Last year’s KFC chicken shortage could have been disastrous (indeed many devoted fried chicken fans thought it was at the time) and yet it threw up a golden opportunity for the brand’s PR and marketing team who quickly took charge of the situation and, crucially, took responsibility for the FCK-up. Head of PR Amanda Bunn takes a look at the importance of crisis communications when things go wrong.
Communicating honestly, with humour and humility, resulted not only in forgiveness from their loyal customer following but a huge increase in brand awareness, including total brand reach for the initial press ad in excess of one billion. Oh, and one silver and three gold Lions in Cannes (the global benchmark for effective creative marketing communications).
By definition, a crisis is going to be unexpected and, whatever business you’re in, it can strike at any time. But the majority of crises aren’t unforeseeable – you just need to have spent some time thinking about what might happen from multiple angles and prepare accordingly.
It might be a data breach, or an event cancelled by bad weather (quite likely in the UK!), maybe a defective product (or one that’s being dangerously misused), or any other of a multitude of possibilities.
What’s important is to have a plan in place to cover those eventualities or be able to adapt swiftly to cover any that haven’t been identified in advance. While the crisis itself can happen in seconds, it takes time to create that plan, which is where working with PR professionals can really help you to consider all of the key points.
Of course, in an ideal world you’ll never need to follow your plan, but there are no guarantees. What is a certainty is that if you forgo any kind of crisis planning, your business is likely to suffer significantly should the worst happen. If this article has got you thinking about your own crisis comms, talk to the team at Mobas today. You can reach us at say.hello@mobas.com or +44 (0)1223 841699.