Recent Articles

Optimizing Your Blog For Syndication, Meme Trackers
With the growing adoption of RSS readers, Meme Trackers and content being syndicated on 3rd party sites, how your content is ultimately presented becomes increasingly important. What follows are some basic steps to...

Discouraging Event Attendance
Ephraim Schwartz has an entry in his Reality Check blog for InfoWorld in which he expresses dissatisfaction with registration and attendance requirements for a recent IBM/Lotus web conference. He quotes the registration...

User Generated Content - Accurate, Not Insult
One of the most repeated terms added to the new web 2.0 glossary describing current trends in web design is "user generated content." It even has it's own Wikipedia page that proclaims it came into mainstream use...

Traditional Vs. Citizen Media - Social Darwinism
I'm sure there are many out there who ask or are asked this question, and many have not yet found a consistent answer. The question is, what's the difference between a journalist and a blogger? Is a blogger a journalist and...

Trust In Search! Dinner
At Search Engine Strategies conferences there are always after-conference events and last night was no exception. The SES Dinner hosted by Allan Dick of Vintage Tub and Bath was definitley a winner in my book. Sponsors...

PubCon: Clicktracks Dinner And Interview
One vendor you're sure to see at virtually every SES and Pubcon conference is web analytics company, ClickTracks. I had the pleasure of speaking at a few DMA conferences at the same time as ClickTracks founder John Marshall...

15 Ways To A Killer Blog W/ The Scobles
It was day three at the Blog Business Summit and time for Fifteen Ways to a Killer Blog with Robert Scoble and Maryam Scoble. I'll recap the Fifteen Ways here with some comments mixed in: 1. Blog because you want to. Robert pushed Maryam to blog for quite a while and she...


Download Now!
02.14.07


PR Blogging: When Disaster Strikes

By Wayne Hurlbert

Disaster can strike a business at any time. Despite an entrepreneur's careful plans to handle any possible emergency, life has a way of throwing the odd curveball. Sometimes those major issues feel like a hailstorm, and it's landing right on your head. Of course, that's only the beginning.

The phone is ringing off the hook with members of the news media wanting answers as to what went wrong, and what is planned as a solution. Customers, creditors, and suppliers are suddenly into full panic mode about the solvency of your business. Even trusted staff members are quietly dusting off their resumes, and making calls around the city, about possible alternative employment. Somehow, the message has to get out to every stakeholder, that like any storm, this too shall pass.

This is no time to adopt the ostrich approach and bury your head in the sand. While it may seem like a good idea to many members of your organization to keep their heads down, managing a crisis by wishful thinking rarely works in the real world. Hoping that no one will notice the nature and depth of the disaster is simply not an option.

It's time to post to your business blog and enter full scale public relations mode. This is not the moment to run away and not talk to anyone. While avoidance of the issues, and a distinct desire to stay clear of the news media are natural reactions for many people, not talking is precisely the wrong approach. Get to that keyboard and start blogging. Tell your side of the story as openly and honestly as possible. Establish a climate of mutual trust and respect with everyone involved.

Download Now!

When posting information about the disaster, it's very important to get the facts out to everyone. Members of the media, clients, suppliers, creditors, and the general public will go to your business blog seeking your statements on what happened, and why it took place. They will want to know your response to the situation, and a timetable for implementation of the planned solution.

While not everything will be finalized at posting time, and plans may still be very preliminary, share as much information as possible. With the public relations blog as a communications vehicle, updates can be provided in real time as more information becomes available. Interim plans, as well as potential contingency plans can be posted to help nervous stakeholders. If an alternative supplier is needed for time sensitive customers, be sure to recommend a few competitors. The customers and your competitors will appreciate your open and honest approach. Transparency is a hallmark of blogging. During a crisis, it's doubly important. It will also pay off in great public relations capital for the future.

If you don't provide the facts of the crisis, the information blanks will get filled in anyway. More often than not, rumours and wildly innacurate stories will begin to circulate. If no word appears from your offices, people will suspect the worst. They may even accuse you of trying to hide something. It's your responsibility to the company, and to the public at large, to set the facts straight.

Address each issue openly and honestly. Don't hide from the false stories that always seem to circulate in any disaster situation. Discuss those rumours as well. It's up to you to fill in the blank spaces with the company side of the story, as truthfully as possible. Snowjobs and falsehoods won't hold up for long, and are best avoided at all costs. They destroy your trust and credibility, and will make the situation even worse. An honest appraisal of the situation and some realistic potential solutions will go far in easing everyone's minds. It may even save your company.

Continue reading this article


About the Author:
Wayne Hurlbert provides insigtful information about marketing, promotions, search engine optimization and public relations for websites and business blogs on the popular Blog Business World.

Check out Blog Business World for yourself.

About ActivePro
ActivePro delivers news and expert insight that help managers create strategy and change directions. ActivePro believes that all businesses need a Flexible Strategy For Success.

ActivePro is brought to you by:

WebProNews.com Jayde.com
MarketingNewz.com SalesNewz.com
CareerNewz.com InvestNewz.com
eCommNewz.com WebsiteNotes.com
AdvertisingDay.com ManagerNewz.com
SoHoDay.com CRMNewz.com

-- ActivePro' is an iEntry, Inc. publication --
iEntry, Inc. 2549 Richmond Rd. Lexington KY, 40509
© 2007 iEntry, Inc. All Rights Reserved Privacy Policy  Legal

archives | advertising info | news headlines | free newsletters | comments/feedback | submit article


ActivePro Home Page About Article Archive News Downloads WebProWorld Forums iEntry Advertise Contact ActivePro News Archives About Us Feedback ActivePro - Flexible Strategy For Success WebProWorld Forum