Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Does Anyone Even Care About #BrandFails?

Does Anyone Even Care About #BrandFails? | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

The recent United and Pepsi social media firestorms are still captivating the media's undivided attention. It’s no surprise that the online perpetuation of these real-life events is the prime topic of conversation for marketers across all industries (not just airlines and soft drinks). 


Both brand blunders have sparked a burning question that’s occupying my mindspace, and it doesn’t have to do with brand reputation. “Does anyone even care?”


Brands have one purpose, selling products and services to the consumers of the world. So unless social backlash and media scrutiny are causing a serious decline in sales numbers, are there any actual consequences?...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

So United Airlines and Pepsi weren't hurt by recent controversies? Interesting proposition but I'm not sure I buy it.

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Health-washing | Tom Fishburne

Health-washing | Tom Fishburne | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

It’s a tricky time to be a food marketer. Consumers are scrutinizing more than ever to what goes into the foods they buy. And what constitutes “healthy” to consumers is in flux.


The FDA recently announced that it will be calling out “added sugar” on nutrition labels in the future. It is estimated that 68% of processed foods contain added sugars.


“It’s going to really surprise people who go to organic and whole foods stores, when they find that all this natural food they’ve been buying is full of added sugar,” said Barry Popkin, UNC professor and author of a study called, “Sweetening of the Global Diet.


”I heard that there are 61 different names for added sugar listed on food labels, which can make it hard for consumers to evaluate the amount of sugar in products they buy. The sneakiest trick to to have multiple sources of added sugar in one product, so that no one type of sugar shows up first on the ingredients panel....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Is it "Health-washing" or is it marketing? Mostly, it's deceptive and dishonest.

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Cinnabon Gets Overzealous in Its Twitter Grief for Carrie Fisher

Cinnabon Gets Overzealous in Its Twitter Grief for Carrie Fisher | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

It’s a cycle that has unfortunately become quite familiar over the last year with the loss of so many pop culture icons.A beloved, iconoclastic celebrity dies and we proceed to express our sadness and disbelief, particularly on social media. And in a rush to get in on the conversation, brands forget the most important rule of grieving in public: it’s not about you.


Carrie Fisher’s death this week spurred remembrances of her prodigious writing talent, mental health advocacy and lacerating perspective about women in Hollywood. So Cinnabon decided to post a swiftly deleted tweet about how she had “the best buns in the galaxy.”...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Tasteless tweet gets hot response for Cinnabon. No excuse! Bad PR, bad!

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At Mylan, Epi-penance is transparent on actions, opaque on reasons - without bullshit

At Mylan, Epi-penance is transparent on actions, opaque on reasons - without bullshit | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Mylan and its CEO Heather Bresch are under fire. It raised the price of its EpiPen product — an essential protection for people with life threatening allergies — by a factor of five in the last eight years. Mylan’s statement defending itself clarifies what it’s doing — providing rebates — but evades the main issue of why it increased the price in the first place.


Here’s the dialogue between Mylan and the public, in a nutshell:


Public: Why is this thing so hellishly expensive?


Mylan: We’ll help you afford it with coupons and rebates.


Public: Why is this thing so hellishly expensive?


Mylan: We’re on your side. It’s the insurance regulations.


Public: Why is this thing so hellishly expensive???


RtMylan: We even give some away to schools!S


So Mylan’s position is that it won’t explain the massive price increase on a product where it has a monopoly on a generic medication product that millions of people could die without, a product that’s essentially unchanged from past years....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Perceptions matter but Mylan's decision seems to be "profits first!" Sloppy messaging at the least.

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Brands Post Tributes to Prince, but Struggle to Make Them Heartfelt and Not Promotional

Brands Post Tributes to Prince, but Struggle to Make Them Heartfelt and Not Promotional | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

It's a tragic day, as one of the most gifted musicians of the modern era has passed.


Despite his moniker, Prince, who died Thursday at 57, was a king among men and will live on only through memory and the hours of powerful and provocative music he left behind.


