, I’d suggest it’s essential.

Jonathan Hemus

www.insigniacomms.com

Perfect crisis communication essential to protect Loyd Grossman brand

Filed Under (Crisis management, Crisis preparedness, Risk communication) by Jonathan Hemus on 15-11-2011

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Premier Foods is not the first food manufacturer to undertake a product recall following a food poisoning scare, and it will not be the last.   But its recall of Loyd Grossman korma sauce carries the potential for greater damage and more crisis communication challenges than most other recalls for two reasons.

Firstly, the fact that the Loyd Grossman brand is based upon a well known personality adds to the company’s crisis management challenge.  Any product recall with a potential health impact has the power to attract media and public interest. Add to it a celebrity angle and media attention is likely to significantly increase.  Not only that, but the celeb in question will be seeking to protect their own brand image, and your crisis communication objectives may not necessarily align.  As a consequence,  planning for the potential downside of any celebrity association needs to be a part of any brand’s reputational risk assessment.

Secondly, Premier Brand’s own business health makes it vulnerable to a mis-handled crisis.  Organisations with a positive reputation and a strong business can emerge from a crisis with their reputation intact, assuming they mange the incident well.  Organisations which enter a crisis with pre-existing business problems, financial question marks or a less than glowing reputation, can be brought to their knees (and beyond) by a mis-handled crisis. Pan Am is a prime example: it was already a troubled business before Lockerbie but its mis-handling of that crisis was enough to seal its fate.

Premier Foods seems to be managing its crisis well: given the circumstances, it needs to.


Jonathan Hemus

www.insigniacomms.com

Why Blackberry’s crisis communication response is so damaging

Filed Under (Corporate reputation managment, Crisis management, Crisis preparedness, Online communications, Online reputation management, Reputation management, Risk communication) by Jonathan Hemus on 13-10-2011

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Blackberry looks set to once again prove the crisis communication adage that it’s not really the crisis which damages reputation, it’s the way in which you respond to it.

On this basis, Blackberry is set to suffer major harm to its reputation (and its business fortunes)  based on a tight-lipped approach to communication and a failure to use social media to communicate its response to the current problems.  Gordon MacMillan’s blog posting on The Wall sums it up perfectly for me – it’s well worth a read: I’ll simply say that I endorse every word and would also add the following.

Swift crisis communication

Any organisation which wants to protect its  reputation in a crisis must be geared up to communicate quickly and expansively in the event of an incident.  For most organisations that must include social media: it’s where the crisis plays out, it’s where customers go to seek information and vent their spleen, it’s where the media turns for information.  And it’s where businesses can quickly exert influence over the communication agenda, and listen and respond to the concerns of its stakeholders.

Social media in crisis communication

In today’s online world, I would contend that even an organisation without a consumer face should have the ability to utilise social media in the event of a crisis.  But if you’re a consumer brand (which Blackberry has chosen to become) you certainly should have this capability.  Moreover, if you’re a  consumer brand in the telecoms space whose devices facilitate communication by social media, I find it truly staggering that you would ignore these channels when your reputation is on the line.

Not only does it go against the guiding principles of effective crisis communication, but it also calls into question whether the Blackberry brand really is at the heart of social media (and therefore the consumer landscape), or not.

Crisis management training

Organisations at the leading edge of  reputation protection have already integrated social media into their crisis communication planning and are running realistic crisis exercises with social media as a core element.  All businesses need to embrace this approach – and quickly – or else risk being overwhelmed by the kind of crisis communication challenge currently facing Blackberry.

Update: 15.20 13 October

Blackberry has now begun the social media fightback with a YouTube video apology from CEO Mike Laziridis in which he admits “we’ve let you down” and commits to more pro-active communication.  Its content, tone and messages are spot on.  But at least 48 hours too late.

Jonathan Hemus

www.insigniacomms.com

Effective media relations in a crisis – five questions to ask beforehand

Filed Under (Crisis management, Crisis preparedness) by Jonathan Hemus on 16-09-2011

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Recent experience demonstrates that major incidents unfold under the unswerving gaze of 24 hour news media so it’s essential that businesses vulnerable to on-site incidents have planned their crisis communication to cope with the arrival of a media pack.

Here are five key questions to address ahead of a potential media invasion:

  • Who will be your media spokesperson?
  • Who is their deputy if they’re unavailable?
  • Where will you conduct press conferences at key sites? (and what’s the alternative venue if your first choice is inaccessible?)
  • Where will the media congregate as the crisis unfolds and how will you manage their presence?
  • How will you brief employees on guidelines for inter-acting with the media and what will the guidance be?

Dealing with a major accident is hard enough.  Making sure that you have prepared beforehand for wall to wall media interest will allow you to focus all attention on the most important task, attending to the incident itself.

