Ppt. Crisis Management
Ppt. Crisis Management
Ppt. Crisis Management
MANAGEMENT
THEORY
PREPARED BY:
AZUCENA R. MATEO
RATIONALE
Effective crisis management handles the
threats sequentially. The primary concern in
crisis has to be public safety. A failure to
address public safety intensifies the damage
from a crisis. Reputation and financial
concerns are considered after public safety
has been remedied. Ultimately, crisis
management theories are designed to
protect an organization and its stakeholders
from threats and/or reduce the impact felt by
threats.
RELATED LITERATURE
(1)Dealing with Past Corporate Crises Johnson &
Johnson Tylenol Crisis In September of 1982, seven
deaths occurred due to capsules of Extra-Strength
Tylenol that were laced with cyanide being consumed
in the Chicago area. These deaths were a crisis that
burst quickly and ferociously upon Johnson &
Johnson, and its subsidiary McNeil Consumer
Products Company, the maker of Tylenol. Although
the Tylenol crisis struck without warning, Johnson &
Johnson is lauded for their exemplary crisis
management performance. First, Johnson & Johnson
began open and honest communication with the
public and the media immediately.
RELATED LITERATURE
Second, Johnson & Johnson’s CEO James E. Burke
made sure to create a seven member crisis
management team that was in charge of handling all
decisions about the “ever-changing developments”
and “coordinated all organizational efforts and
communications”. Johnson & Johnson crisis
management team and CEO looked to the Credo to
guide them in decisions, like whether or not they
should have withdrawn the Tylenol product from
stores, which made that decision the third great crisis
management choice made by Johnson & Johnson .
RELATED LITERATURE
Fourth, Johnson & Johnson not only fully admitted to
the Tylenol problem when it first surfaced, but also
“accepted fault and didn’t hide behind the problem or
try to affix the blame on someone or something else”.
Besides financially reimbursing their consumers,
Johnson & Johnson opened up their ears to listen to
their customers concerns in order to gain back public
trust in the Tylenol product. Thus, the fifth great crisis
management decision made by Johnson & Johnson,
was to have McNeil, Johnson & Johnson’s
subsidiary, create “toll-free consumer hot lines to
respond to inquiries concerning the safety of Tylenol”.
RELATED LITERATURE
Finally, the last great crisis management choice that
Johnson & Johnson made was to come out publicly
with information about what they did to make to make
things right and to what they were doing to prevent a
similar crisis from happening, including introducing a
safer and improved product. “The key to the
remarkable comeback of Tylenol can be attributed to
swift action by the company combined with a clearly
defined action plan. Following a strategy and
developing the correct message for the appropriate
public is clearly illuminated” in the handling of the
Tylenol crisis.
RELATED LITERATURE
(2) Social Network Theory: An Application in crisis management
The geographical location of the Philippines makes it prone to
natural disasters. It lies at the western side of the Pacific Ocean
where most typhoons are formed. It sits “astride typhoon belt,
usually affected by 15 and struck by five to six cyclonic storms
per year” (Geography of the Philippines, 2013). It also
experiences landslides, volcanic eruptions, destructive
earthquakes and tsunamis. A report from the Citizen’s Disaster
Response Center (CDRC) showed that the Philippines is the
most disaster-affected country in 2012 with 471 natural and
human-induced disasters, that killed 1,615 people from 2.8
million families or 12 million people and costing over P39.9 billion
(Research and Public Information Department, 2012). Coastal
cities such as Manila, are most likely to suffer from coastal
flooding and other effects of the global climate change that
resulted to sea-level rise and increased storminess.
RELATED LITERATURE
A World Bank report published in 2013 reported,
though, that the Philippines is one of the most
prepared countries that could manage the effects of
natural disasters . In spite of this, the readiness and
the preparedness of the Philippines and its Asian
neighbors will be regularly tested by the occurrence
of these disasters year after year. The World Bank
report classified Manila, Cebu and Davao as “among
the top metropolises at risk in the region”. Given the
increasing prevalence of disaster, the need for
preventive measures has become more imperative.
RELATED LITERATURE
The situation calls for collaboration among government
agencies, private organizations and community to
render disaster management effective. Rapid and
timely dissemination of information from one unit to
another is key to achieving this goal. The rising
popularity of social media makes it an ideal channel to
connect people from different places in real time.
Disaster management efforts can be communicated
via social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter,
Multiply etc. to make information readily accessible to
everybody.
