You probably know about the Applebee’s waitress who was fired for posting a customer’s receipt that had a
derogatory statement on it. You may not be aware of the aftermath, which took
place in the wee hours of Saturday, February 2. It’s virtually a textbook
example of what not to do in a PR
crisis.
The Brand
Applebee’s
·
3.8 million
Facebook likes
·
85,700 Twitter followers
·
279,000 YouTube
views
The Incident
Around noon on Friday, Applebee’s
issued an official statement about the firing on its Facebook page, explaining
that posting a customer’s name was a violation of its policies. Defenders of
the waitress rushed to Facebook to complain, noting that Applebee’s itself had posted a photo of a customer’s name on Facebook – though that customer’s note was positive. Rather than address the issue,
Applebee’s deleted the photo. And the company remained silent as the negative comments
mounted, surpassing 17,000 after midnight.
The Problem
At 2:53 a.m., whoever runs Applebee’s Facebook
page suddenly began replying to the comments. Worse, instead of making a big,
clear announcement with a new post, Applebee’s replied in the comments of its original post, where it
was quickly buried under hundreds of new complaints. Even worse, Applebee’s
committed a cardinal sin of social media by deleting some negative comments and
blocking select people from commenting. This, of course, led to a new round of
criticism and mockery.Screen shot courtesy of R.L. Stollar |
The Response
It was now after 3 a.m. Did
Applebee’s issue an apology and call it a night? No, the restaurant began
posting the same boilerplate reply over and over, tagging negative commenters’
names to make sure they would see it. The commenters then decried the
repetitive posts. Applebee’s continued with the cut-and-paste replies,
sometimes tagging individual commenters
and pleading for understanding. One critic responded: “Stop insulting us by
claiming we got our facts wrong…if there is some specific information we do not
have that will correct the record, then either share it or continue to hide
behind your lawyers.”
At almost 4:30 a.m., Applebee’s stopped making
comments and finally posted an official status update – a bland non-apology for
the “unfortunate situation.” 2,000 negative comments to that update followed. Applebee’s then hid its original post, taking
the 20,000 comments with it. People then accused the restaurant of deleting
criticism. The saga didn’t end until the following evening; one blogger
estimated that Applebee’s three status updates had garnered more than 40,000
comments – almost all of them negative.Screen shot courtesy of R.L. Stollar |
The Takeaway
How can you avoid a similar
PR disaster? Let me count the ways…
- Reply During Daylight Hours
There is no reason to post a
major update at 3 o’clock in the morning. At best, you’re unlikely to reach
your intended audience. At worst, you may find the late-night crowd a little
more ornery then others.
- Make Statements Clear
Facebook doesn’t make every
comment visible, so Applebee’s replies were quickly bumped off the page.
Instead, the company should have posted new status updates, which stand out and
look official.
- Don’t Lose Your Cool
Another mistake was
switching from “we” to “I”: “No one’s asking me to comment at 5 am. I am
because I care, we care.” Was that Applebee’s speaking or just one of its
employees? Or its PR firm? Statements like that only confuse the situation.
- Don’t Put Your Social Media in the Hands of an Intern
- Don’t Put Your Social Media in the Hands of an Intern
I doubt that Applebee’s
official PR firm or marketing department was posting at 3 a.m. It’s tempting to
let the summer intern handle your social channels, but disasters like this
should make you reconsider who’s in charge of these very important public
communications outlets.
At the same time, a similar debacle took place on Twitter, showing that Applebee’s truly needs to re-evaluate
its social media strategy – and its personnel.
Is your social media in the
best hands? Brandemix specializes in social media for customer service,
branding, and recruiting. If you’d like to reduce your risk of a PR disaster, we’d love to hear from you.
For the latest on social media, online recruiting,
mobile marketing, and other branding trends, please like Brandemix on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, and join
our LinkedIn group, Your Digital Brand.
Wow, what a story! Thanks for sharing and for the great takeaways.
ReplyDeleteapplebees continues to delete posts on their facebook page. Here is a site where people are going after being blocked from posting on applebees fb page.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.facebook.com/PickingApples2013?fref=ts
I too was blocked from posting honest but respectful posts at the Applebee's facebook page, and I didn't ever use copy n paste or repeat post. Applebees actually launched an attack from Miami Florida, with somewhere around 12,000 people, which was mostly likes but also about 200 commenters, flooding the page with repeat posts like 'yummy' 'mmm mmm' not to mention all of the Spanish language 'positive' comments. They got around 60 of us the first night. The 2nd day, the attacks started coming from California, also primarily what appeared to be mostly hispanic 'customers' liking their page and giving positive comments. This was a staged attack from the PR team, using bought likes and comments, along with a few real employees and/or franchise owners in the mix. With each passing day, supporters of Chelsea Welch are getting silenced. What's worse is that Mike Archer denied doing this and made a statement about being an open community and wanted both good and bad comments/feedback. Lies lies lies.
ReplyDelete