Thankfully most of us will never have a morning where the world is told we have lost over four hundred of our staff and customers in a fiery accident as Qantas did last week.
While not a Qantas customer, I had a lot of sympathy and respect for their management and staff who had to deal with conflicting accounts while balancing their obligations to regulators, shareholders and, most importantly, the loved ones of those aboard QF32.
The initial story that went out on the media was a Reuters’ report that a Qantas A380 had crashed on taking off from Singapore. While Qantas were able to quickly deny that, they found their other assurances that no debris had fallen from the plane were quickly contradicted by online photos of the pieces in a nearby Indonesian town.
Luckily, Qantas’ communications teams appeared to be listening to these comments so were quickly able to verify their accuracy and amend the company’s position before they were embarrassed.
Today’s connected consumers are armed with camera equipped, internet enabled smart phones and can post images contradicting or confirming your message or understanding of the situation quickly. Which is exactly what happened in this instance, with passengers and witnesses quickly uploading their views of the incident.
In one respect this is a threat to traditional management, where controlling the message is everything, to the modern manager this is a fantastic opportunity to react quickly and positively to changing situations.
One of my favourite stories comes from the Virgin Blue checking problems in late September where staff, alerted by complaints on Twitter, were able to get water bottles out to thirsty passengers stuck in queues. It didn’t rescue Virgin from the PR battering they took, but it helped a few of their customers and just maybe won a few of them back.
This isn’t to say the internet is infallible, far from it — the internet is mankind’s gift to the ill-informed ratbag and the mischievous troll — what you read on Twitter and Facebook needs to be treated with the same suspicion as what you see on Reuters and CNN.
Even when the information is downright wrong, you at least have an early warning there’s a perception problem in the community which you can quickly work upon. The key is to evaluate and recognise the credible from the silly and then be able to act on the credible while countering the silly stuff.
One big lesson from both Qantas’ problems last week and Virgin’s in September is how important it is to point all of your communications channels, including call centres, to the organisation’s website where up-to-date, verified information is available for the public, staff and customers.
While the net represents great challenges to business owners and managers of all organisations, it’s also a fantastic resource for getting your facts right and reacting to fast moving changes. Make sure you have the tools and the team to deal with the opportunities and threats our connected economy will throw at us.
Paul Wallbank will be holding They Are Talking About You, a morning workshop for businesses on dealing with what’s being said about them online. The session is being held with Reputation Australia in North Sydney on November 26.