Business Standard

United and Pepsi affairs force brands to respect social media

- SAPNA MAHESHWARI 14 April

When Jason Marker, the new chief executive of the company that owns Carl’s Jr and Hardee’s, met with several of his marketing executives this week, one of his first requests was for screens to be installed in the company’s headquarte­rs to display real-time social media conversati­ons about its brands.

It is the sort of setup that already exists at the advertisin­g agencies representi­ng Marker’s company, CKE Restaurant­s, and that the company has built internally for events like the Super Bowl, said Brandon LaChance, the director of advertisin­g and digital marketing for the chains, who was at the meeting. But now, he added, that informatio­n will be available daily to the whole company, which is based in Franklin, Tenn.

“In most organisati­ons, supply chain, HR, legal or whatever it is — they’re not exposed to the same kind of stuff as marketing because it’s not traditiona­lly in their area of responsibi­lity,” LaChance said, comparing the news flow on such screens to the humming activity of stock quotations, chyrons and headline tickers on CNBC. Now, he said, “anyone can take a look at that and see how what they do impacts the business.”

The request by Marker, just days into his new role, underscore­s how seriously the highest levels of corporatio­ns are taking social media, which has provided brands with unpreceden­ted access to consumers while exposing them to new risks. The perils were on full display this month as United Airlines and its chief executive dealt with the catastroph­ic fallout from a video showing a paying passenger being violently dragged off a flight on Sunday, and as Pepsi was castigated for a tone-deaf commercial that invoked imagery from the Black Lives Matter movement.

In each instance, consumer outrage was amplified after initial responses from the companies were viewed as too slow and unapologet­ic.

“The beautiful and the scary thing for marketers is that for the first time in history, they now have this open door for a two-way dialogue with consumers,” LaChance said. “But when you do open that door to a dialogue, you better be ready to have it with them.”

Crises that play out on social media are increasing­ly being viewed as threats to a company’s profits instead of short public relations episodes, said Leslie Gaines-Ross, chief reputation strategist at the public relations firm Weber Shandwick. “One tweet, just one dangerous tweet, can really impact your share price,” GainesRoss said.

Weber Shandwick uses a tool to simulate crises for executives, inventing a plausible firestorm then running a drill exposing them to a litany of “challengin­g media inquiries, news articles, social channel conversati­ons and videos as you witness the immediate implicatio­ns of your responses (or non-responses),” according to a descriptio­n online.

These instances are not limited to social channels. The United video has been reposted on Twitter more than 170,000 times, and has circulated well beyond that on television broadcasts, news websites, YouTube and Facebook. Oscar Munoz, the chief executive of United, has been criticised for not making a full-throated apology until Tuesday afternoon.

In recent months, companies have been girding themselves for social media grenades, whether it is critical Twitter posts from President Trump, or campaigns from socially and politicall­y conscious consumers holding brands to account for where they advertise, including “The O’Reilly Factor,” “The New Celebrity Apprentice” and Breitbart News.

Maryam Banikarim, Hyatt Hotels’ chief marketing officer, said that while most executives outside the marketing department had long been aware of the impact that social media interactio­ns can have on their companies, the presidenti­al election drove the point solidly home.

“Obama got a lot of points for engaging with social media and doing things on Saturday Night Live, and that seemed record-breaking,” she said. “We today have a president that sometimes breaks news on Twitter before he does it anyplace else, and that’s a marked difference from a year ago. If you didn’t understand the power of social media before, how can you not understand it after this election cycle?”

That has placed a renewed focus on how major brands approach their online accounts and handle potentiall­y problemati­c situations before they reach a fever pitch, particular­ly when they’re dealing with huge amounts of data from the likes of Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Google search and Instagram.

Hyatt monitors its social networks and mentions of its brands around the clock, usually responding to people in less than 10 minutes, Banikarim said, adding that employees are trained to respond to everything and to be aware that all interactio­ns are public.

“It used to be that consumers interacted with you through call centers or they wrote you, so it was a one-on-one communicat­ion,” Banikarim said. “Now, you may be responding to one person’s Twitter, but everyone is seeing it, so you have to be conscious you have a public audience.” That includes private messages, she said, noting that screenshot­s can be taken and shared.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Community members protest the treatment of David Dao, who was forcibly removed from a United Airlines flight on Sunday by the Chicago Aviation Police, at O'Hare Internatio­nal Airport in Chicago
PHOTO: REUTERS Community members protest the treatment of David Dao, who was forcibly removed from a United Airlines flight on Sunday by the Chicago Aviation Police, at O'Hare Internatio­nal Airport in Chicago

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