Posts categorized under ‘Public Relations’

Out of the Woods, Tiger emerges

Tiger Woods finally did come clean today. In a statement posted on his Web site, Tiger doesn’t specifically reference his car accident but he does appear to admit to the extra marital affair that’s been rumored.

As part of a long statement, he writes: “I have let my family down and I regret those transgressions with all of my heart. I have not been true to my values and the behavior my family deserves.”

As I had mentioned in my previous post, Tiger has now stepped into the vacuum of information his silence had created. And while the news reporting will continue, his admission will slow down the feeding frenzy and cause this issue to go away much sooner.

What happens next in his family is between Tiger and his wife, but I do believe this is the beginning of Tiger being able to move forward publicly. And assuming there are no more bombs to drop, this will be a footnote in his storied career.

Tiger, Please Step Into the Vacuum

There’s a basic rule I always tell my clients with public relations challenges and if Tiger Woods would let me, I’d tell him too. It goes like this: The absence of information creates a vacuum – a void that sucks in everything swirling around it: rumors, pontification, half-truths, and one side of the story. And unless you step into that vacuum and set the record straight, you will never be in control of the story being told about you.

Tiger – the superstar of the world’s superstar athletes – is stuck in the worst public relations disaster of his career. And it’s all his doing. His story smells funny. The media knows it and his fans know it. The police would like to know it. And the people who pay him hundreds of millions of dollars to endorse their products would like to know it, too.

By now you know the details of his accident — apparently backing out of his driveway fast enough to knock him unconscious after the crash. Injuries bad enough to keep him locked up at home and forcing him to cancel his upcoming appearance at a golf tournament he hosts. Most likely because he doesn’t want to answer the questions swirling around him. The same questions he doesn’t want to hear from police – who have tried at least three times to interview him.

Tiger did release a statement saying that this was a private matter, but given his enormous public stature, he and his team of advisors should know the media won’t stop questioning – especially with rumors of an extramarital affair fueling speculation about this incident.

And while even the most public of our public figures deserve some privacy, history shows us that there’s only one way to make that happen as fast as possible. Just tell the truth.

It worked for David Letterman. The talk show host took control of his PR nightmare a few months ago by breaking his own news first – admitting on the air that he had sexual relationships with some of his co-workers. He did so because that information was about to be revealed during a legal matter. So Letterman bit the bullet, took control of the story and quickly set the record straight, Yes, he took heat for a couple of weeks, But then it all went away quickly.

No one accused him of covering up the truth or hiding – those are behaviors that really start to damage your credibility and reputation.

Tiger, are you listening?

The truth is Tiger will survive this incident, much like Michael Jordan got through his gambling scandals and leaving basketball to play minor league baseball. Like Jordan, Woods is a once-in-a-century athlete who’s worshipped by millions. He will be forgiven.

But to be forgiven, you have to confess. Just step into the vacuum Tiger, please. This will all end much faster that way.

Make your own news in 2010

It’s that time again when we set marketing and business goals for the coming year and some of us couldn’t be in a bigger hurry to break away from Old Man 2009. A rotten year for businesses? Uh, yes. A challenging year for marketing? Depends on which tactics mean the most to you.

Many people hire a Public Relations team to help supplement their advertising reach. And while very cost effective compared to buying billboards and air time, this year news outlets also experienced a business bust. Newspapers continued to file bankruptcy and find themselves without buyers. Broadcasters cut staff in response to fewer advertisers and viewers. And more of us turned to online news on-demand. Call it a perfect storm or a bubbling crucible, but it all means that your PR tactics should evolve in 2010 beyond the connotations we have now.

While traditional news outlets still are considered more trustworthy than social media sites, 28% of the public  say they will turn to a search engine when news is happening and they want to know more. If you don’t have your side of the story posted online somewhere, only one side of the story gets told – and it could be the side without your key message. Sure, it’s exciting to be on TV and push your message out to hundreds of thousands of viewers, but TV is prone to tight editing with just a 9-second soundbite from you. And unless the station or newspaper archives your story online indefinitely, it will soon be forgotten, too. Businesses in 2010 will do well to also follow the time-efficient, cost-efficient, targeted approach of making your own news and sharing it online.

I’m encouraging PR clients in 2010 to think and act like a newsroom. Find the compelling stories about how your business is breaking the trend or pushing innovation or reaching milestones, then act fast and create the story. PR practitioners can help craft online articles, blog posts, social networking updates and video or audio podcasts that are placed on your business’ website, corporate newsroom or unique URL. By also harnessing advertising or social media channels, others can be alerted to the self-produced news. Not only will you control the message completely (without risk of a reporter’s editing or error), but you also have more control over how long it lives online. And you can seek comments or respond without being left out of the conversation.

Let’s face it, as traditional media undergoes more changes that hurt the ability to win air-time or ink, we’ll only see fewer places to share a message with fewer reporters to tell it. But before you start crying at this funeral, you might just pop open the champagne for a newborn approach in 2010. You can create it, tell it, target it and share your self-produced message like never before.

Tweeting the News Just Got Easier

Google announced today that the search engine would begin indexing real time updates like those on Twitter. And, Microsoft’s search engine Bing announced today a deal with Twitter and Facebook to search real time updates. This is huge news for news!

Think back to some of the biggest breaking news events of the past year. When the US Airways flight landed on the Hudson it was Twitter that broke the story. When Iranians rose up to speak their minds and protest the presidential election they used Twitter to overcome media blackouts. The news of Michael Jackson’s death was a trending topic even before it was on TV. And, when the world was riveted to television wondering if balloon boy was actually in the balloon, it was the Twittersphere who began to dig into the bizarre background of the balloon boy’s father.

By making Twitter searches and other real time updates searchable on Google and Bing, news will travel faster than ever before. I am not as likely to tune into Fox News or CNN any more. My first move is Twitter. Now, I can hit up Google or Bing to get the latest in user-generated reports. And, for this former journalism major and geek, that is just cool.

Click here to view the announcement from Google and here for the Bing news from Wired.