Tag Archives: gil

Following NSA Leak, Booz Allen Must Reassure Its Clients

boozallenhamiltonlogoWhen I jumped from the newsroom to the world of crisis communication, I consciously and resolutely gave up the principle of the public’s right to know.

I regularly get client information that would make front-page news. It’s the nature of what crisis communicators do, and upholding clients’ trust and keeping secrets give us ongoing credibility and ensure we’ll be kept on as trusted advisors.

But are there circumstances in which confidential information must be leaked in the interest of public good? And what do you do when you have a rogue employee who violates well-established nondisclosure rules and blabs client secrets to the media?

Enter Booz Allen Hamilton staffer Edward Snowden. The 29-year-old employee, who started his job with the firm just three months earlier, took responsibility for an international media storm by leaking top-secret documents outlining the NSA’s surveillance of Americans and foreigners. The NSA hired Booz Allen Hamilton as a contractor, and, in fact, most of its business comes from government contracts.

Read the entire article on Ragan’s PR Daily.

GroundFloor Media’s Gil Rudawsky Latest Denver Business Journal Column on Protecting Communications

confidentialThe scrappy Aspen Daily News has one of the best mottos in the business: “If You Don’t Want It Printed, Don’t Let It Happen.”

In the world of communications, we have a similar motto that we share with clients who are facing a pending crisis or are in the midst of one: “Anything You Write, Email, Skype or iChat Can Be Used Against You.” It’s not as jocular as the News’ motto. But it just happens to be the truth in our increasingly litigious world.

Read the entire column at the Denver Business Journal.

Twitter vs. NYT: What is the better business model?

nytimes-live-twitterThe debate over which business model has a brighter future—The Gray Lady or the bright, shiny penny that is Twitter—spilled over into media circles this last week.

In the world of PR, the discussion has been taking place in client meetings and communications planning sessions for several years. Still, it remains unclear whether the industry has placed its bets on either model just yet.

Peter Thiel, however, has.

The PayPal co-founder and online trendsetter added fuel to that particular fire at a recent press conference when he declared that Twitter will outlast The New York Times. Thiel contended that “Twitter’s roughly 1,000 employees will have jobs a decade from now,” while Times’ journalists should be worried about their jobs because the newspaper “is not guaranteed a future in the digital age.”

Read more about it Ragan’s PR Daily.

What Print’s Slow Transition to Digital Means for PR

Apple-Digital-Newsstand (1)The digital age and pay walls are finally taking hold at the nation’s largest newspapers, bringing new life to an industry struggling to reinvent itself.

For the world of PR, the figures released Wednesday by the Alliance for Audited Media means that our industry can still try to pitch news outlets with more of a focus on digital editions, but probably with the same limited success.

A couple of points about the ongoing digital shift and what it means to PR:

• Put the term “newspaper clipping services” into the time capsule, along with fax machines and press conferences;

• More news sites will set up pay walls instead of giving away news for free, making it harder to track news subjects and specific reporters;

• Competing sites will figure out how to offer news products free, without the overhead of newsroom, and that will open up more outlets for PR;

• USA Today, long seen as the gold standard for the future of journalism, might need to reinvent how to sell its product;

• PR will continue struggle to show results, primarily quality versus quantity in terms of media results based on number of eyeballs.

Read more at Ragan’s PRDaily.

NBC Spat With Emanuel Brothers, Hickenlooper Outburst

fastpitchThe softball interview is under attack.

Just landing an interview with an important figure is not enough to get a credibility boost. National news reporters are expected to ask tough questions, and do so without upsetting the interview subject or the handlers. It’s a tough needle to thread, but if they fail, the reporters risk getting pilloried on social media.

NBC’s Brian Williams, apparently all too aware of the potential criticism, purposefully strayed from a discussion with the Emanuel brothers—Hollywood mogul Ari, doctor and author Ezekiel, and Chicago Mayor Rahm—about Ezekiel’s new book, “Brothers Emanuel: A Memoir of an American Family” and broached edgier topics during an interview for last Friday’s “Rock Center” broadcast.

On the flip side, a 9News reporter gets called out by Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper for asking a “stupid” question.

Read more at Ragan’s PR Daily.

