Dino Baskovic Can’t Lose

Lifestreaming is so last season 
Filed under

public favor

 

Oh, what a feeling to be in PR

I've had mixed emotions about this whole Toyota mess. Part of me jeered along with the rest of the blue-collar, red-blooded compatriots I grew up with in the Rust Belt that watched the reputation of our beloved American cars turn a not-so-lovely shade of patina from decades of poor decision-making. It's a part of me I'm not necessarily proud of and my world view is far more matured these days. Admittedly, I found myself momentarily pointing and laughing. "Ha ha, Toyota, feel that media heat. Hear that consumer rage. Taste that big government boot. Kiss that five-star favorability good-bye..."

Of course, part of me was compassionate. I feel for the affected families. From a business standpoint, you can't excuse such errors in judgment. There is no justification for silencing, stalling, covering up. But whether we like it or not, these things happen. Cracks form, things slip through them. Companies are people, too. Humans. Prone to human error. A $2 billion error notwithstanding litigation. Maybe Toyota sat on this far too long, maybe they didn't. It really doesn't matter. The good people behind a great company that build and market some of the world's best cars will pay the price for years to come.

It is times of corporate crisis like these that I hope that competent PR people are behind the scenes. Not just parading presidents around the morning network news, mea culpa mea culpa mea maxima culpa. But credible, dedicated professionals that will go to mattresses to restore faith in their organization's name and reputation. PR pros that, when duty calls, leave their personal lives behind to become the unsung backroom heroes that won't rest until they can call mission accomplished.

I wasn't kidding when I said "years." Faulty brakes isn't a "sticky situation" that can be brushed aside after a few nights of bad late night comedy. No, this will take winning back the trust of owners and buyers, regulators, even dealers. Knowing at least one person pulling long hours for Toyota PR these last few weeks, I truly believe the automaker is on the road to recovery.

"Moving forward." It's been Toyota's slogan for some time. There is new meaning to that now. Like my own past perceptions, Americans have evolved -- and given the global economy, evolution means survival. Toyota will survive this and be a stronger company. The company is crash-coursing lessons their "American" competitors long learned the hard way. This will become fodder for PR textbooks for generations to come. Toyota will grow smarter and move forward. So too will the industry, and so will America.

Filed under  //   automotive   cars   crisis   favorability   mea culpa   public favor   public relations   toyota  

Comments [0]

Conan the Barista

I was always a casual fan of Conan O'Brien and never really a huge follower.  I honestly had no idea he wrote for SNL, though he was responsible for infamous "Nude Beach" sketch and even reared his reddy head as the doorman of the "Five-Timers Club."  Nor did I give him and sidekick Andy Richter much thought on his old "Late Night" stint until he suddenly stumbled upon street cred.  While Leno and Letterman wrestled for the 11:30 heavyweight belt, Conan quietly built himself some loyalty which would one day turn into "Tonight Show" royalty.

That is, for seven whole months.  NBC really knows how screw the pooch and they've had some practice.  Let 'em lick their wounds, I really don't care.  They got their white-haired has-chin back and he and Dave can safely resume their race to irrelevancy.  As for Conan, well, let's just say I suddenly have a new hero.  He remained a class act throughout this entire debacle, ensured a safety net for his staff and sailed away with a boat load of cash and public favor.  Not bad for a week's work, albeit his last.  And Johnny Carson couldn't have delivered a better farewell speech:

All I ask of you is one thing: please don't be cynical. I hate cynicism -- it's my least favorite quality and it doesn't lead anywhere.  Nobody in life gets exactly what they thought they were going to get. But if you work really hard and you're kind, amazing things will happen.

Wow, nice.  And if you gotta have more cowbell, fear not the reaper: Hulu.com preserved his final show for another few weeks.  Tom Hanks, Steve Carell, Neil Young and Will Ferrell and friends send out Conan in style.

See you in September, "CoCo."  Oh, and make mine half-caf...

Filed under  //   comedy   conan o'brien   entertainment   nbc   public favor   the tonight show   will ferrell  

Comments [0]