INTRODUCTION
The application of the crisis management theory is illustrated
in a series of experiments of complex managerial decision
making, using a simulated organization. Organizational
complexity and assigned performance standards also serve as
contributing influences. Path analyses reveal that perceived
managerial self-efficacy influences managers’ organizational
attainment both directly and through its effects on their goal
setting and analytic thinking. As managers begin to form a
self-schema of their efficacy through further experience, the
performance system is regulated more strongly and intricately
through their self-conceptions of managerial efficacy. Although
the relative strength of the constituent influences changes with
increasing experience, these influences operate together as a
triadic reciprocal control system.
DEFINITION OF TERMS
Theory - a supposition or a system of ideas intended to explain
something, especially one based on general principles
independent of the thing to be explained.
An innovation
An individual or other unit of adoption that
has knowledge of or experience with using
the innovation.
Another individual or other unit that does
not yet have knowledge of the innovation
A communication channel connecting the
two units.
THEORY OF CRISIS MANAGEMENT
Second, for both conditions, perceptions are more important than reality.
The important point is not whether the business in fact is responsible for
the offensive act, but whether the firm is thought to be responsible for it
by the relevant audience. Of course, if the firm is not really to blame for
the offensive act, this can be an important component of its response. As
long as the audience thinks the firm at fault, the image is at risk.
IMAGE REPAIR THEORY
1. Denial
One general approach to image repair, with two variants, is denial. For
example, Pepsi-Cola accused Coca-Cola of requiring its other accounts to pay
higher prices, subsidizing its largest customer, McDonald's. Coke replied by
simply and directly denying Pepsi's charges: charges that Coke increased
prices for some customers but not all were absolutely false; price increases
were universally applied; there were no exceptions. Here, Coke rejects
Pepsi's charges as false. A firm may deny that the act occurred, that the firm
performed the act, or that the act was harmful to anyone.
A second form of denial is shifting the blame, arguing that another person or
organization is actually responsible for the offensive act. After the Exxon
Valdez oil spill, Rawl, Chair of Exxon, "blamed state officials and the Coast
Guard for the delay, charging ... that the company could not obtain immediate
authorization on the scene to begin cleaning up the oil or applying a chemical
dispersant. If Exxon was not at fault for the delay, their image should not be
tarnished.
IMAGE REPAIR THEORY
2. Evasion of Responsibility
This general image repair strategy has four versions:
A firm can say its act was merely a response to another's offensive act, and
that the behavior can be seen as a reasonable reaction to that provocation. For
example, a company might claim it moved its plant to another state because
the first state passed a new law reducing its profit margin.
Another specific form of evading responsibility is defeasibility. Here, the
business alleges a lack of information about or control over important elements
of the situation. For instance, a busy executive who missed an important
meeting could claim that "I was never told that the meeting had been moved up
a day." If true, the lack of information excuses the absence.
A third option is to claim the offensive action occurred by accident. If the
company can convince the audience that the act in question happened
accidentally, it should be held less accountable, and the damage to that
business's image should be reduced. After charges of auto repair fraud, Sears'
Chairman Brennan characterized the auto repair mistakes as "inadvertent,"
rather than intentional.
Fourth, the business can suggest that the offensive behavior was performed
with good intentions. Brennan also stressed Sears' good intentions, declaring
that "Sears wants you to know that we would never intentionally violate the trust
customers have shown in our company for 105 years." This remark functions to
stress Sears' good intentions toward its customers.
IMAGE REPAIR THEORY
3. Reduce Offensiveness
This general image repair strategy has six versions.
First, a corporation may use bolstering to strengthen the audience's positive
feelings toward the itself, in order to offset the negative feelings connected with
the wrongful act. Businesses may describe positive characteristics they have or
positive acts they have done in the past. After the Valdez oil spill, for example,
Exxon's Chairman Rawl declared that "Exxon has moved swiftly and competently
to minimize the effect this oil will have on the environment, fish, and other wildlife."
He expressed his sympathy to "the residents of Valdez and the people of the
State of Alaska. These sentiments, if accepted, should bolster its image and offset
damage to its reputation.
A second possibility is to try to minimize the negative feelings associated with the
wrongful act. After the Valdez oil spill, Exxon officials also tried to downplay the
extent of the damage. Baker explained that "On May 19, when Alaska retrieved
corpses of tens of thousands of sea birds, hundreds of otters, and dozens of bald
eagles, an Exxon official told National Public Radio that Exxon had counted just
300 birds and 70 otters. This statement works to minimize the apparent problem.
Third, a firm can employ differentiation, in which the act is distinguished from
other similar but more offensive actions. Sears argued that the acts labeled
unneeded repairs were actually preventative maintenance. Clearly, its actions
sound much less offensive when understood as preventative maintenance instead
of as fraud.
IMAGE REPAIR THEORY
4. Corrective Action
5. Mortification