Communications professionals know having a PR crisis plan in place is invaluable. It is the one asset we hope we never have to use on a client’s behalf.
There are clients who understand a PR crisis plan is essential, and either expect or welcome its creation. Then there are others who do not understand or appreciate how crucial it is to have a plan in place. Whether a major event or a minor blunder, how a PR crisis is handled impacts a client’s livelihood and everything they have built.
One way to convince a reluctant client is to show how a botched PR crisis can affect their bottom line. PR Daily pulled these stats when Chipotle and United Airlines were each faced with customer-facing crises:
- “In Chipotle’s case, E. coli outbreaks caused the company’s stock price to plummet 40 percent. The fast-food chain lost an estimated $8.3 million from the fiasco.”
- “United Airlines, which dominated headlines when a man was dragged off an over-booked flight, only took a 2.5 percent stock hit after the PR crisis, but lost an estimated $700 million.”
If your clients have a PR crisis plan in place, terrific. If not, or if you are seeking resources to begin, start with the following infographic shared with us from newsexposure.com:
We are also proud to have among our members seasoned crisis PR pros who have created sound PR crisis plan resources:
- Fran Stephenson of Step In Communications offers Five Crisis Communications Building Blocks
- Doug Levy of Doug Levy Communications is the author of The Communications Golden Hour: The Essential Guide To Public Information When Every Minute Counts
- Ann Marie van den Hurk of Mind the Gap PR is the author of Social Media Crisis Communications: Preparing for, Preventing, and Surviving a Public Relations #FAIL
Start now. Get one step ahead. Join Solo PR Pro for access to a Media Training template and many more members-only tools.
This post was written by Michelle Kane, Solo PR Pro Premium Member and Head Honcho of Voice Matters, LLC . Michelle has over 20 years' experience in communications management, writing, public relations, administration, and broadcasting.
Photo by Jametlene Reskp on Unsplash
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