Brands, as they usually do, tried to join the conversation about Prince online with mostly-purple-clad homages. That's challenging in the best of times—and doubly hard when the conversation is mostly one giant outpouring of grief. Not every brand managed it well. As of this writing, at least two brands have had second thoughts about their posts and deleted them outright. Many others remain up, though some are clearly in questionable taste—mostly because they feel overly self-promotional....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Another icon has left us and brands prove once again that self-promotion gets in the way of real feeling and sincerity and generates well-deserved scorn. These are loud marketing fails and they should be signed up for sensitivity training.

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'The Real Thing'? Not This Coke Campaign

'The Real Thing'? Not This Coke Campaign | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Sometimes the smartest brands use content marketing in a remarkably dangerous and stupid way. Case in point: Coca Cola's recent sneaky gambit, employing nutritionist bloggers to sell the iconic soft drink as a heart-smart snack.
Last month, nutritionists paid by the beverage mega-giant were touting mini-cans of Coke as a healthy snack option in online columns, radio commentary and print. Making the whole thing particularly odious, this paid content was insinuated into stories about February's Heart Health and Black History Month. 

Without shame, the world's largest beverage company has admitted to paying to push mini-cans of Coke as a part of a healthy diet, arguing the marketing ploy is simply a version of “product placement.” A  Coca-Cola spokesman told the Associated Press that the semi-stealth effort was what virtually all brands do to shine a positive light on their respective products....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

A big brand marketing and PR fail by Coca Cola. Consumers may be gullible but stupid they are not. 

Kasia Hein-Peters's curator insight, March 20, 2015 6:59 PM

Is it good marketing (promoting smaller sizes of a sugary drink) or bad marketing (lack of transparency)?

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The Worst Social Media Business Blunders | B2B Marketing Blog | Webbiquity

The Worst Social Media Business Blunders | B2B Marketing Blog | Webbiquity | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Businesses and celebrities are supposed to be professional, so why are there constantly mistakes being made, sometimes by even the largest of companies? Well, the answer is because there’s a human behind those Facebook post and endless tweets.


From bad grammar to getting visibly frustrated and engaging in flame wars, there are lessons to be learned from the social media faux pas of others....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Five bad acts not to follow!

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The Public Apology Letter: 6 Brands That Nailed It | HubSpot

The Public Apology Letter: 6 Brands That Nailed It | HubSpot | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

But to little old me, a sincere apology goes a long way. When I sense genuine remorse, it means a lot to me -- perhaps because it's so rare, at least in my experience. Combined with my nerdy affection for all things marketing, that sentiment applies to brand apologies, too. It's not so much that I think, "Wow, that means a lot to me," but more like, "Wow, that company really nailed saying, 'Sorry.'"


So, who's done it best? We rounded up some of our favorite brand apologies to inspire you next time you make a mistake -- and need to admit your wrongdoing....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

HubSpot suggests six brands that have mastered the art of the apology, and admitting when they're wrong. Useful lessons for reputation management.

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Lessons From Three of 2016's Biggest PR Fails

Lessons From Three of 2016's Biggest PR Fails | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
2016 saw its fair share of corporate public-relations mishaps, but some were more cringeworthy than others. To be sure, the PR crises in certain cases weren't all that bad compared with the serious business missteps that precipitated a few of them, but the fact remains that there is always a better and a worse way to talk to customers and the public when something's gone wrong. These were three of the year's most egregious gaffes, and what companies can learn from them heading into 2017
Jeff Domansky's insight:

Some PR mishaps are simply ill-advised tweets, while others are huge corporate scandals. Here's what Cheerios, Wells Fargo and Samsung taught us.

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Santa Abducts and Tortures a Single Mother in 2016's Weirdest Christmas Ad

Santa Abducts and Tortures a Single Mother in 2016's Weirdest Christmas Ad | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

A bizarre Christmas commercial from Russia is under fire for showing Santa Claus trying to teach a single mother a lesson in being a better parent—by abducting her and dragging her through the wilderness by a rope and eventually pulling a knife on her.