Jonathan Hemus

www.insigniacomms.com

Reputational overdraft hinders UBS in crisis communication efforts

Filed Under (Crisis management, Crisis preparedness, Issues management, Reputation management, Risk communication) by Jonathan Hemus on 16-09-2011

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With news that a “rogue trader” is responsible for a $2 billion loss, it is clear that Swiss bank UBS faces a huge crisis communication challenge.  A number of factors make this challenge even tougher than might otherwise be the case.

Preserving UBS’s reputation

Reports that the unauthorised trading was not picked up by UBS’s internal controls could suggest that the real crisis communication challenge centres not on the $2 billion loss, but in preserving the organisation’s reputation as a well managed, secure and professional operation.  These qualities need to be at the heart of any bank’s reputation and so any crisis which indicates their absence poses a major threat.

A lack of credit in the bank

A stock of reputational goodwill can be enormously valuable in a crisis: this can be built up with the right actions, relationship-building and pro-active communication ahead of time.  Unfortunately, UBS has a rather low stock of reputational credit currently.   Recent losses on toxic assets, a tax evasion dispute in the US and job cuts all contribute to an organisation which is low on reputational capital.  This is an unhelpful context from which to engage in crisis communication and protect reputation.

Tight-lipped communication

UBS has been extremely guarded in its crisis communication response with its most visible  presence being a 63 word statement about the issue on its website.  Others have been less tight-lipped. Ratings agencies, academics, journalists, financial analysts and other commentators have been quick to fill the vacuum.  Whilst this is undoubtedly a complex situation and the presence of lawyers will loom large, in a crisis of this magnitude, it is rarely the right strategy to stay so quiet.

Pro-active crisis communication required

The crisis poses a major challenge for UBS and threatens serious damage to its reputation and long term business (its shares dropped by 11% on the day that the news broke).   A pro-active approach to crisis communication may not be enough to fully preserve UBS’s reputational value, but I firmly believe that without it, the damage will be much more severe.

Jonathan Hemus

www.insigniacomms.com

Social media in crisis communication: lessons from UK riots

Filed Under (Crisis management, Crisis preparedness, Online reputation management) by Jonathan Hemus on 09-09-2011

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One of the main sub-stories of the August riots was the use of social media in inciting and organising rioters as they took to the streets.  Some commentators even called for social media to be “turned off”.

Now, whilst it’s clear that social media can indeed contribute to the escalation and spread of a crisis situation, it’s even more powerful as a crisis communication solution. That’s why I was so heartened to read a blog posting from Superintendent Mark Payne of West Midlands Police with his views on the subject.  I’d recommend you read his entire posting, but for now, consider these excerpts:

  • One thing that we have seen over and over again during emergency situations is that where there is no information coming from the authorities, the gap will be plugged by speculation
  • The very clear message is that people were reassured by following my feed, and believed it rather than all of the rumours that were flying about on the day
  • If you use social media on a day to day basis, people start to trust your voice, and they are much more likely to turn to you for information in a crisis

It seems clear to me that these are crisis communication lessons not just for the police force, but for corporate communicators too.  Anyone in the business of reputation protection should be paying full attention to the impact of social media, and planning for its use in crisis management.  Applying the principles suggested by Superintendant Payne would be a very good start.

Jonathan Hemus

www.insigniacomms.com

Cautious crisis communication by Nurofen Plus is risky strategy

Filed Under (Crisis management, Crisis preparedness, Issues management, Online communications, Online reputation management, Reputation management, Risk communication) by Jonathan Hemus on 25-08-2011

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If you heard that your regular painkiller could have been replaced with antipsychotic drugs instead, you might be a little concerned.  So concerned that you might want a little more information to put your mind at rest. 

That is the scenario facing purchasers of Nurofen Plus following an announcement from the Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency (MHRA) that some packs contain not the expected Ibuprofen, but Seroquel XL, an antipsychotic drug used to treat conditions such as schizophrenia.

Go to the Nurofen website and there appears to be no information about the incident.  Move on to Nurofen’s Facebook page and there’s a great quiz, but no information about the product contamination.  Turn to the website of Reckitt Benckiser and still you won’t find any advice from Nurofen or its parent company. 

So, instead, you pick up the phone and call the consumer helpline listed on the Nurofen website. Unfortunately, news of  the incident hit the BBC around 6pm and the helpline shut at 5pm.

Businesses which want to reassure their customers and retain their loyalty during and after a crisis need to communicate with them.  That means being geared up to communicate via company websites and social media.  It means having the capability to man your customer helpline 24/7 if necessary.  Failing to do this leaves customers in the dark, potentially fearful and with your reputation in the hands of the commentators who are prepared to provide information.  It’s a high risk crisis communication strategy.

