This is what Sen. Marco Rubio is saying about whether he smoked pot earlier in his life. It is a carefully worded non-answer. One can assume that it is a well trained media response, rehearsed and play back on camera. Rubio never answers the question with a yes or no. He provides a reason for his failure to respond and repeats his opposition to pot smoking. Non-answers are more common than “no comment” but they are just as unsatisfactory to the questioner. Sometimes, however, one must use them. There are situations in which the facts should not come out, especially as Rubio suggests, when no one would believe them anyway. Instead, he falls back on his key message. He doesn’t want anyone smoking marijuana. He is clear about that.
Foreign Peril
New York University is learning the peril of starting operations in a different culture. Although the University set guidelines for how workers should be treated at its Abu Dhabi campus, The New York Times has found that laborers were exploited and mistreated. That is a blow to NYU’s reputation even though it had no direct control over the contractors who hired and sometimes paid the East Asian workforce. How could NYU have let this happen? The University’s answer is that it didn’t know. A tort lawyer would charge that the University should have known, given the history of poor treatment of foreign workers in Arab countries. If there was a mistake in building the campus, it might have been in oversight that NYU neglected. If the Times’ reporters could document abuse, one would think that NYU could have done the same. There also could have been naivete — assuming contractors would abide by the University’s principles but failing to check if they were. Either way, the Abu Dhabi campus has become a sore point and PR headache for the University and a cautionary tale for other academic institutions who might wish to move into different cultures.
Bursting Bubble
China’s real estate bubble has popped and air has gone out of the market. This is a PR headache for the government. Many Chinese invested in apartments as their principal form of savings and wealth. Now it is in danger of disappearing. Bureaucrats can attempt to re-inflate prices, but it will only prolong the time until they plummet again. The problem is that China is over-built for the population it has. The poor can’t afford to live in new high rises. The middle class has purchased tens of thousands of them on the expectation that someone will live there someday. I asked a friend who recently traveled to China whether news reports of empty cities are true. He assured me they are. How can the technocratic government ease the burden and still maintain GDP growth? It has put in draconian measures but they might not be enough. Developers meanwhile have sparked protests because they are discounting to attract more buyers, and banks are holding millions of mortgages that could be underwater. This is a dangerous time for the central government and how it communicates to citizens who are watching their hard-earned money disappear.
Something To Think About
Wearable computing is nearly here. Is PR ready for it? How will we change strategy and communications to account for Google Glass and body sensors? Individualized communication will come to the fore as it has already done with social media. However, wearable computing is a step beyond. It is instantaneous and in many cases will not require input from the wearer. Of course, a concern that has arisen already is loss of privacy. That will happen to anyone who decides to wear a computer in some capacity. But, implicitly, the wearer is giving electronics the right to record, to transmit and communicate. It is not too early to consider how PR should use the computerized body to send messages and build support.
New Isolationism
Americans want their military forces to stay home. The globe may be small today with international flights and worldwide manufacturing, but that doesn’t matter. The public is tired of engaging terrorists and Taliban. Well they should be. It has been more than a decade that the US has been fighting against terrorism. Unfortunately, the world is marginally safer now than it was. This means that the current and next president have a PR job to do to convince the public that the US must stayed engaged with other nations whether we like it or not. It might not be easy, especially with the pull-back of forces from the Middle East. One might question who appointed America to be the police force for the world. The country took on that role post World War II in the face of communism. Now the exchequer is exhausted, the debts piling and the cost of armaments skyrocketing. It’s time for others to take over, but that doesn’t mean the US should seal itself off. It is a member of coalitions and not the driver. Maybe America’s citizens will accept that.
Gaming The System
There ought to be public shaming of executives who game the system to look better. Consider this example. Extensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) was developed to help investors better compare companies. It is a step toward greater transparency. But executives have found ways around it so they can’t be measured against peers. There isn’t much of an excuse for this. It’s bad investor relations, and it is obvious to anyone who looks at what the companies are doing. Rather then force compliance to XBRL, the move now is to get rid of it for small companies who find it a burden to tag their numbers in the 10-K. Executives can talk all they want about their concern for investors and consumers but when something as basic as this becomes a way to obfuscate performance, their actions speak louder than words.
Strength In Numbers
When does it make sense to give away proprietary technology? When it risks being eclipsed and failing as a product. That is the decision IBM has made for its Power microprocessors. It has turned the chip into open architecture to get more people to use it. Now, IBM will need to build relations with collaborators who adopt the chip design. The OpenPower Foundation already has two dozen members. Public relations among manufacturers is often fractious because each lets self-interest control decisions. It takes a far-sighted CEO to understand that cooperation is better in the long run. IBM is clearly hoping that its collaborators are willing to work with it, but the company should not be surprised if foundation members are demanding and attempting to modify the Power chip to make it once again proprietary to their designs.
Perception Vs. Reality
This is an interesting story of perception versus reality. It seems professional violinists can’t tell the difference between a Stradivarius violin and a well-made modern one. Yet, the Strads cost millions more than a modern violin and artists compete to get them. One would think that the price of a Strad would plummet as a result, but it hasn’t. Perception can overpower reality even with the most sophisticated of people. PR practitioners and marketers know well the power of perception. That is how we got the title of spinmeisters. But it is also a warning. Those who would play with the power of perception can be shown up by facts and lose in the end. The cost of a Strad is far above what most violinists can afford to pay — in the tens of millions of dollars. That alone forces musicians to look for less expensive alternatives. Reality has a way of overpowering perception eventually.
Stepping Into It
Can a comedian make a racially insensitive joke and get away with it online? Apparently not. Stephen Colbert is the focus of a Twitter campaign to cancel his TV satire show for offending Asian Americans. Colbert has fired back and made a joke of the joke. A satirist can sometimes do that. Anyone else would be the target of the “PC police.” It is nearly impossible for anyone working in public relations to engage in satire. That’s because we are conditioned to take individuals and companies at face value. Today is April 1, the traditional time for practical jokes and pranks. It is interesting that those who launch one are often believed, even when what they say or do is outrageous. Satire is best left to comedians, but even they can get into trouble.
The Lingering Crisis
There is a special stress for communicators in a crisis that won’t resolve. It drags on from day to day without resolution, without facts to explain what happened, without information for those affected. This is the case with Malaysia Airlines. It is no closer to finding its missing plane today than it was six days ago, and conflicting statements made to relatives of the 239 passengers have made things worse. There is little or nothing one can say other than to rebut rumor and to iterate what little one knows. As of last night, authorities weren’t even sure which way the plane was traveling. They are searching a vast area for something less than a needle in a haystack. There is a good chance they will never find wreckage nor bodies nor anything else to bring closure to affected families. The communicator is reduced to saying, “We don’t know” in as many ways as possible and accepting the anger of those demanding answers. The worst part of ignorance is that one cannot learn if what happened will occur again. Will other Boeing 777s suddenly fall from the sky? Everyone has an urgent interest in finding the facts, but there aren’t any