And the ad's creators seem baffled that anyone could have a problem with it. The spot, for Credit Bank of Moscow, was created by ad agency 3Sba. It is beautifully shot, which makes it even weirder—clearly no expense was spared in producing the film, yet how no one raised a red flag during its creation is baffling. Check out the ad here...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Yup this bizarre 5:07 min Russian spot is really great reputation management and destined to sell lots of loans, mortgages and banking services for Credit Bank of Moscow... NOT. Strategy missing in action although it's going viral...

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Martha Stewart says she passed her time in jail making ceramics and jam out of the crab apple trees

Martha Stewart says she passed her time in jail making ceramics and jam out of the crab apple trees | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Back in 2004, media and TV personality Martha Stewart was sentenced to five months in jail for obstructing a federal securities investigation.


To pass the time during her incarceration, Stewart did what she does best: cooking and crafts.


Speaking at a Daily Mail brunch session at the Cannes Lions advertising festival on Thursday, Stewart said the food inside was around three years past its expiry date.


"That's why I made jam out of the crab apples on the trees," she added.


Aside from making jam, Stewart also turned her hand to ceramics. As a child she'd go to ceramic classes at the weekend, so she quickly signed up to a ceramics class in prison too, at a place called Alderson....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

She made an entire nativity scene that she brings out each Christmas. She also obstructed justice. No sympathy despite the ceramics and crabapple jam.

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Sorry, Burger King: McDonald's just said no to your joint 'McWhopper' burger idea

Sorry, Burger King: McDonald's just said no to your joint 'McWhopper' burger idea | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Burger King took out a full-page, open-letter-style ad in The New York Times and Chicago Tribune this morning, calling for a truce with McDonald's and suggesting they join forces to create a "McWhopper" burger.


But McDonald's is having none of it.Burger King's idea was to "get the world talking" about the Peace One Day charity, which is lobbying for September 21 to become an official Peace Day. Fernando Machado, the fast-food chain's senior vice president for global brand management, said it wasn't just a PR stunt and that BK was hoping McDonald's would agree to sell the hybrid burger September 21....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

McD burns BK Peace Day initiative. McDonald's CEO Steve Easterbrook says of Burger King's proposal, "A simple phone call will do next time." Bad PR on both sides or do they each have a point?

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Marketers Tricked SXSW Tinder Users With A Chatbot | TechCrunch

Marketers Tricked SXSW Tinder Users With A Chatbot | TechCrunch | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

There are a few universal truths in online dating: most photos are carefully staged, most profiles are slightly puffed-up, and most people on them (and this is clearly fast-changing) are actually human.Until some unlucky Tinder users spotted Ava.


A company promoting the movie Ex Machina created a fake account, Ava, with a photo of the star of the movie. Ava is an AI in the film and presumably she wants to get down. Unsuspecting men and women swiped to make a match and Ava, in a cross between cheesy AI and Eliza, asked a few pertinent questions including “Have you ever been in love?” and “What makes you human?”


Normal users assumed they were talking to a human but they were actually talking to a bot. In the end, like the chatbots that now linger on near dead chat systems like AIM, Ava sent her suitors to an Instagram page where they found out that she was all a sham....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Movie's tender Tinder trap leads to transparency debate. This publicity stunt was playing with fire. Good read. 9/10

Christina Papazaharias's curator insight, May 12, 2015 1:02 PM

This explains the deception involved with online dating networking very well. Users have no idea who they are talking to, and if they are real, living, breathing, human beings. It is scary entering online dating apps due to the insecurity of knowing who you are talking to. The role of deception, as mentioned in previous posts, is a major contributor to the lack of trust users experience when developing relationships online. Deception does not only happen on online dating sites, but also on social networking sites as well. Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, etc are targeted platforms scammers use to obtain their goal at hand. Fake accounts are sometimes easy to come by and are easily identified, but there are people who overlook the common signs of identity fraud. Education and common sense are two tools users who are involved in online relationships should utilize when trying to asses accounts they deem as being fake.