PR News Online Social Media Summit & Taste of Tech
June 21 - 22 in NYC
PR News Online
PRNews
Home Contact Us RSS
Social Networks
 
       
       
Follow Me on Pinterest

 
Channels
Digital PR
Measurement
Corporate Responsibility
Media Relations
College Guide
PR News Awards
Call for Entries!

Platinum PR Awards
Late Entry Deadline:
May 18


Digital PR Awards
Entry Deadline:
  July 13


Top Places to Work in PR Awards
Entry Deadline:
August 3


15-to-Watch Awards
Entry Deadline:
August 17


PR People Awards
Entry Deadline:
September 7


Nonprofit Awards
Entry Deadline:
December 7

PR News' Winners Circle
See our list of winners and honorable mentions from PR News' Awards Programs
Research & Surveys

Take the Survey: What Is the One High Tech Tool You Cannot Live Without?

Leaders Globally Fall Short of the Public's Expectations

Women's Deep Trust in Blogs Converts to Purchase Action

... more research

E-letter
Calendar




 	 Subscriber Resource Center

Crisis Expert With Oil Industry Experience Weighs In on BP

PR agency exec and PR News Media Relations Forum panelist Karen Hinton has done battle with Chrevron over its enviromental practices, and doesn't mince words when it comes to BP....


FREE REGISTRATION is required to access this article and others on the site. Please complete the form to gain access. Thank you.

First Name*:
Last Name*:
Job Title*:
Company*:
Company Type*:
Address 1*:
Address 2:
City*:
State*:
Zip/Postal Code*:
Country*:
Phone Number:
Cell Phone:
E-Mail Address*:

 

Note: All fields are required except Address 2 and Phone Number.

 


June 11, 2010



COMMENTS
1.
WELL SAID!!!
Posted by Sara Brady on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 03:15 PM
2.
I couldn't agree more with Ms. Hinton's assessment of BP's poor PR practices. PR students will be analyzing their missteps for years to come. I just shared some lessons learned from BP's communication blunders on our InSites blog: http://bit.ly/c7i0x6.
Posted by Crystal Borde on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 03:23 PM
3.
We can pick on BP -- and they deserve it - but the industry has now 'hit a triple' in U.S. spills (Union Oil in '68 in CA); Exxon Valdez in Alaska; now BP. With 4,000 wells in the Gulf and many of them now 1 mi. down due to environmental concerns, it isn't clear where our immediate future lies, no matter what's done to BP.

