Not All Publicity Is Made Equal
By Danny Brown
Expert Author
Article Date: 2009-02-02
There's an old saying that any publicity is good publicity - but is it? True, a discussion about your company or business means that at least people are talking about you but is there a limit as to how far this should go and be accepted as a good thing?
A client approached a well-known agency in New York to run a campaign about that client's new start-up business. The business was technology-led, and the idea behind the campaign was to run a number of press releases that implied the current technology on the market was doomed.
This was where the PR agency's client would step in - by providing the new technology that would replace the "outdated" one, they would become the de facto standard for this piece of software.
Unfortunately, due to a number of reasons, this backfired spectacularly.
- First, the software wasn't actually ready - it was still buggy and users kept having their systems frozen.
- Second, the target audience the client was going for were already fiercely loyal to the older technology. They came out fighting when the suggestion was made that they were the equivalent to schoolchildren if they didn't upgrade to the new software, whose users would be the advanced students of that niche.
Cue forums lighting up with inflammatory statements and posts about this new upstart who was saying all these bad things about the user community. The PR agency swiftly put a damage limitation exercise into place, but it looks like it's too little, too late.
Now it looks likely that when the software is ready, it's going to have too much baggage attached to make any headway - which is a shame, as the technology in question is an excellent idea.
So who's to blame - the client or the PR agency? It's a little bit of both.
For a business that wanted to be the standard in its field, releasing a buggy product and not classifying it as a beta is one of the worst things it could have done.
For the agency's part, they should have had more balls and advised their client that pissing off your target audience is not good PR. The client hired the agency for their expertise at getting media attention - so they should have enforced that and made the client realize the mistake they were about to make. After all, their reputation would be at stake as well.
In fairness to the PR agency in question, it seems that in this case the client wanted to drum up controversy and get people talking about their product. That certainly happened - but was the (potentially) final result worth it?
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About the Author:
Danny Brown is the owner of Press Release PR, a boutique agency specializing in search engine optimized press releases and social media PR. He offers consultancy advice on social media and PR to both individuals and corporations
He has guest authored at leading web and search marketing site Web Analytics World and is a blog partner of the WebProNews and iEntry business networks. He is also a regular contributor to the Dad-o-Matic project.
To read more of Danny's articles or interact with him, please visit danny BROWN - social media PR.