Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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McDonald's Crisis Management Failure | Social Media Today

McDonald's Crisis Management Failure | Social Media Today | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

So, you set out to create a website, accessible to the public, aimed at helping your employees budget. You have hopes of helping them out, but let’s be real here, you’re also looking to grab you some good PR in the process. Once you get started, however, you realize that there is no way a typical employee at your organization makes enough to live on, even with a second job, and leaving out minor expenses like food, water, and clothing…because those are luxury items, right?


Most of us would scrap the project on the spot, but not McDonald’s! The company, which has already run into a few stumbling blocks while getting acquainted with how the modern web works, must not have thought it was a problem because they went live. As could be expected, the company took a beating in the media, largely as result of the buzz generated following video, from the activists at Low Pay is Not Okay:


Jeff Domansky's insight:

Hard to imagine making this poor judgment and social media execution.

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Tesla vs New York Times: New-School Crisis Communications on Display | PR Newswire

Tesla vs New York Times: New-School Crisis Communications on Display | PR Newswire | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

A lot of discussion and PR thought leadership have been focused on managing crises in this age immediate communications and networked audiences.

 

However, a fascinating situation that’s unfolding right now between the New York Timesand Tesla Motors highlights the important opportunity brands have to tell their side of the story immediately and convincingly when they have a dispute with the news coverage, and it sure beats the daylights out of having a correction or clarification printed three days after the fact.    Simply put, brands don’t have to take what they consider to be unfair or biased coverage lying down....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Sparring continues in this heavyweight media relations bout.

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Social Media Rumors Could "Wreak Havoc" on Economy | MediaPost

Rumors disseminated via social media could “wreak havoc” on the world economy, according to a new report from the World Economic Forum titled “Global Risks 2013.” The deliberate or accidental spreading of misinformation, poetically termed “digital wildfires” by the report, could result in mass stock sell-offs as well as (even) more serious consequences like disorganized, panicked mass evacuations -- basically stampedes on a giant scale that could cause thousands of deaths.

 

These cheerful thoughts are only a few of an array of threats to the world economy identified by WEF, including plenty of things unrelated to social media or technology per se: if you like you can also worry all night about a global pandemic, runaway climate change resulting in mass flooding, and even a visit by an advanced alien civilization (really). But social media provides the most interesting anxiety fodder, in my humble op-ed, in part because its capacity for sowing chaos has already been amply demonstrated....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Digital wildfires? Risk management challenges ahead especially in social media...

ben bernard's comment, January 9, 2013 11:51 PM
thanks ! http://www.scoop.it/t/direct-marketing-services my newly made scoop.it :)
Jeff Domansky's comment, January 10, 2013 12:42 AM
Hey Ben, welcome to Scoop.it. Best of luck and have fun!
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5 PR Concerns Instagram Should Have Addressed | PRNewser

5 PR Concerns Instagram Should Have Addressed | PRNewser | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

It’s been a crazy couple of days for Instagram.

 

Just yesterday the maverick social media brand updated its privacy practices and sent the entire planet into a digital uproar. Customers across the seven continents expressed outrage that Instagram would take their precious photos and leverage them to turn a profit.

 

We broke down the fiasco in this post, but now that Instagram has apologized and retracted its new policy and the smoke has begun to clear, it’s time to break down what happened and determine what Instagram could have done better from a PR perspective....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

More post-crisis PR analysis after Instagram's apology.

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Tesla CEO Offers Damning Refutal To NYT’s Negative Model S Review | NextGadgets.net

Tesla CEO Offers Damning Refutal To NYT’s Negative Model S Review | NextGadgets.net | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

...On February 8th, the New York Time’s Josh Broder released a scathing review of the Tesla Model S, claiming it was unfit for cold weather driving. The problem was, according to Elon Musk, Tesla’s CEO, there were factual inaccuracies in the piece. Matter of fact, according to him, the review “was fake” and he would produce some hard data to back that up. Yesterday, he did, and it’s quite shocking. It turns out Broder did a number of things to, at least apparently, purposely sabotage the test. Here are just a few....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

This story just keeps on getting more interesting every day...

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The Truthiness Is Out There | MediaPost

The Truthiness Is Out There | MediaPost | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

This was the week of not quite apologizing enough.

 

Lance Armstrong appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Network to explain 20 years of cheating, lying and cruel personal destruction of his truthful critics. He repeatedly said he was sorry for his conduct, but left the distinct impression that he was sorry mainly for getting caught. And his claim that he did not force his teammates into doping, among other continued denials, sounds like a crock.

 

Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o named the supposed hoaxer who created the fake Lennay Kekua persona who e-romanced the football star before tragically dying, and even before actually living. Te'o's story can be proved or disapproved in about 5 minutes with a peek at his cell phone records, yet university officials have not been curious enough to look at them. Nor did they refute two years of false stories about the star-crossed lovers until at least a week after learning of the hoax.

 

Yet the most shocking non-apology apology was buried in the avalanche of coverage about the disgraced athletes. The true disgrace belongs to Atlantic President M. Scott Havens, whose memo to colleagues about the magazine's ill-conceived online advertorial from the Church of Scientology fails just about every test of honesty, judgment and simple common sense.



Read more: http://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/191476/the-truthiness-is-out-there.html#ixzz2IdlSIVT4

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Unfortunately the truth is NOT enough for Lance, Te'o, Atlantic magazine...

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PR Flubs, Missed Opportunities and the Human Touch | PRBreakfastClub

PR Flubs, Missed Opportunities and the Human Touch | PRBreakfastClub | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

If you haven’t heard of Health Management Associates (HMA), that’s ok, few would probably know who they are. That is unless you watched the 60 Minutes segment this past Sunday on how they are allegedly encouraging administrators and physicians at hospitals they own to admit as many patients as possible, in order to boost profits. The public company, headquartered in Naples, FL and whose shares are traded on the NYSE, “through its subsidiaries owns and operates (15) general acute care hospitals and other health care facilities in non-urban communities”, as reported on their Wall Street Journal company profile.

 

If you did see the segment and immediately wondered about a company response to the allegations, then one of your first instincts may have been to see what it was, and maybe (like me) you hopped on Facebook to see what they were posting, damage control, community engagement, etc. Here is a $5.1 billion company I thought, with a gigantic network and hundreds of thousands of patients moving in and out of their facilities every year. Surely they are on social media by now, taking advantages of its potential to reach out, interact, inform, and entertain their community. Instead, I found nothing. No social media presence at all. Zip.

 

If you click around their Web site it looks clean, informative, professional, and…missing something. The absence of social media channels for a company who clearly now has a crisis on their hands makes you wonder why they decided to forgo participation when the channel could have served them well in the wake of the 60 Minutes report....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Really good example of where social media could have played a valuable, positive role in a crisis...and didn't...

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Instagram Boycott Now Includes National Geographic And Anonymous | Forbes

Instagram Boycott Now Includes National Geographic And Anonymous | Forbes | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
The magazine and hacktivist network criticize the photo network after says it will start sharing users' photos with advertisers.

 

The boycott against photo sharing site Instagram just got the support of two big institutions, each spanning the spectrum of the old and new: National Geographic, and the hacktivist network Anonymous.

 

National Geographic has posted an image on its photo feed saying it was “suspending new posts to Instagram. We are very concerned with the direction of the proposed new terms of service.”

 

Meanwhile @YourAnonNews, the hugely-popular Twitter feed for Anonymous supporters has also encouraged people to deletetheir Instagram accounts.

Jeff Domansky's insight:

What's up with Instagram and its poor crisis management?

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