GroundFloor Media’s Gil Rudawsky Offers
Crisis Response Tips for Denver Business Journal

An integral part of a crisis-response plan is providing clear, honest messages to various audiences that might be affected by the bad news.

Yes, you need to spend time responding to allegations and working with the media. But keeping other key audiences in the loop as well often can take the sting out of a crisis and get an organization back on the road to recovery much sooner.

Read the entire article in the Denver Business Journal.

Labeling GMOs a good PR move by Whole Foods

label-300x154Whole Foods has changed the way many Americans shop for groceries, but is its decision to create a so-called “health-halo” with GMO-labeling going too far?

The fast-growing and sometimes irreverent grocery chain announced last week that it will label all products on its shelves that contain genetically modified ingredients or organisms (GMOs). As part of its five-year “GMO transparency” campaign, Whole Foods launched a Web page that includes its reasoning, including information about GMOs and frequently asked questions.

“Our goal at Whole Foods Market is to provide informed consumer choice with regard to genetically engineered ingredients,” the company said. “Clearly labeled products enable shoppers who want to avoid foods made with GMOs to do so.”

Whole Foods is known as an organic grocer, but it also sells many non-organic products. In fact, the grocer has been expanding its product base to appeal to a wider base of customers. Last year, the chain launched a campaign to try to get rid of the “whole paycheck” label used somewhat affectionately by customers and bemoaned by its co-CEO John Mackey.

Read the rest of this post at Ragan’s PR Daily.

The cringe-worthy things journalists do

reporterThe following is an excerpt from an article written by GroundFloor Media’s Gil Rudawsky for Ragan’s PR Daily:

This week marks four years since I became a PR professional after spending nearly two decades as a newsman.

Since going down with the ship when the Rocky Mountain News stopped the presses after 150 years, I’ve had few regrets about my career move to PR. Sure, I miss the big news stories, the energy of election nights, and the irreverence of the newsroom, but witnessing from a client perspective how the changing news media operate makes me even more comfortable that I’m no longer a journalist.

While most of my friends continue as journalists and I continue to be a news junkie, I am disheartened by the direction of aspects of the profession. It is even clearer in my job as a crisis communication practitioner.

Yes, there are still good reporters, editors, and producers out there, but there don’t seem to be as many as there once were. I don’t take questioning the Fourth Estate lightly, so I have put together some firsthand examples of practices that made me cringe as a PR professional, and as a journalist.

Read all the cringe-worthy practices here. Also see how some journalists are responding on Jim Romenesko blog.

Wary Public Digest Food Labeling Scandals

BeefThe following is an excerpt from an article written by GroundFloor Media’s Gil Rudawsky for Ragan’s PR Daily:

There are few instances that upset the public more than being lied to, particularly about what they’re eating.

In the last month, there have been several huge misrepresentations about food products, starting with the ongoing horsemeat scandal in Europe, and continuing with the less egregious, but still concerning, fish mislabeling issue in the U.S. that hit the media this week.

To offer some context, it has been just over a year since the American public was roiled by the “pink slime” beef additive revelations, prompting all kinds of traditional and social media outcry, and resulting legislation.

Read the entire article here.

21 Top Editors Leaving NY Times,
What Does It Mean For Journalism?

new-york-times-buildingThe following is an excerpt from an article written by GroundFloor Media’s Gil Rudawsky for Ragan’s PR Daily:

The world caught a glimpse of the future of print journalism in December with The New York Times’ publication of “Snow Fall,” a story about an avalanche that unifies text and multimedia to dramatic effect. 

With “Snow Fall,” the staff at the Grey Lady showed its readers that good storytelling doesn’t have to be just columns of text, and this new hybrid multimedia approach can attract millions of readers. But, as the Times attempts to rewrite the future of newspapering, they still can’t shake the old world problems of not enough readers or advertisers. 

To stay viable, the paper kicked off the new year by offering buyouts to its team of top editors. This week it was reported that 21 top editors accepted the offer, including Sports Editor Joe Sexton, who oversaw the production of “Snow Fall.” 

In a candid interview with New York magazine, Sexton said that the Times’ culture lacks radical thinking needed to survive in the changing media environment.

Read the entire article here.