Update

Twelve hours later and a terse statement is now available on the Nurofen website, but it contains little information or reassurance.  At 8.06am the customer helpline is still closed and people are beginning to post to the Nurofen Facebook page, for example “Never mind the competitions , what about informing the public of the anti-depressants found in your packs?”.  No information about the problem can be found on Nurofen’s Facebook page.  People are also making their views known on Twitter.  More expansive crisis communication would surely be in Nurofen’s best interests?

Update 2 (26 Aug)

Nurofen has now announced a recall of all stock in retail outlets: a more expansive communication approach is now surely essential.

Jonathan Hemus

www.insigniacomms.com

How Seychelles’ spokesman got his crisis communication so wrong

Filed Under (Communication and media training, Crisis management, Crisis preparedness, Reputation management, Risk communication) by Jonathan Hemus on 24-08-2011

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For a country whose econony relies on tourism, there’s no bigger crisis communication challenge than dealing with a fatal shark attack.  So it’s little wonder that the Seychelles’ crisis media spokesperson, tourism chief Alain St Ange, sounded under pressure when conducting media interviews about the death of British tourist Ian Redmond.

What is surprising though is that he should have made so many fundamental and damaging mistakes in the way he handled his media interviews.  A thorough reputational risk assessment should identify the crisis scenarios capable of seriously damaging a reputation so that thorough crisis communication training and planning can take place ahead of  a possible crisis event.  Either a shark attack had not been identified as a potential risk (a serious oversight) or insufficient crisis media training had taken place to identify and prepare a spokesperson to deal with such an event.

So where exactly did Mr St Ange go wrong?  Listen to this early BBC interview which illustrates the following errors:

1) Inappropriate balance between messages about the victim versus messages about the Seychelles

Whilst Mr St Ange expresses sympathy for the victim and his family, this is out-weighed by messages focused inwardly on the Seychelles.  This smacks of self-interest and self-justification.  He twice describes the country as being “innocent” as though apportioning (or avoiding) blame is the priority at this stage.  More than this, his attempt to position the attacker as a “foreign shark”  and by inference not the responsibility of the Seychelles, stretches credulity.  The impression created – rightly or wrongly – is that the spokesperson cares more about the impact on business in the Seychelles than the human tragedy.  In other words, the exact opposite of what he should be communicating.

2) Inappropriate tone of  voice

It’s not just what you say, it’s how you say it.  Mr St Ange fails to convincingly communicate compassion in his tone of voice.  Instead, he sounds business-like, matter of fact and slightly brusque.  The impression is  of someone slightly irritated that he is having to deal with a problem (and the media), rather than someone who cares deeply about what has happened.  Some may argue that the fact he is not a native English speaker is a key factor in his vocal delivery.  I say that’s not good enough: when your reputation is on the line, you cannot afford to field a spokesperson who is unable to create the right perceptions among viewers and listeners.  Crisis communication training is essential to identify and enahnce the skills of your crisis spokespeople

In this later clip, again featuring Alain St Ange, a further problem arises:

3) Poor preparation leads to unwanted headlines

Mr St Ange continues to defend the actions taken by the Seychelles to protect tourists, but in an apparently throw away remark – again communicated in a casual tone of voice - he concedes “we did try, but maybe not enough”.  Guess what the headlines were after this interview?  Almost universally, along the lines of “Seychelles tourism chief admits we could have done more”.  My criticism is not so much the message itself – acknowledging mistakes and committing to address them can be a very powerful and engaging message – more that it appeared to emerge in an unplanned way.  More than this, it seemed to conflict with earlier messages which sought to distance the Seychelles from blame.  To be successful, crisis spokespeople must know exactly want they want to communicate in a media interview and be pro-active in getting those messages across.  Consistency of message is crucial: media interest in crises can be sustained much longer in the event of mixed or conflicting messages.

The role of spokesperson in a crisis carries significant responsibility.  In addition to successfully communicating important information to stakeholders, the impression they create will influence longer term perceptions of the affected organisation.  Choosing the right person for this task, training them properly and providing them with the right messages can make  the differnce between preserving reputation, and seeing it severely damaged.

Jonathan Hemus

www.insigniacomms.com

News International phonegate: why crisis communication efforts failed

Filed Under (Corporate culture, Crisis management, Issues management, Reputation management, Risk communication) by Jonathan Hemus on 22-07-2011

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News International has applied many of the right crisis communication tactics to preserve its reputation.  So why is it still suffering criticism and damage?

