Toronto Star

Smartphone­s turn consumers into whistleblo­wers

United Airlines incident latest example of cameras giving people the power to hold companies accountabl­e

- MAE ANDERSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK— Look out, Corporate America. Customers armed with smartphone­s and video cameras are watching when you screw up.

The viral video of a ticketed passenger dragged forcefully off a United flight is only the latest example of bad behaviour exposed in the age of social media.

In February, Uber came under fire after a driver posted video of CEO Travis Kalanick berating him. Earlier, a Comcast technician was shown in a video sleeping on a customer’s couch, and an audio recording chronicled one man’s herculean efforts to drop Comcast service; they are among the embarrassi­ng customer complaints that ultimately forced improvemen­ts.

FedEx had to respond after video showed a driver carelessly throwing a package with a computer monitor over the front gate.

Beyond the corporate sphere, smartphone videos of police brutality have prompted protests and investigat­ions.

Not long ago, such incidents might have gotten a mention on the local news at most, and quickly disappeare­d.

But smartphone cameras and social media have democratiz­ed informatio­n and shifted power to consumers. Companies can no longer sweep complaints under the rug.

“That’s something a lot of companies just don’t get,” said Paul Argenti, a professor of corporate communicat­ions at Dartmouth’s Tuck School of Business. Companies can’t eliminate embarrassi­ng gaffes entirely, but they can learn from past blunders to minimize the damage.

It starts with training. Employees need to be ready to react when a situation gets dramatic — and companies should emphasize that anything employees do could be recorded. That’s especially true for transporta­tion, fast food and other companies with a lot of employees who interact directly with large numbers of customers.

Running through hypothetic­al scenarios helps.

“Have a couple things planned, what we should do if ‘x’ happens and what we should do if ‘y’ happens,” said Lakshman Krishnamur­thi, a Kellogg School of Management marketing professor.

On-site employees need to be given more power to respond to avoid escalating an incident, especially one that might be recorded. In United’s case, for instance, even if employees were following the rules for seeking volunteers to give up seats, they should have been able to read the situation and increase the financial incentives for volunteers rather than drag a passenger off a flight.

“You need rules, but you need to be flexible and adapt,” Argenti said.

Once a video is out there, the standard PR-crisis response remains the same as it always has: Work swiftly to correct the situation in the eyes of the public.

“Apologize, talk about why it hap- pened, and say it will never happen again,” Argenti said.

United CEO Oscar Munoz eventually apologized, but not for two days and after first blaming the customer and airport security. Once a video goes viral, companies have to cede control of the narrative. “When the video is out there, don’t try to counterman­d what the video says,” said Herman Leonard, a professor of business administra­tion at Harvard.

In the past, companies had hours or days to respond to a crisis. Now, companies must respond immediatel­y, before a scandal spins out of control on social media.

For example, when Domino’s Pizza employees posted a YouTube video of workers defacing sandwiches in 2009, the employees were quickly fired, the store was inspected and the CEO apologized. That helped mitigate some, if not all of the damage.

Similarly, after TV cameras shot video of rats scurrying through a KFC/Taco Bell in Manhattan, parent company Yum closed 10 of its New York City restaurant­s and hired a leading rat expert to review the company’s standards.

In 2009, musician Dave Carroll had a guitar he checked destroyed during a flight. At first, United said Carroll wasn’t eligible for compensati­on, which caused a frustrated Carroll to write a song and book about it, both called “United Breaks Guitars.” Carroll’s online video of his song was so popular that Time named it one of the top viral videos of 2009. It became a business case study of how social media can harm a company’s image.

If the lesson from that episode was to be more responsive to customers, United didn’t learn it.

“It was ‘United Breaks Guitars,’ now it’s ‘United Breaks People,’ ” said Richard Levick, a crisis-management consultant.

Despite the new-found empowermen­t from social media, however, consumers have one thing against them: a short memory. They may remember the incident, but brand names fade and consumers will soon move on to the next PR flap, branding consultant Laura Ries said. This limits the changes companies must really make before moving on.

“It was ‘United Breaks Guitars,’ now it’s ‘United Breaks People.’ ” RICHARD LEVICK CRISIS-MANAGEMENT CONSULTANT

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