There’s no such thing as negative press; what a load of rubbish! I accept that notoriety amongst certain celebrities has earned them significant revenues but that’s just personality prostitution.
The rest of us see loss of reputation and negative press as disastrous to our businesses. We all make mistakes but unfortunately the attention we receive for our failures, in our society, is magnified. The dilemma is, that we need to learn from our mistakes to make progress.
When I’m dishing out yet another personal critical review I like to remind myself that companies with lots of money and expertise often get it badly wrong. Here are some classic PR mistakes and well publicised examples:
Product issues
Toyota recoils over recalls
The brand has been badly damaged and reputation of Japanese car makes ruined by the recall of over 8m cars.
Persil’s rotten lot
Persil Power was meant to clean clothes at lower temperatures but it soon emerged that its new catalyst attacked certain dyes in clothes beyond repair. Pictures soon circulated of rotting clothes.
Bernard’s birds get flu
Sales plummeted and several countries banned UK poultry imports following an outbreak of bird flu at the Bernard Matthews farm. The brand struggled to recover.
Poor planning
Extra time at Wembley stadium
The new building was a year late and 400m over budget.
Opening of Terminal 5 at Heathrow
BAA hoped to put an end to “Heathrow hassle” but upon opening made it a great deal worse with one in five flights cancelled.
Ikea Stampede in Edmonton
20 people needed hospital treatment following the midnight opening of the new store. The 6000 shoppers, entertained by fire eaters and stilt walkers, were turned away after just 40 minutes when security fled and ambulances arrived to treat customers with heat exhaustion and crush injuries.
No understanding of target audience
Ratner’s owner jokes his product is rubbish
500m was wiped off the value of the high street jewellery chain after its owner claimed its goods were substandard. During his infamous speech he stated a sherry decanter was cheap because it was “total crap” and that his earrings were cheaper than a prawn sandwich but wouldn’t last as long.
Topman at Topman insults customers
Topman’s chief was quoted branding its customers as “hooligans” and claimed that its clients only wore suits for court cases.
Barclaycard chief loses his credit
Barclaycards top exec was quoted saying that smart customers should steer away from credit cards.
(examples above taken from various telegraph.co.uk articles)
Can anyone else think of any big PR disasters that I can console myself with when I am confronted with another learning experience!