The first reason is of course the sheer magnitude of the issue, the alleged cover up and the time it was allowed to fester without resolution.  But the timing and sequencing of News International’s crisis management response is also partly to blame.  Let’s take a look at three golden rules of successful crisis communication, how News international applied them and why they failed to prevent reputational damage.

1) Take decisive action to address the problem

News International’s announcement of the closure of the News of  the World on 7 July was the epitome of a decisive move and could have marked a significant turning point in this drama.  It failed to do so because the decision left Rebekah Brooks in post, one of the few current employees who was working for the News of the World at the time the hacking took place.  As a consequence, the decision was seen as expedient, and current News of  the World journalists were perceived more as victims than villains.  More than this though, News International’s action in closing the paper and the words that accompanied it, still indicated an organisation in denial of the scale of its problem.

2) Say sorry

In a crisis, lawyers advise never to say sorry; communicators recommend that it should be the first step.  When News International said sorry via full page advertisements in the national press on 15 July, it started to get its tone of voice right for the very first time.  Even more powerfully, when Rupert Murdoch met with Milly Dowler’s parents to express his regret, even Mark Lewis, the Dowler’s lawyer, commented on his sincerity.  But the apology was way too late to have the  impact that News International desired: it was the right message at the wrong time.

3)  Communicate pro-actively

As a media organisation some have found it surprising that News International’s crisis communication has been so lacking: I see it as a very high profile example of “cobbler’s children”.  It was interesting to note that when Murdochs senior and junior spoke to the Commons Select Committee, News International’s share price went up.  By communicating willingly and pro-actively, organisations begin to exert control over a situation and their reputation.  But it doesn’t help when you appear to have been cajoled, kicking and screaming, to that point.

News International’s crisis really began with a culture which allowed – maybe implicitly encouraged – phone hacking and an inability or unwillingness to confront the problem.   When it exploded, its use of all of the right crisis communication tactics, but not necessarily in the right order, meant that recovery was all the harder.

Jonathan Hemus

www.insigniacomms.com

Can the News of the World be good?

Filed Under (Corporate culture, Corporate reputation managment, Crisis management, Crisis preparedness, Issues management, Reputation management) by Jonathan Hemus on 07-07-2011

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Yesterday we considered the crisis communication lessons that businesses could learn from the News of the World hacking scandal.  Today, guest blogger Nick Woods, head of Publicis Consultants, considers how the paper might recover from its current crisis management challenges.

If you believe Rousseau, man is essentially good. He, or she, has flaws but the start point is that they are born good.

Your view on how this applies to Rupert Murdoch, Rebekah Brooks, Andy Coulson, Glenn Mulcaire or the coppers that sold stories is yours to ponder but it raises an interesting point about brands.

Very few brands are ‘born good’, rather they are created with the express purpose of making money for their owner.  But that doesn’t mean they shouldn’t do good, as the NotW is proving – doing good isn’t just a useful pillar when things begin to go wrong it also provides a new potential strategic direction.

The News of the World has, undoubtedly, behaved appallingly and it seems likely we’ll see inquiries, new laws and hefty punishments for those who thought they were above the law.

But, as Colin Myler said in his letter to staff yesterday, the paper has also done some very good things:

“We are the paper that campaigned to enshrine the Military Covenant in law, fought for ten years to establish Sarah’s Law into legislation, the paper of Children’s Champions, the paper that has fought tirelessly against bullying and so much more.”

On top of these they have been one of Help for Heroes’ leading champions; the irony of last night’s reports that they also hacked into the phones of dead servicemen is lost on no-one.

This ‘good’ work could form a part of the brand’s recovery (and recover it surely shall – I predict a circulation spank this Sunday and then a full recovery over subsequent weeks with advertisers quietly returning).

The paper will undoubtedly have to be contrite, apologise and maybe wear some sack cloth, cover its head with ashes and do a fair amount of public wailing but it will also, eventually, need to move on and one possible route is an even more campaigning future.

This is a paper which is read by around 7 million people every Sunday, not just an impressive figure but a powerful one. This is a paper courted by politicians of every hue because of its influence over so many. This is a brand with an enormous opportunity to re-define its entire brand story, to put its shady and seemingly illegal past firmly behind it by finding a new narrative to follow, a narrative that is entirely positive.

If you look across British life there are lots of areas we could improve and if you begin to break it down even simplistically into political, environmental, social, technological, legal and economic, you can probably come up with a few yourself. Now imagine the most widely read newspaper in Britain running multi-platform campaigns in some of these areas.

I know some are talking about the ‘end of the News of the World’ but they’re kidding themselves. Some people there have behaved abominably and will, rightly, suffer the consequences. But like all crises this one represents an enormous opportunity and maybe it’s the NotW’s opportunity to redefine itself as a brand ‘for good’ in both senses.