You have to have sympathy for the PR folks who worked for Enron, Exxon, FEMA and the countless other organizations that endured public relations crises and came out for the worse. In times of crisis, it is not the PR person who needs to be on point and handling the public and media with savvy. [...]
A basic principle of social psychology is that people used to a certain something will react strongly if that something is suddenly taken away. National Public Radio reports on the gas rationing that began yesterday in Iran and the public’s violent responses. The county would have seen less negative reactions had the rationing been instituted incrementally, [...]
Fortunately, some public relations folks see value in raising the bar—and telling it like it is. Courtesy of Murphy’s law, here’s a telling example of why public relations will likely continue to suffer its ongoing identity crisis.
I’m not sure which is sadder: the profile on NPR of Larry Peterson, who was in prison for more than 17 years before DNA testing exonerated him, or the recent lawsuit filed against the federal government by the parents of about 5,000 autistic children. The tragedy in Peterson’s case is two-fold. His time in prison [...]
Gotta love Consumerist. This time Dell responds to the site with an apology after initially threatening Consumerist by asking the blog to remove a post about “confessions” from a former Dell employee. First, it should be acknowledged that there’s good reason sites like Consumerist exist—a general lack of faith in corporate American and customer service [...]
July 3, 2007
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