It's obvious the entire region's been in danger for a long time, with another catastrophe very possible. Singling out BP ain't gonna' solve much. DRD
Posted by Denny Diehl on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 03:35 PM
4.
BP this is nuts! Contain this thing now while you figure out a way to stop it. It’s simple. OIL FLOATS and it does NOT MIX WELL WITH WATER if you don’t put any dispersants in it. This makes it easy to contain on the surface. The oil will come to you. You do not have to go down and get it. It takes only the thinnest sheet of plastic to separate it from water. Here’s how. Go buy up all of the Blue Tarps you can find and sew them together. Make a 5000 foot deep and 1 mile long curtain and hang it from really big buoys and weight it with really heavy sand bags then circle the well site. The oil will be contained in the middle where you can suck it up. Sound expensive? Not really. a 100 foot by 100 foot tarp costs $500 on the internet. You need 50 to make a 100 foot by 5000 curtain. That’s $25,000. You need 55 of those really big curtains to make a mile long version with some over lap. That’s $1,375,000 Million. Sounds like a bargain to me and you might even get a volume discount. Sounds too hard to make? A heavy-duty sewing machine can sew a 5000 feet in 2 hours. It would need to do that 55 times so 110 hours for one guy to do the whole thing and I sure he could find some friends to help him. You can assemble it on barges at the site. Do you understand yet????? Also if I'm not mistaken since this would not interfere with your current efforts or require your help so the government or even private industry could do this unilaterally and could do it with out asking your permission.. BP you do not control all the space around the site so why don’t you just hang the curtain before an army of private individuals in fishing boats comes out there and does it for you!!! I’ll send you the first tarp. What address would you like me to send it to? Let's have a Blue Tarp Tea Party! Jeff Holden in Winston Salem NC
Posted by Jeff Holden on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 03:40 PM
5.
Like Tiger Woods, Elliot Spitzer, Rod Blagojevich - the root of the problem is entitlement!
Posted by Robyn Allgeyer on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 03:54 PM
6.
Completely agree with Karen. Every pr class in the Fall should use this as a key case study. It is one of the best examples of a lack of a cohesive crisis communications plan that we have seen from a Fortune 500 company in a long time.
Posted by Jeanne Ellinport on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 04:11 PM
7.
The BP handling PR-wise is abhorrent. No common sense. Misleading statements by the spokesman president. A very real disaster not only environmentally, but also truth and credibility-free.
Posted by Larry Eiler on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 04:25 PM
8.
There's no bias in her comments, are there
Posted by Paul S on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 04:27 PM
9.
BP would have done itself a big favor by replacing its CEO with a trusted spokesperson. http://bit.ly/bnbWtJ
Posted by Jim Barbagallo on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 04:28 PM
10.
This article reflects my experience with BP in the wake of a fatality at one of their facilities in SC, which I investigated several years ago.
Posted by Robert Andres, CSP, on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 05:36 PM
11.
It doesn't take an expert to realize BP screwed the pooch in every way possible. Rule No. 1 in PR tell the truth!
Posted by Marc Stewart on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 06:41 PM
12.
The situation with BP is more a problem of substance than PR. They behaved badly in having lax procedures that caused the disaster and they failed to attack the leak aggressively when it occurred. Their crisis communication response has been fair (not poor or good) until the recent ad campaign, which, as Hinton states, is way off target and doing more harm than good. It highlights the disconnect between the green brand they have tried to project for some time and what has become a black reputation. The spokespeople are doing the best they can with what they are directed to say. They are not believable because, again, there is a disconnect between what they believe and what they are told to say. What a mess.
Posted by David Rosen on Monday, June 14, 2010 @ 08:58 PM
13.
Why don't you get your information from the emergency workers who are working closely with BP and everyone else involved. Instead of someone who is biased BEFORE the spill.
Posted by Ken on Tuesday, June 15, 2010 @ 07:07 AM
14.
The system is broken. We need to move from oil, coal and nuclear power to renewable, sustainable energy - wind, solar, geothermal.
Posted by Larry Furman on Tuesday, June 15, 2010 @ 01:14 PM
15.
Are we supposed to be commenting on energy and environmental issues or the PR? I think everyone agrees the oil spill is a disaster, in more ways than one. I feel bad for the PR department, as they are doing their best, while the CEO is dismantling their crisis communications efforts by making some of the most stupid, insensitive comments I've ever heard from a CEO. He and the PR department need to get on the same page...and as someone else said, be consistent AND truthful!
Posted by Linda Wise on Tuesday, June 15, 2010 @ 04:53 PM
16.
In my opinion I don't believe Hinton is exactly an objective party on this issue. Also, I have found that the media is much more likely to side with a group such as Hinton's than a big corp. like BP (especially an oil company). The media "comforts the afflicted and afflicts the comforted." Hinton has the easier job than, say, the PR person for BP.
Posted by Tito Davila on Wednesday, June 16, 2010 @ 10:47 AM
17.
It is always easy to point out mistakes certainly BP has made a few, but what is the other side of the story? I'd be intersted in hearing that.
Posted by Penny, Vancouver BC on Thursday, June 17, 2010 @ 03:02 PM
18.
If Americans were not so hooked on BIG OIL and the automotive lifestyle, then companies like BP would not be driven by greed. Why don't we take some of the blame for this fiasco, drive our cars less, make fewer trips to the grocery store, use other sources of energy more, and WEAN ourselves off of the _____ oil! That's the ultimate solution to saving our environment!
Posted by Idalie Muñoz Muñoz on Thursday, June 17, 2010 @ 08:25 PM

 

PR News Social Media Summit & Taste of Tech

Countdown to the event:


 
Join us at the Social Media Summit & Taste of Tech June 21-22,2012

PR Jobs
Boston, MA
Global Rescue

Wells Fargo
Albuquerque, NM
Albuquerque Academy

Find a Job | Post a Job
Free PR Job Alert
Post Your Resume

Search Jobs

 

Upcoming Webinar

Instagram Webinar
May 31
Register     

Social Media Summit & 
Taste of Tech 

June 21 & 22 in NYC
Register

SEO Workshop
August 8 in San Francisco
Register 

Facebook Conference
August 9 in San Francisco
Register  

PR News Press

Corporate Social Responsibility & Green PR Guidebook, Vol. 5

Order
Now

Employee Communications

Employee Communications Guidebook

Order
Now

Salary Survey: PR Compensation & Benefits Report

Order
Now

Digital PR Guidebook, Vol. 4

Order
Now

Crisis Management Guidebook, Vol. 5

Order
Now

Media Training Guidebook, Vol. 4

Order
Now

Guide to Best Practices in PR Measurement , Vol. 5

Order
Now

Top 100 Case Studies in PR Guidebook, Vol. 5

Order
Now